12-Week HYROX Training Plan for Beginners (Free PDF) | Checkin Sport
Training · Checkin Sport · May 2026

The 12-Week HYROX Training Plan
for Beginners

Zero experience required. Four days a week. One goal: cross that finish line in Stockholm — or wherever your first race takes you. Download the free PDF and start building your engine today.

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A 12-week HYROX training plan for beginners is structured around 4 training days per week across 3 progressive phases: Base Build (Weeks 1–4), Station Integration (Weeks 5–8), and Race Simulation (Weeks 9–12). Each phase introduces new stimulus — aerobic base first, then functional station work, then compromised running. No prior HYROX experience is required.

Most people discover HYROX the same way: they watch a race video, see athletes grinding through sled pushes and wall balls after eight kilometers of running, and think — I want that. Then they Google «how to train for HYROX» and end up buried in 20-week programs built for athletes who already run sub-45 minute 10Ks. This isn’t that plan.

This is a 12 week HYROX training plan built specifically for beginners — people who can run but haven’t done it seriously in months, people who lift but have never done functional fitness in a race context, and people who are starting essentially from zero. Four days a week. Three clear phases. One race at the end of it.

HYROX is the world’s biggest fitness racing series — 8km of running combined with 8 functional workout stations. This 12 week HYROX training plan will take you from zero to finish line, regardless of your current fitness level. Before anything else: download the PDF version of this 12 week HYROX training plan. It’s free, it’s printable, and it’s what you’ll actually take to the gym.

Free PDF: Full 12 Week HYROX Training Plan

All 12 weeks, every session, every set and rep — in one printable document.

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01 / The Architecture Why This 12 Week HYROX Training Plan Works

HYROX is a dual-demand sport. It requires aerobic capacity (you’re running 8km total) and functional strength (you’re performing 8 challenging workout stations). Training one without the other is the most common beginner mistake — and it shows up in every race as either a strength blowout on the sled or a cardiovascular implosion on the run.

12 weeks gives your body enough time to build both systems progressively without burning out before race day. Four days per week is the sweet spot for beginners: enough volume to create real adaptation, enough rest days to actually recover. And three phases ensure you’re never doing too much too soon.

01
Base Build
Weeks 1–4
Build your aerobic engine and introduce the 8 stations with light loads. No compromised running yet. Just foundation.
02
Station Integration
Weeks 5–8
Increase loads, introduce compromised running, and start linking stations together. Your engine meets your strength.
03
Race Simulation
Weeks 9–12
Full race-pace sessions, taper week, and strategic race-day preparation. You’re ready to compete.
⚡ PRO TIP — Heart Rate Zones

During Phase 1, keep all your running sessions in Zone 2 — conversational pace, nose breathing, roughly 60–70% of your max HR. It feels too easy. Do it anyway. Zone 2 training builds the aerobic base that lets you recover between stations on race day. Athletes who skip this phase always pay for it in the back half of the race.

02 / The Weekly Structure What Your 4 Training Days Look Like

Every week follows the same four-day template. The content changes as you progress through phases, but the structure stays consistent — which means you always know what’s coming and can plan around it.

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Day Focus Primary Stimulus Duration
Monday Functional Strength Station-specific strength work: sled, farmers carry, wall balls, sandbag 50–60 min
Wednesday Cardio + Stations SkiErg, rower, running intervals + 2–3 station combos 55–65 min
Friday Strength + Run Heavier station work followed by a tempo run 60–70 min
Saturday Long Session Long aerobic run (Phase 1) → Full station circuit (Phase 2–3) 70–90 min

Important: Tuesday, Thursday, and Sunday are rest days. Active recovery (walking, stretching, mobility) is fine. Adding extra training sessions is not — especially in the first 4 weeks. Adaptation happens during rest, not during work.

03 / The 8 Stations Beginner Loads & What to Focus On First

You don’t need to master all 8 stations in week one. This plan introduces them progressively, starting with the stations that carry the highest injury risk if done with bad form — the Sled Push, Sled Pull, and Sandbag Lunges. Learn those first. The rest follow naturally.

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Station Open Weight (Men) Open Weight (Women) Beginner Focus
SkiErg 1,000m (0.62mi) 1,000m (0.62mi) Stroke rate, lat engagement, breathing rhythm
Sled Push 152kg (335lb) 102kg (225lb) Low hips, full arm extension, short steps
Sled Pull 152kg (335lb) 102kg (225lb) Rope over shoulder, hip drive, not arms
Burpee Broad Jump 80 reps × 1.8m (6ft) 80 reps × 1.8m (6ft) Consistent distance, chest-to-floor standard
Rowing 1,000m (0.62mi) 1,000m (0.62mi) Legs-hips-arms sequence, controlled split
Farmers Carry 2×24kg (2×53lb) 2×16kg (2×35lb) Tall posture, neutral wrists, even pace
Sandbag Lunges 20kg (44lb) / 10m (33ft) 10kg (22lb) / 10m (33ft) Knee tracking, upright torso, full hip extension
Wall Balls 100 reps / 9kg (20lb) 100 reps / 6kg (14lb) Hip crease below knee, target contact, catch timing

For deep dives on technique, we’ve built dedicated guides for every station. Use them alongside this plan — especially before your first time attempting the sled or the burpee broad jump.

04 / Phase 1 12 Week HYROX Training Plan — Phase 1: Base Build (Weeks 1–4)

Phase 1 has one job: build your aerobic engine without breaking you. The running loads are deliberately low-intensity. The station work is at 50–60% of race weight. You will feel like you’re going easy. That’s the point. The athletes who try to go hard in week one are the same athletes who are overtrained by week six.

WEEK 1 — Sample Week Phase 1: Base Build

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Day Workout Load / Notes
MON
Strength
Functional Strength A
Goblet Squat 4×10 · Romanian Deadlift 3×10
Farmers Carry 3×30m (light) · Wall Ball 3×15
Core: Plank 3×45s
~50% race weight
Rest 90s between sets
Total: 50 min
TUE
Rest
Rest or light walk / mobility (20 min max)
WED
Cardio
Cardio + Station Intro
SkiErg 3×250m · Rower 3×250m
Run 20 min Zone 2 · Burpee Broad Jump 3×10
Zone 2: nose breathing
No rush on stations
Total: 55 min
THU
Rest
Rest or light walk / mobility
FRI
Strength+Run
Strength B + Tempo
Sled Push 4×10m (50%) · Sandbag Lunge 3×10m
Sled Pull 3×10m (50%)
Tempo Run 15 min Zone 3
First sled exposure
Focus on form only
Total: 60 min
SAT
Long Run
Long Aerobic Run
30–35 min Zone 2 continuous run
Finish: 100m Farmers Carry + 20 Wall Balls (light)
First compromised finish
Easy pace throughout
Total: 50 min
SUN
Rest
Full rest. Non-negotiable.

Weeks 2, 3, and 4 follow the same template with progressive overload: run distances increase by 5–10 minutes, station weights increase by 10% each week, and the Saturday session adds one extra station per week.

⚡ PRO TIP — The Sled in Week 1

The first time you push the sled, use 50% of your race weight. Not because you can’t handle more — you probably can. But the sled demands hip flexor and lower back stability that most people haven’t trained specifically. Earning that position takes 2–3 weeks. Athletes who load the sled heavy in week one either develop a limp or bad habits. Neither helps on race day.

05 / Phase 2 12 Week HYROX Training Plan — Phase 2: Station Integration (Weeks 5–8)

In this 12 week HYROX training plan, by week five, your aerobic base is built enough to handle real stress. Phase 2 introduces three game-changers: race-weight stations, compromised running, and station combos. Compromised running means running immediately after a heavy station — which is what HYROX is. Your legs will feel like concrete. That’s the adaptation you’re building.

WEEK 5 — Sample Week Phase 2: Station Integration

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Day Workout Load / Notes
MON
Strength
Heavy Station Day
Sled Push 5×20m (75%) · Sled Pull 4×20m
Farmers Carry 4×50m (race weight) · Sandbag Lunge 3×20m
Wall Ball 4×20 reps
First race-weight exposure
Rest 2 min between sets
Total: 60 min
TUE
Rest
Rest. Your legs need it after Monday.
WED
Combo
Station Combo + Run
3 rounds: SkiErg 250m → Run 400m → Rower 250m
Finish: Burpee Broad Jump 3×20 reps
Compromised run: 10 min after last station
First compromised run
Pace: controlled effort
Total: 65 min
THU
Rest
Rest or mobility work
FRI
Strength+Run
Strength C + Tempo Run
Wall Ball 5×20 · Sandbag Lunge 4×20m
Burpee Broad Jump 4×15
Tempo Run 20 min Zone 3–4
Wall ball volume building
First hard tempo run
Total: 65 min
SAT
Long Session
Half-Race Simulation
Run 1km → SkiErg 500m → Run 1km → Sled Push 25m
Run 1km → Rower 500m → Run 1km → Farmers Carry 100m
Easy run 10 min cooldown
First race simulation
4 stations, 4km run
Total: 70–80 min
SUN
Rest
Full rest.

06 / Phase 3 12 Week HYROX Training Plan — Phase 3: Race Simulation (Weeks 9–12)

Phase 3 is where it gets real. Weeks 9 and 10 feature full race simulations — all 8 stations at race weight, with running between each one. Week 11 is a taper week: volume drops by 40%, intensity stays high. Week 12 is race week — one light activation session on Wednesday and race day on Saturday or Sunday.

WEEK 9 — Full Race Simulation Phase 3: Race Simulation

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Day Workout Load / Notes
MON
Strength
Race-Weight Station Block
All 8 stations at race weight, 1 set each
Focus: perfect form, not speed
No running between stations today
Full race weight
Technical rehearsal
Total: 60 min
TUE
Rest
Rest. You need it before Saturday.
WED
Intervals
Run Intervals + Light Stations
6×600m at race pace (90s rest between)
2 rounds: SkiErg 500m + Rower 500m
Race pace effort
No heavy loads
Total: 55 min
THU
Rest
Rest or 20 min easy walk
FRI
Activation
Pre-Race Activation
20 min easy run · Wall Ball 3×15 (light)
Sled Push 2×10m (light) · Mobility 15 min
Low intensity only
Legs fresh for Saturday
Total: 45 min
SAT
★ Full Race
★ FULL RACE SIMULATION
8×1km run + all 8 stations at race weight
Time yourself. This is your benchmark.
SkiErg → Sled Push → Sled Pull → Burpee BJ → Rower → Farmers Carry → Sandbag → Wall Balls
100% effort
Race conditions
Total: 60–90 min
SUN
Rest
Full rest. You’ve earned it.
⚡ PRO TIP — Taper Week (Week 11)

Cut total volume by 40% in week 11, but keep at least two sessions at race intensity. The goal is to arrive at race day with fresh legs but a sharp nervous system. The biggest taper mistake is going too easy — athletes who do nothing for 7 days before a race lose their sharpness. Two short, intense sessions plus real rest is the formula.

07 / Equipment 12 Week HYROX Training Plan — Equipment You Need

You don’t need a fully equipped HYROX gym. For the first 8 weeks, most of this plan can be done with basic gym access. Here’s the minimum viable equipment list:

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Equipment Used For Can’t Access It?
Concept2 SkiErg Station 1 training Substitute: lat pulldown machine, band pull-downs. Official Concept2 SkiErg →
Rowing Machine Station 5 training Most gyms have one. Concept2 rower preferred.
Sled (push/pull) Stations 2 & 3 Substitute: sled push alternatives guide →
Kettlebells / Dumbbells Farmers Carry, Goblet Squats Any weighted handles work
Medicine Ball (9kg/6kg) Wall Balls Rent or buy. No real substitute for race prep.
Sandbag (20kg/10kg) Sandbag Lunges Duffel bag filled with sand as DIY option

For shoe recommendations specific to HYROX training and race day, check our 2026 HYROX Shoes Guide — footwear matters more than most beginners realize, especially for the sled and the running volume.

Take the Full Plan to the Gym

All 12 weeks, every session, printable. Free download, no email required.

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08 / Race Day 12 Week HYROX Training Plan — Race Day Expectations

Your first HYROX will feel different from training. The atmosphere is electric, the sled feels different on a different surface, and adrenaline will make you go out too fast on the first kilometer. Here are the three things every beginner needs to know before race day:

1. Run the first km slower than you think. Adrenaline is real. If your training pace for 1km is 5:30/km, run the first one at 5:50. You’ll thank yourself at station 6.

2. The Roxzone transition costs more time than the station. Walk into the Roxzone, rack your equipment, start your run. Athletes who sprint out of the Roxzone and crash on the run lose more time than they save. Controlled exit, steady run.

3. Wall Balls will be harder than in training. They’re always the last station. Your legs are gone, your lungs are burning, and you’ve still got 100 reps. Break them into sets of 20 from the start. Do not try to go unbroken. For a deep breakdown of the wall ball station, read our Wall Ball complete guide.

For a complete breakdown of race categories, divisions, and what to expect on race day, read the HYROX Categories & Divisions Guide and the HYROX Race Format Guide. If you’ve completed this 12 week HYROX training plan and want to find your first race, browse all HYROX events worldwide →

Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional coaching advice. Individual fitness levels vary. Consult a certified personal trainer or sports medicine professional before starting any new training program, especially if you have pre-existing injuries or health conditions. Always train within your current capacity and progress gradually.