Why recovery is key in Hyrox®
Hyrox® simultaneously taxes the cardiovascular system, strength muscles (quads, glutes, back, shoulders) and the central nervous system. This combination creates a systemic fatigue deeper than a simple run or gym session.
Without sufficient recovery, risks multiply: overuse injuries (tendinitis, stress fractures), performance plateau, hormonal overtraining and immune suppression. Conversely, optimised recovery allows you to train more frequently and more intensely in the long run.
Recovery is not passive rest: it is a training phase in its own right that must be planned with as much care as the sessions themselves.
Sleep and regeneration
Sleep is the most powerful and most underestimated recovery lever. During deep sleep phases, the body releases 80% of growth hormone (GH), essential for muscle repair.
Duration and quality
- Minimum 7-8 hours for athletes in moderate training. Aim for 8-9 hours during intense preparation or competition week.
- Heavy training weeks sometimes require a 20-30 minute nap (short nap before 3pm) to compensate for sleep debt.
Optimising sleep quality
- Cool (18-19°C) and dark room
- Cut screens 60 min before bed
- Avoid caffeine after 2 pm
- Magnesium bisglycinate (200-400 mg) in the evening: improves deep sleep quality
- Relaxation ritual: light stretching, reading, heart coherence breathing
The night before a race
It's normal to sleep poorly the night before a race. Don't panic: it's the quality of sleep over the 3 preceding nights that truly matters for performance. Prepare your gear the evening before to reduce morning stress.
Active recovery
Active recovery (low-intensity exercise) speeds up lactate clearance, reduces soreness and maintains joint mobility without adding fatigue.
Post-race protocol (D+1 to D+2)
- 20-30 min walk: activates circulation without joint stress.
- Light swimming or aqua-jogging: decompressive effect on joints.
- Easy cycling: 20-30 min at 50-60% max heart rate.
- Yoga or mobility work: focus on hips, hamstrings and shoulders.
Recovery within training cycles
- Include 1-2 active recovery days per week depending on training intensity.
- Deload weeks (every 3-4 weeks) reduce volume by 40-50% while maintaining intensity.
Body recovery techniques
| Technique | Main benefit | When to use |
|---|---|---|
| Foam rolling | Reduces myofascial tension | Daily, 10-15 min |
| Cold bath / cryotherapy | Reduces acute inflammation | D to D+1 (10-15 min at 10-15°C) |
| Sports massage | Lymphatic drainage, relaxation | D+2 or D+3 |
| Compression (socks, sleeves) | Venous return, oedema reduction | During and after effort |
| Sauna (15-20 min) | Relaxation, heat shock proteins | D+2 to D+3 (not immediately post-effort) |
Caution with cryotherapy during muscle-building phases: cold baths applied immediately after strength sessions can inhibit protein synthesis. Use them after races or intense cardio sessions instead.
Recovery nutrition
For a complete nutrition guide (before, during and after effort), see our Hyrox® nutrition guide. Here are the key recovery-specific points:
- Anabolic window (0-30 min): 20-40 g protein + fast carbs immediately after effort maximises muscle protein synthesis.
- Natural anti-inflammatories: omega-3 (salmon, sardines, walnuts), turmeric, ginger, red berries. Promote resolution of muscle inflammation.
- Collagen: 10-15 g hydrolysed collagen with vitamin C 30-60 min before training improves tendon and ligament recovery.
- Alcohol: disrupts protein synthesis and sleep quality. Avoid for 24-48 h post-race.
Planning your post-Hyrox® recovery week
After a Hyrox® race, full recovery typically takes 5 to 10 days depending on your fitness level and race intensity.
Post-race week 1
- D to D+2: complete rest or very light active recovery. Prioritise sleep and nutrition.
- D+3: first mobility session (30 min yoga or stretching).
- D+4 to D+5: very easy jog (20-30 min, conversational pace), foam rolling.
- D+6 to D+7: return to normal sessions if feeling good.
Signs of insufficient recovery
- Resting heart rate abnormally elevated (>5-8 bpm above baseline)
- Persistent fatigue, sleep disturbances
- Unexplained drop in motivation
- Prolonged muscle soreness (>5 days)
- Declining performance despite training
If you experience these signs, consider a full recovery week before resuming intensive training. Working with a Hyrox® coach can help plan optimal training and recovery cycles.


