HYROX Geneva 2026
8 kilometres of running, 8 strength stations, one question: will you be ready on 9 October? The complete guide, by a Geneva coach.

HYROX returns to Geneva from 9 to 11 October 2026, at Palexpo. It's the second edition in French-speaking Switzerland, after a first that drew over 10,000 participants in 2025. On the programme: 8 km of running broken up by 8 strength stations. A regular athlete finishes in 1h30 to 1h45. And the good news, you don't need a specialised gym to prepare for it.
What does a HYROX actually involve?
The concept is simple to understand, and much harder to live through.
- 8 kilometres of running in total,
- split into 8 laps of 1 km,
- each lap followed by a strength station.
No complicated technical movements: push, pull, carry, row, run. The trap is the accumulation. Pushing a sled fresh is fine. Pushing it after 6 km and four stations is another world entirely.
- It's not CrossFit: no technique, no continuous max intensity.
- It's not a marathon: 8 km, but broken up by strength efforts.
- It's strength endurance, and it rewards balance.

The 8 HYROX stations in Geneva, in order
Tap a station for the load and the move that changes everything. Switch between Open and Pro. In the Open category, women's and men's loads below.
Penalties to know: +15 s per missed rep, 2 min for a false start, and a forgotten running lap can cost you disqualification. Count your laps.
On these eight stations, none requires any special talent. What makes the difference is knowing which one costs you the most, you specifically. I spot that from the very first session, and that's what we work on first.

Where to train for HYROX in Geneva?
The event is at Palexpo. But to prepare for it, there are several options in Geneva, and one truth no one mentions.

- CrossFit WaterField, in Plan-les-Ouates.
- Pur(e) Sport Club, in Geneva.
- CrossFit 1163, in Etoy (Vaud).
- The lake waterfront, to lock in your pace on repeated 1 km efforts.
- The Salève climbs or the Old Town stairs, to simulate the sleds.
- Parc La Grange or the Bastions, for running under fatigue.
Here's what no one tells you: a HYROX box isn't essential. Most stations can be reproduced in any gym.
- The sled push: heavy walking lunges, or pushing a switched-off treadmill.
- The sled pull: heavy cable rows, deadlifts.
- The ski erg: straight-arm pulldowns on the high cable, in long sets.
- The wall balls: dumbbell or kettlebell thrusters.
That's exactly how Nicolas prepares his clients, in the gym in Versoix (Hybrid Gym) and Servette (RJ Training), or at home, with the equipment available.
People often tell me 'I can't do HYROX, I don't have access to the machines.' It's the opposite. 90% of the work is done with regular weights and a bit of imagination. The official equipment, you discover on race day.

Preparing for your HYROX in Geneva in 12 weeks
12 weeks for a regular athlete, 16 if you're starting further back. There are still months ahead and the event is in October: you have time to do it properly.
01Weeks 1 to 4: the base+
Build the engine. Lots of easy running, general strength work, learning the movements. Volume before intensity.
02Weeks 5 to 8: the pace+
We introduce running under fatigue (1 km right after a station) and ramp up specific intensity.
03Weeks 9 to 11: the specific work+
Partial simulations, working on transitions and the weak points spotted at the start of the cycle.
04Week 12: the taper+
We ease off, reduced volume, arriving fresh and rested on race day.
Running 1 km fresh takes 5 minutes. Running it after a sled, legs full of lactic acid, is a different exercise. That's THE skill to train. Typical session: one heavy station, then 1 km at your target pace, and repeat.
Never go out too fast. Aim for your half-marathon pace, not your 5 km pace. If you blow up after the sleds, you started too hard.

A 12-week plan is a framework, not a bible. Yours depends on your life, your schedule, your joints. My job is to adjust it week after week. A programme that's too rigid is the best way to get injured.

The mindset, and the mistakes that cost you
HYROX isn't a suffering contest. Those who finish well are the most clear-headed, not the toughest with pain.
Around the 5th or 6th km, almost everyone has doubts. It's normal, and it's manageable.
- Break it down: one piece at a time, never '3 stations to go.'
- The transition zone is a reset: active walking, three breaths, shoulders relaxed.
- Run your race, not other people's.
- Miscounting your laps (minutes lost, even disqualification).
- Neglecting grip: forearms fried, and the carries become a nightmare.
- Wrong shoes: no carbon plate, no heavy sole, what you mainly need is grip.
- Trying something new on race day: everything gets broken in during training.
Keeping a cool head, breathing, sticking to your plan: I work on this with my clients as much as the physical side. That's often what separates those who finish proud from those who finish broken.

Preparing for HYROX with Nicolas
Let's be clear: Nicolas isn't a 'certified HYROX coach,' and will never claim to be. He's a personal trainer and strength and conditioning coach in Geneva with over 8 years of experience, an instructor at a sports school and a former examiner. And that's exactly what gets you to the start line ready, without burning out.
- A plan built for you, not a fixed PDF.
- Coaching that adapts week after week.
- A human approach: arriving fit, and wanting it.

HYROX Geneva FAQ
Where can you do HYROX in Geneva?+
What does a HYROX involve?+
How much does a HYROX race cost?+
Is HYROX harder than CrossFit?+
Is HYROX harder than a marathon?+
How long does a HYROX take?+
Do you have to be an athlete to take part?+
How much preparation time do you need?+
Can you do it as a team?+
