The HYROX PFT: What It Is, Why It Exists, How To Compete, and How To Prepare

December 28th 2025 14 minutes read
The HYROX PFT: What It Is, Why It Exists, How To Compete, and How To Prepare

What is the HYROX® PFT?


The HYROX® Physical Fitness Test (PFT) is a globally uniform benchmark workout that introduces athletes to the HYROX® race concept while giving a clear snapshot of their current hybrid fitness. It's designed for all members of HYROX® Affiliated Gyms and helps athletes gauge which race division is the best fit. Finishers earn a patch (Gold, Silver, or Bronze) based on time and age group, and every result is added to a global leaderboard by gender and age. 

Any HYROX® affiliated gym can host a PFT with support from HYROX®. 

The Official PFT Sequence (for time)

  1. 1000 m Run
  2. 50 Burpee Broad Jumps
  3. 100 Stationary (Forward) Lunges (alternating, total reps)
  4. 1000 m Row
  5. 30 Hand-Release Push-Ups
  6. 100 Wall Balls (6 kg men / 4 kg women; 10 ft men / 9 ft women targets)

All work is performed in order; you must complete the full distance/reps before moving on. The score is total time. 


Modification policy. Any movement modification (e.g., alternative distances/targets, rep sharing with a partner) automatically places your result in the Bronze category and on the leaderboard as “scaled.” 



Why was the PFT created?

  • On-ramp to the sport. It's a fun, high-energy community event that introduces athletes to HYROX® in a standardized way.
  • Placement guidance. Your time is a practical indicator to choose an appropriate division for HYROX® main events.
  • Recognition + data. Patches (Gold/Silver/Bronze) by age group, and inclusion in a global ranking—so you can compare across gyms and seasons.



How do you compete in a HYROX® PFT?


1) Find or host an event

  • Attend an event at an affiliated gym (check local announcements/socials).
  • Host if you're an affiliated gym: coordinate registration, social sharing, and finisher patches; HYROX® regional coordinators can assist when available.

2) What to expect on event day

  • Heats. Many gyms schedule heats based on available rowers (e.g., if you have 8 rowers and 48 athletes, plan 6 heats of 8) and often space heats ~10 minutes apart to prevent bottlenecks at rowers and wall balls.
  • Standards. Movement standards are enforced (see below). Rowers must be reset to 0 m before each athlete. Targets must be visibly marked at 9 ft (women) and 10 ft (men).
  • Post-event. Times are entered in the database; patch level is auto-assigned, and your score lands on the global leaderboard.



Movement Standards & Smart Technique


Below is a coach's view on what's required (official) and what's smart (technique).



1) 1000 m Run


Standard: Can be outside, treadmill (2% incline), or air runner; outside distances must be measured (wheel or GPS). Substitutions for limitations: 1000 m SkiErg or Row, or ~3000 m Bike. 

Technique:

  • Pace near your aerobic threshold (RPE ~7) to avoid spiking lactate early.
  • Treadmill: lock cadence quickly; outside: choose a measured, low-turn course.



2) 50 Burpee Broad Jumps


Standard: Performed between two lines, 35 inches apart. Chest touches the floor. Two-foot takeoff and two-foot landing over both lines; turn and repeat. 


Technique:

  • Step up from burpee into a hip-loaded stance, then jump.
  • Keep jumps controlled to maintain rhythm; avoid over-jumping distance.
  • If needed, scaling options include step-overs or sprawl-style burpees (Bronze/“scaled”).



3) 100 Stationary (Forward) Lunges (alternating)


Standard: Start tall; step forward; back knee touches the floor; alternate legs to 100 total (50/side). 


Technique:

  • Vertical shin on front leg; push “through the floor” to return.
  • Keep ribcage stacked over hips; eyes forward; short, repeatable steps.
  • Scaling: reduce depth if needed (Bronze/“scaled”)



4) 1000 m Row


Standard: Monitor must start at 0 m for each athlete; coaches reset between heats. 


Technique (power order): Legs → Hips (swing) → Arms, then reverse on the recovery. Aim ~24–28 spm, powerful legs, smooth finish; don't over-pull at the catch.



5) 30 Hand-Release Push-Ups


Standard: From plank to chest-down on floor, hands release briefly, then press back to plank without knee assistance. Feet remain on the ground. 


Technique:

  • Tense glutes; ribs down; forearms vertical.
  • Quick hand release; press as a unit (no “worming”).



6) 100 Wall Balls (6/4 kg; 10 ft men / 9 ft women)


Standard: Hip crease below knee, then throw; rep counts when the ball hits the target. Targets must be marked; missed target = no-rep. Modifying squat depth or target height = Bronze.


Technique:

  • Cluster reps into sustainable sets (e.g., 20–20–15–15–10–10–5–5).
  • Use breathing ladders (exhale on throw, quick recovery inhale).
  • Keep ball front-rack high; descend with heels down, drive tall.



Why compete in a PFT?


  • Clarity: It's an honest benchmark that maps well to HYROX® race demands (run capacity, mixed-modality endurance, muscular endurance).
  • Community: High-energy, team vibe—often your first taste of “race day” flow.
  • Next steps: Your time plus how you felt reveals where to invest training (e.g., run economy vs. wall-ball capacity) and which race division to target. 
  • Recognition + ranking: Earn a patch and appear on a global leaderboard—motivating for future attempts.



How to prepare (and PR) your HYROX® PFT


Training priorities

  1. Aerobic engine with fatigue resistance. You'll run, then do high-rep calisthenics and rowing—train steady power with the ability to keep moving.
  2. Movement economy. Rowing power order; efficient wall-ball cycle; repeatable burpee rhythm; lunge mechanics.
  3. Local muscular endurance. Push-ups and wall balls are often where athletes “blow up.”
  4. Pacing + transitions. Time lost in sloppy transitions is real—train your order and setup exactly like test day.



A focused, example 6-week build


Weekly rhythm (repeat for 6 weeks with progressive overload):

  • Day 1 – Engine Intervals (Run): 5–6 × 3:00 @ ~10K pace (RPE 7–8) / 2:00 easy jog. Finish with 4 × 10 burpee broad jumps smooth and controlled.
  • Day 2 – Strength Endurance (Upper): 6–8 sets quality push-up clusters (e.g., 10–12 reps with perfect form) supersetted with rowing 250 m @ 1k pace + 1:30 easy.
  • Day 3 – Mixed Builder: 3–4 rounds (400 m run, 25 lunges, 10 hand-release push-ups, 15 wall balls), controlled pace; focus immaculate standards.
  • Day 4 – Row Power + Technique: 6 × 500 m row @ 2k pace + 10–12 s / 2:00 rest; every recovery minute, practice 10 perfect wall balls (technique only).
  • Day 5 – Threshold Combo: 3 × (800 m run @ LT / 500 m row @ moderate / 15 push-ups / 20 wall balls) with 3:00 rest; keep all sets even.
  • Day 6 – Mobility + Tissue: Hips/ankles/thoracic spine, squat patterning, scapular stability, breathing.
  • Day 7 – Rest.


Progression knobs:

  • Add one interval or extend interval duration on Days 1 & 4.
  • Add 5–10 wall balls total per week in mixed sessions.
  • Keep quality: if push-ups degrade, increase set count, not slop.


Two practice run-throughs

  • Week 3 Mini-Simulation (70%): 600 m run → 25 BBJ → 50 lunges → 600 m row → 15 HRPU → 50 WB (scaled volume).
  • Week 6 Full Simulation (race effort): Follow official order and standards.


Targeted micro-drills

  • Burpee rhythm drill: 10 reps every :45 for 5–8 sets; focus two-foot jump and quick turn.
  • Lunge “no-wobble” sets: 5 × 20 alternating; slow eccentric, stable knee, push back through full foot.
  • Push-up density: EMOM 10: 6–10 perfect HR push-ups; terminate a set early if trunk sags.
  • Wall-ball cadence: Metronome tempo; aim 15–20 unbroken at a time, breathing on the throw.


Rowing form refresher (powerful, sustainable)

  • Drive: Legs strong from the catch; keep heels connected as long as possible.
  • Swing: Hinge through the hips to transfer force; avoid early arm pull.
  • Finish: Elbows travel past ribs; handle to lower sternum.
  • Recovery: Arms → body over → knees; ratio ~1:2 (drive:recovery) to keep HR in control.


Pacing, Transitions, and Strategy

  • Run: Start at “honest but calm.” You should be able to start BBJ without gasping.
  • BBJ: Smooth > fast. Count in 5s or 10s; eliminate step-pattern confusion.
  • Lunges: Shake arms every 20–30 reps to prepare for push-ups later.
  • Row: Set foot straps and drag in warm-up; accelerate the flywheel and settle into a sustainable split. Reset monitor is the gym's job, but verify “0 m” yourself before you start.
  • Push-ups: Avoid failure. Use short “breathing pauses” at the top; maintain plank integrity.
  • Wall balls: Pre-plan set sizes; one deep breath between sets; eyes on target; hit the line every rep. Targets must be marked at regulation heights—know yours.


Common mistakes (and easy fixes)

  1. Overcooking the first run. Fix: cap RPE at ~7; your job is to arrive at BBJ with composure.
  2. Losing BBJ rhythm. Fix: same stance every rep; two-foot landings; turn immediately.
  3. Shallow squats / missed target on wall balls. Fix: consistent depth cues; eyes up; don't rush the release—contact is required.
  4. Row spike then die. Fix: steady pacing, tidy stroke rate, long leg drive.
  5. Push-up “worming.” Fix: squeeze glutes and quads; move as one unit from floor to plank.


Equipment & Setup Checklist

  • Run: Verified 1000 m (wheel/GPS) or treadmill at 2% incline.
  • BBJ: Two lines 35 inches apart, visible; space to turn.
  • Lunges: Clear lane; floor that allows knee contact. Row: Monitor at 0 m each athlete; staff reset between heats. 
  • Push-Ups: Judge eyes on chest-to-floor + hand release each rep.
  • Wall Balls: Correct ball mass (6/4 kg), clearly marked 10 ft / 9 ft targets.


Hosting Notes for Coaches/Gyms

  • Capacity planning: Determine heat size by number of rowers; example: 8 rowers → 6 heats of 8 for 48 athletes. Space heats ~10 minutes apart to prevent bottlenecks. 
  • Admin: Set up registration, share on socials, organize patches, ask for regional support as needed.
  • Post-PFT: Enter times; the system assigns patch level and updates the leaderboard.



FAQ


Do modifications “count”?

Yes—your score is recorded, but any modification (rep shares, altered targets/loads, alternative movements) is automatically categorized as Bronze (scaled)

How heavy are the wall balls and how high are the targets?

6 kg for men, 4 kg for women; 10 ft target for men, 9 ft for women. 

Can we do the run outside?

Yes. It must be measured accurately (wheel or GPS). Treadmill runs should be set at 2% incline



The HYROX® PFT is more than a test. It's a structured, exciting way to experience hybrid competition, identify your strengths, and get precise about your training. Nail the standards, respect pacing, and build a plan that raises your aerobic floor and movement economy. When you're ready, retest then set your sights on your next HYROX® main event.




Movement Techniques & How-To


Global race-day cues

  • Transitions: Pre-stage your area (rower foot straps set, wall-ball weight ready, target identified). Walk straight to the next station; start in ≤5 seconds.
  • Breathing rhythm: Keep a steady nasal-or-soft-mouth rhythm until wall balls. Use a deliberate exhale on each throw.
  • Posture & bracing: “Ribs stacked over pelvis,” light abdominal brace. Don't arch or over-hinge to find speed.
  • Pacing rule: You should always be able to start the next station within 10 seconds. If you can't, you went too hard.



1) 1000 m Run (outdoor measured, air runner, or treadmill @ 2% incline)


Setup & standard

  • 1000 m continuous run. If treadmill, 2% incline. If outdoors, course must be measured.


How to do it (step-by-step)

  1. Start calm: First 150–200 m at controlled pace; let HR settle.
  2. Find cadence: Slight forward lean from ankles, mid-foot landing under center of mass.
  3. Arms: 90°–100° elbow angle, hands brush your shorts' seams; no cross-body swing.
  4. Finish: Last 100–150 m, hold pace; don't sprint if it'll cost BBJ rhythm.

Breathing & cadence

  • 2-2 or 3-2 breathing (steps per inhale–exhale). Cadence ~170–184 spm (shorter strides under fatigue).


Pacing

  • Target ~10K pace (RPE 7). You should enter BBJ able to breathe through your nose or talk in short phrases.


Common faults & quick fixes

  • Over-striding: Shorten step; land under hips.
  • Shoulders up by ears: Shake out arms every 60–90 s.

Optional regressions/progressions

  • Regress: slight pace cap, treadmill for steady rhythm.
  • Progress: negative-split the last 400 m by ~2–4 s/200 m.

Micro-prep

  • 60–90 s brisk walk + 4 × 20 m strides pre-heat.



2) 50 Burpee Broad Jumps (BBJ)


Setup & standard

  • Two lines 35 in (≈89 cm) apart. Chest must touch the floor; two-foot takeoff and two-foot landing clear both lines every rep.


How to do it

  1. Drop: Hands down → controlled sprawl → chest touch (no flop).
  2. Pop: Step or hop feet to athletic stance (hips loaded, neutral spine).
  3. Jump: Two-foot jump over the line; land softly, knees track over toes.
  4. Turn & repeat: Pivot as you reset your feet—keep a metronome-like rhythm.


Rhythm & breathing

  • Count reps in 5s/10s; exhale on jump. Think “down-pop-jump-turn.”


Pacing

  • Aim steady-smooth. Over-jumping distance spikes lactate—clear the line by a foot, not three.


Common faults & fixes

  • Staggered landing: Practice stick-landings for 5 reps between rounds.
  • Loose midline: Squeeze glutes and brace before the jump.


Regressions/progressions

  • Regress: step-back/step-up burpee; shorter but legal jump (still two-footed).
  • Progress: keep hands close on the drop to shorten the “pop” path.


Micro-drills

  • EMOM 6: 6–8 BBJ at race rhythm; stop each set feeling you could do 2–3 more.



3) 100 Stationary (Forward) Lunges (alternating)


Setup & standard

  • Alternating reps to 100 total (50/side). Back knee touches the floor; stand tall between reps.


How to do it

  1. Step: Long enough that the front shin stays near vertical.
  2. Descend: Back knee kisses the floor; torso tall, hips square.
  3. Drive back: Push through the whole front foot; return to lockout.
  4. Alternate smoothly; keep eyes on a fixed spot straight ahead.


Breathing & rhythm

  • One breath per rep. Brief inhale on the step, exhale on the drive back.


Pacing

  • Chunk into 4 × 25 with a quick arm shake and 1–2 breaths between chunks.


Common faults & fixes

  • Front knee collapsing in: Press big toe down; imagine “spreading the floor.”
  • Torso tipping forward: Think “chest proud, zipper tall.”


Regressions/progressions

  • Regress: reduce knee depth (maintain control); shorter step.
  • Progress: tempo 2–1–1 for 10 reps mid-set to reinforce control.


Micro-drills

  • 5 × 20 alternating reps, smooth and silent knees; 30 s rest.



4) 1000 m Row


Setup & standard

  • Monitor must read 0 m at start. Foot straps snug; damper at a moderate setting that preserves stroke length (often 4–6 on Concept2, but use drag factor if available).


How to do it (technique = “legs → hips → arms”)

  1. Catch: Shins vertical, heels close to down, torso slightly forward, arms long.
  2. Drive: Legs first—push the platform away; feel the seat accelerate.
  3. Swing: As legs finish, hinge to ~11 o'clock torso.
  4. Arms: Draw handle to lower sternum; elbows past ribs.
  5. Recovery (reverse): Arms away → body pivots forward → then knees.


Breathing & cadence

  • Stroke rate 24–28 spm. Ratio 1:2 (drive:recovery). Inhale on recovery, exhale at finish.


Pacing

  • Split you could hold for a straight 1500–2000 m. First 10–12 strokes are power strokes, then settle.


Common faults & fixes

  • Early arm pull: Count “legs-legs-arms” in your head.
  • Rushing the slide: Pause a half-beat with arms away to reset rhythm.
  • Over-grip: Loosen fingers; thumbs under handle.


Regressions/progressions

  • Regress: cap stroke rate at 24 spm; focus on long drives.
  • Progress: controlled rate 26–28 with same split (efficiency focus).


Micro-drills

  • 6 × 250 m at target pace, 60 s easy paddle; hold technique even.



5) 30 Hand-Release Push-Ups (HRPU)


Setup & standard

  • From plank to chest-down, hands release visibly, then press to full lockout. No knee drop, hips and shoulders rise together.


How to do it

  1. Set plank: Hands just outside shoulder width; squeeze glutes/quads.
  2. Lower: Elbows ~45–60° from torso; chest and thighs touch together.
  3. Release: Brief off-load of hands without moving body position.
  4. Press: Drive the floor away; ribs down, head neutral.


Breathing & cadence

  • Exhale on the press, quick nasal inhale at the top.


Pacing

  • Avoid failure. Use clusters (e.g., 10-8-6-6 or 8-8-7-7) with 2–3 breaths at the top between clusters.


Common faults & fixes

  • “Worming”/sag: Reset tension: squeeze glutes, pull ribs down before the next rep.
  • Elbows flaring: Rotate elbows slightly toward hips; palms grip the floor.


Regressions/progressions

  • Regress: incline HRPU (hands on box) to keep perfect plank line.
  • Progress: strict tempo 2-1-1 for a few reps to reinforce control mid-set (don't overdo).


Micro-drills

  • EMOM 6–8: 6–10 perfect HRPU; stop before form breaks.



6) 100 Wall Balls (Men 6 kg @ 10 ft • Women 4 kg @ 9 ft)


Setup & standard

  • Correct ball mass, clearly marked target height. Hip crease below knee each rep; ball must contact target for the rep to count.


How to do it

  1. Stance & rack: Feet shoulder-width, ball cradled high at chest (not low in forearms).
  2. Descend: Heels down, knees track over toes; hit depth quietly.
  3. Drive & throw: Stand powerfully then extend arms; eyes on target.
  4. Catch & absorb: Meet the ball in the same front-rack; descend immediately.


Breathing & cadence

  • Exhale on each throw; one short inhale as you absorb the catch.


Set strategy

  • Pre-plan sets (e.g., 20-20-15-15-10-10-5-5 or 25-20-15-15-10-10-5).
  • 3–4 breaths between sets; keep hands on the ball while breathing.


Common faults & fixes

  • Missing depth: Think “knees forward and out, hips between heels,” not hips back only.
  • Low catch = forearm burn: Catch higher on the chest; elbows slightly under the ball.
  • Target misses: Keep gaze fixed at a single spot; don't chase the ball with your eyes.


Regressions/progressions

  • Regress: smaller sets with full standards; if needed, reduce target height (counts as scaled).
  • Progress: maintain same set plan with shorter rests.


Micro-drills

  • 5 × 15 at race cadence, 30–40 s rest; record time per set and keep even.



Warm-Up (10–12 min) & Movement Prep (5 min)


Warm-Up

  1. 3–4 min easy row or jog
  2. Joint prep: 6–8 cat-cows, 10 hip airplanes/side, 10 ankle rocks/side
  3. Patterns: 2 rounds – 10 air squats (pause at depth), 10 alternating lunges, 5 push-ups, 5 burpees


Movement Prep

  • Row: 10 strokes build + 10 at target rate + 10 easy
  • Wall Ball: 10 tempo squats with ball, 8 practice throws
  • BBJ: 6 controlled reps focusing on two-foot jump
  • Push-Up: 6 perfect HRPU
  • Run: 2 × 60 m strides or 30 s brisk treadmill pick-ups


Judge-Ready Standards (quick checklist)

  • Run: Distance verified; incline 2% if treadmill.
  • BBJ: Chest-to-floor; two-foot takeoff/landing; clear 35" each rep.
  • Lunges: Back knee floor contact; full stand between reps; alternate legs.
  • Row: Monitor at 0 m before start; athlete rows full 1000 m.
  • HRPU: Visible hand release; straight-line body; full lockout.
  • Wall Balls: Depth below parallel; ball contacts target at regulation height.



Quick “Fix-it” Map During the Test

  • Spiking HR on BBJ? Shorten jump distance to the minimum standard and control the turn.
  • Quads screaming on lunges? Shorten step slightly and push through the whole foot; 2–3 shake-outs are allowed.
  • Row split drifting up? Drop to 24–26 spm, lengthen the drive, and relax the grip.
  • Push-ups failing? Go to smaller clusters with 2–3 breaths at the top; never dip to knees.
  • Wall balls missing target? Reset stance, eyes fixed; take 2 deep breaths and resume planned sets.
The HYROX PFT: What It Is, Why It Exists, How To Compete, and How To Prepare