Sharpen transitions and race pacing in the final six weeks.
HYROX 6-week race plan — How to prepare in the final 6 weeks
A practical, coach-backed 6-week plan for recreational and ambitious HYROX athletes prepping to race.
Final six weeks is where training turns into preparation: you consolidate fitness, sharpen race-specific skills, and reduce risk of fatigue so you perform your best on race day. This plan gives clear weekly targets, sample sessions, a progressive taper plan, and race-week checklist — written for athletes who want practical, coach-level direction without hype.
Quick overview — phases and goals (Build, Sharpen, Taper)
Think of the final 6 weeks as three phases: Build, Sharpen (transition), and Taper. Each has a clear aim.
- Build (Weeks 6–5): Keep the intensity and volume that produce gains but avoid last-minute heavy overload. Goal: maintain strength, finish a few HYROX-specific efforts, and keep aerobic fitness high.
- Sharpen (Weeks 4–3): Shift to race-specific work: shorter, harder intervals, simulator workouts, and practice transitions. Goal: improve race pacing, skill efficiency and replicate race efforts.
- Taper (Weeks 2–1): Reduce overall volume while keeping short bursts of intensity so you arrive fresh and neurologically ready. Goal: maximize freshness, preserve speed, and minimise fatigue.
Coach tip: Base adjustments on how you feel. If you’ve had consistent training, prioritize quality over adding more volume now.
Week-by-week plan (Week 6 → Week 1)
Below is a concise week-by-week focus you can adapt to your schedule and level. Use the sample weeks that follow for concrete sessions.
- Week 6 (Build): Two strength sessions (heavy-to-moderate), one long steady run or tempo, one HYROX simulator session, 1–2 easy recovery sessions.
- Week 5 (Build): Keep the strength but reduce load slightly; add one interval run (e.g., 4x1k or 6x800m) and one simulator or mixed modal session.
- Week 4 (Sharpen transition): Replace one strength day with power/plyo; shorter, sharper runs (threshold intervals), a full HYROX simulator or split-sim.
- Week 3 (Sharpen): High-quality race-pace efforts, short rest intervals, a lighter strength session focused on movement quality, and 1 long easy day.
- Week 2 (Early taper): Reduce volume by ~30–40%, maintain intensity with short efforts (e.g., 3x3min at race effort), simulation of transitions but shorter total time.
- Week 1 (Race week): Cut volume to ~50%+ of normal, keep short sharp bursts (10–30s), active mobility, precise race-plan rehearsals and recovery.
Pair this with your usual cross-training and lifestyle needs. If you have limited sessions per week, prioritize HYROX-specific work and runs.
Week 6 — Build sample week
This is a safe, balanced build week for most athletes.
Monday: Strength (45–60 min)
- Compound lifts: squats/Front squats (3x5), deadlifts or Romanian deadlifts (3x5), accessory rows (3x8). Focus on solid technique.
Tuesday: Run intervals (session example)
- Warm-up 10–15 min, 5x4 min at slightly harder than race pace with 2 min easy jog between, cool down.
Wednesday: Easy active recovery
- 30–45 min easy bike, mobility, or 30–45 min easy run.
Thursday: HYROX simulator or mixed modal (45–60 min)
- Split the HYROX stations into manageable sets (e.g., 2 rounds of lighter simulation), practice transitions between sled, ski, and burpee variations. Focus on efficiency over all-out time.
Friday: Strength (short, focused)
- EMOM or circuit with core, single-leg work, pushing sled or farmer carries (4 rounds).
Saturday: Long aerobic session
- 60–90 min steady run or zone-2 hybrid (run + low-intensity row/assault bike). Build aerobic base.
Sunday: Rest or active recovery
- Stretch, foam roll, sleep priority.
Notes: Keep one session per week devoted to quality HYROX movements. Do not introduce maximal tests in this week.
Week 4 — Transition sample week
Week 4 focuses on converting strength and fitness into race-ready performance.
Monday: Power + skill (40–50 min)
- Olympic lift variations or explosive squats (3x3), sled pushes for power (4x40m), technique work for sled, ski and wall balls.
Tuesday: Threshold run
- 20–30 min at tempo/threshold pace or 6x4 min at race effort with 90s rest.
Wednesday: HYROX simulator (full or split)
- Aim for higher intensity but slightly reduced volume vs. a full competition: 40–50% of race duration if race distance unknown, or 60–70% of usual race simulation.
Thursday: Mobility + active recovery
- Short mobility session, easy 30-min jog if needed.
Friday: Short strength and transitions (30–40 min)
- Light technical strength, practice quick changeovers (e.g., 500m ski then sled 20m, repeat 4–6 times).
Saturday: Interval run + finishers
- Short intervals (10x400m at faster than race pace) and short HYROX movement finishers to practice fatigue management.
Sunday: Rest with quality sleep and nutrition focus.
Notes: This week is where you should feel the workouts becoming sharper and more specific to race demands.
Week 1 — Race-week sample week
Race week is about sharpening and arriving fresh. Keep sessions short, specific, and confidence-building.
Monday: Easy run + mobility (30–40 min)
- Include 4–6 short strides of 20–30s at race pace to keep legs sharp.
Tuesday: Short race-pace rehearsal (30 min)
- Warm-up; 3 x 3 min at race intensity with 3 min recoveries; practice starting pace and breathing.
Wednesday: Light simulator or movement rehearsal (30–40 min)
- 2–3 short station sets focusing on transitions and technique. Keep RPE moderate.
Thursday: Rest or very light active recovery
- Mobility, foam roll, and 20–30 min easy movement.
Friday: Short pre-race activation (20–30 min)
- Warm-up, 4–6 x 30s build-ups, mobility and mental rehearsal.
Saturday: Pre-race checklist and sleep priority
- Pack gear, check nutrition, hydrate, and aim for consistent sleep.
Sunday: Race day
- Use your practiced warm-up, manage pacing and transitions, and trust the plan.
Notes: No new equipment, no hard sessions. Focus on sleep quality, simple meals, and confidence.
Which sessions to keep and which to cut
Prioritise sessions that transfer directly to HYROX race demands: simulator work, running at race pace, and strength that supports repeated efforts (squats, deadlifts, sled pushes, carries).
Keep:
- HYROX simulator workouts (or station-specific practice)
- Key run sessions: tempo runs and race-pace intervals
- One quality strength session per week focusing on compound lifts and sled work
- Short neuromuscular efforts (strides, plyo) during taper
Cut or reduce:
- Long, slow miles that don’t contribute to your aerobic base if you’re already consistent (replace with longer hybrid sessions)
- Non-specific high-volume strength (e.g., very long bodybuilding sessions)
- New modalities or experimental training methods during the final three weeks
Coach note: If pressed for time, cut volume first and keep quality. A shorter focused workout is better than a long low-value session.
HYROX simulator workouts — when and how to prioritise
HYROX simulator workouts are high-value: they train pacing, transitions and mental sequencing. Use them strategically.
When to prioritise:
- Weeks 6–5: One full or split simulator to practice movement patterns and identify weak stations.
- Weeks 4–3: Increase intensity of simulator sessions, focus on race-pace efforts and quick transitions.
- Week 2: Short, high-quality simulator segments (not full-length) to rehearse pacing and nutrition.
- Week 1: Very short technical rehearsals only.
How to structure a simulator session:
- Warm-up thoroughly (10–15 min).
- Option A — Full simulation: Complete all stations in sequence at steady race effort; use this once per 2–3 weeks earlier in the 6-week block.
- Option B — Split-sim: Break the race into 2–3 chunks (e.g., first half, second half) on separate days to focus on transitions and pacing.
- Option C — Station focus: 30–40 min focusing on your weakest movements with interval-style rest.
Practical tips:
- Time your transitions and practice quick recovery strategies (deep breathing, standing vs sitting recovery).
- Wear the shoes and carry the gear you plan to race in.
- Record times for stations to track small improvements.
Running volume & intensity rules (Beginner vs Intermediate)
Run training should be specific to your fitness level.
Beginner (0–3 runs/week or <20 km/week):
- Volume: Keep total weekly volume steady; avoid big jumps. Aim for 2–3 runs totaling 30–50 min easy + 1 quality session every 7–10 days.
- Intensity: Focus on tempo runs and short intervals (e.g., 4x3–4 min with full recovery) to build race pace familiarity.
Intermediate (3–5 runs/week or 20–50+ km/week):
- Volume: Maintain your base while reducing by ~10–30% during sharpening and ~30–50% during taper.
- Intensity: Include one VO2/interval session and one threshold/tempo session per week in the build/sharpen phases.
Rules to follow:
- No more than a 10% weekly volume increase during the build phase.
- Keep at least one easy recovery day after a hard run or HYROX simulator.
- During taper, reduce volume but keep intensity short and sharp to preserve neuromuscular coordination.
Pacing reference:
- Race pace: the sustainable intensity you can hold for the running portion of HYROX without blowing up on the stations. Practice this in intervals.
Progressive taper plan and practical guidelines
A practical taper reduces volume while maintaining short bouts of intensity to stay sharp.
Two-week taper example:
- Week 2 (early taper): Reduce total volume by ~30–40%. Keep session intensity up but shorten time spent at that intensity. Example: replace a 40-min threshold with 20–25 min of threshold work split into quality intervals.
- Week 1 (race week): Reduce volume by ~50% from normal. Include 1–2 short sessions with brief high-intensity efforts (10–30s or up to 3 min) and extended recovery.
Guidelines:
- Preserve session quality, not quantity. Maintain speed with fewer reps and longer rests.
- Maintain 2–3 days of low-intensity movement for blood flow and mobility.
- Sleep and nutrition matter more in the taper than training changes. Don’t experiment with new supplements or meals.
- Expect to feel slightly sluggish on reduced volume; this is normal and often means freshness is building.
Taper red flags:
- Don’t drop intensity completely — complete rest for long periods can blunt race sharpness.
- Avoid a heavy weightlifting session in week 1 that causes soreness.
Recovery, sleep, and nutrition priorities in the final 6 weeks
Non-training habits often decide race-day success. Focus on practical, sustainable routines.
Recovery & sleep:
- Aim for consistent sleep (7–9 hours). Prioritise consistent bed/wake times, especially in the week before the race.
- Use active recovery days: light cardio, mobility, and soft tissue work.
- Manage stress — short breathing or mindfulness routines after tough sessions help recovery.
Nutrition:
- Keep protein intake stable (around 20–30g per meal) to support recovery and strength.
- In the 48–72 hours before race, increase carbohydrate availability modestly — favour familiar, easily digested carbs.
- Hydration: maintain regular fluid intake; include electrolytes if you sweat a lot. Don’t overdo water loading.
- Race fueling: practice any race nutrition (bars, gels, drinks) during the last two simulator sessions.
Practical rule: Don’t introduce radically different foods, supplements or routines in the last 7–10 days.
Race-week checklist, warm-up and race-day reminders
Race week checklist (pack and confirm):
- Race bib, timing chip, comfortable race clothing and backup kit
- Racing shoes and a slightly worn pair for comfort
- Nutrition: pre-race meal plan, race gels, sports drink
- Hydration plan and small first-aid kit (tape, blister plasters)
- Warm clothing for pre-race and post-race recovery
- Route logistics: travel, parking, race briefing time
Warm-up (20–30 min template):
- 10 min easy jog or bike
- Dynamic mobility (leg swings, hip circles)
- 4–6 strides 20–30s at race pace with full recoveries
- 2 short race-intensity efforts (30–60s) with full recovery to prime
Race-day reminders:
- Start controlled. Your first kilometers and early stations should feel manageable.
- Break the race into chunks: run + station. Use consistent routines at each station to save energy.
- Focus on efficient technique on sled, ski, and burpee stations — small technical gains add up.
- Stick to practiced nutrition and pacing. Avoid new snacks or extreme caffeine doses.
Final coach note: Trust the training and the taper. Stay present and execute your routine.
How to adapt if you’re behind, injured or short on time
Short on time:
- Prioritise two weekly high-value sessions: one HYROX-specific simulator or station practice and one quality run (tempo or intervals). Keep 1 strength session focused on compound movements.
Behind on training:
- Avoid cramming volume. Do two high-quality workouts per week for the remaining weeks and maintain sleep, nutrition and recovery. Focus on efficiency: race-specific skills and pacing.
Minor injury or niggle (non-medical advice):
- Reduce volume and replace high-impact runs with bike/row while you maintain technique work and mobility.
- Prioritise rehab exercises, loads that don’t cause pain, and consult a professional for guidance.
If you’re injured:
- Stop aggravating the issue and seek professional assessment. Returning to high-intensity training too early risks longer downtime.
Decision rules:
- If pain increases with a session, stop and modify.
- If you must cut sessions, cut long steady-state volume first and keep short, race-relevant quality sessions.
Practical reassurance: Even well-preserved race-day performance can be achieved by prioritising quality, sleep, and race-specific practice in the final weeks.
Conclusion
The final six weeks are about making smart choices: keep the work that directly improves HYROX performance, sharpen pacing and transitions, then reduce volume while preserving intensity. Follow the week-by-week structure, prioritise sleep and recovery, and use short simulator sessions to rehearse race demands. Trust the process: consistent, targeted training plus a thoughtful taper will help you arrive to the start line confident and ready. Want more tailored plans? Check Start to Hyrox for level-specific training templates and community tips.
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