⚡ Quick Answer — HYROX World Record
The current HYROX world record for Men’s Pro is 51:59, set by Alexander Rončević (Austria) at the Warsaw Major in April 2026 — the first time any man has broken the 52-minute barrier. The Women’s Pro world record stands at 54:25, set by Joanna Wietrzyk (Australia) at the same Warsaw Major. In Open, Rončević also holds the men’s record at 50:38 (Cologne, April 2024) and Lauren Weeks holds the women’s record at 55:38 (Washington DC, March 2025).
The HYROX world record has never moved faster than it is right now. At the Warsaw Major in April 2026, Alexander Rončević didn’t just break the men’s Pro record — he reclaimed it from Hidde Weersma just weeks after losing it, crossing the line in 51:59 and becoming the first man in history to finish under 52 minutes.
We compiled verified results from over 25,000 HYROX race performances across Pro, Open, Doubles, and Relay to bring you every current world record in one place — with context on who holds it, where it was set, and what it actually means for your own training targets.
All Current HYROX World Records at a Glance
Every HYROX world record listed below has been verified from official race results. Records are set exclusively at official HYROX World Series events using certified chip timing. For the most up-to-date records after major events, always cross-reference with the official HYROX website.
| Division | Athlete(s) | Time | Location | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men’s Pro | Alexander Rončević (AUT) | 51:59 | Warsaw Major | April 2026 |
| Women’s Pro | Joanna Wietrzyk (AUS) | 54:25 | Warsaw Major | April 2026 |
| Men’s Open | Alexander Rončević (AUT) | 50:38 | Cologne | April 2024 |
| Women’s Open | Lauren Weeks (USA) | 55:38 | Washington DC | March 2025 |
| Men’s Pro Doubles | Rončević / Wenisch | 47:40 | London (EMEA Champs) | March 2026 |
| Women’s Pro Doubles | Weeks / Tafuto | 52:11 | Warsaw Major | April 2026 |
| Men’s Open Doubles | Williamson / Eisenlauer | 47:57 | Berlin | 2025 |
| Women’s Open Doubles | Martin / Sheridan | 53:21 | Brisbane | April 2026 |
| Mixed Open Doubles | Learn / Fkiaras | 49:13 | Melbourne | December 2025 |
| Men’s Relay | Olsen / Røssland / Woods / White | 45:43 | London | December 2025 |
| Women’s Relay | Hill / Stockley / Geddes / Falconer | 51:26 | London | December 2025 |
| Mixed Relay | Ifversen / Bent / Wietrzyk / Botterill | 46:47 | Warsaw | April 2026 |
HYROX world records are broken multiple times per season. The times on this page were verified in June 2026, following the World Championships in Stockholm. Always check hyrox.com for the most current official records before referencing them.
Men’s Pro World Record — Alexander Rončević, 51:59

The current Men’s Pro HYROX world record belongs to Alexander Rončević of Austria, who crossed the line in 51:59 at the Warsaw Major in April 2026 — the first time any man had finished under 52 minutes in a HYROX Pro race. The performance reclaimed the record he had lost only weeks earlier.
The record had been on the move all season. Rončević held it at 53:15 (Hamburg, October 2025) until Hidde Weersma broke it at the EMEA Championships in London in March 2026, crossing in 52:42 to become the first man under 53 minutes. Rončević answered a few weeks later in Warsaw, taking the record back down to 51:59 — built on a standout 3:29 wall ball split that separated him from the rest of the field.
Despite holding the world record entering the 2026 World Championships in Stockholm (June 18–21), Rončević did not win the Elite 15 Singles title — Dylan Scott (USA) took the win in 53:47, with Rončević finishing 6th in 54:18. Rončević did claim a world title in Stockholm, however: he and Tim Wenisch won the Elite 15 Men’s Doubles in 48:57.37. See the full Stockholm results breakdown for what happened.
The Men’s Pro HYROX world record has improved by nearly 10 minutes since 2018, reflecting the rapid development of HYROX-specific training. The gap between a competitive age-group athlete and world record pace is large — but the path is well understood.
Women’s Pro World Record — Joanna Wietrzyk, 54:25
The Women’s Pro HYROX world record is held by Australian Joanna Wietrzyk with a time of 54:25, set at the Warsaw Major in April 2026. The performance capped an extraordinary season in which Wietrzyk won every Elite 15 Major — an unprecedented “Grand Slam” in HYROX history.
Wietrzyk had previously set the record at 56:03 in Phoenix in January 2026. She broke her own benchmark by over 90 seconds in Warsaw — a margin that signals the Women’s Pro field is still in rapid development. At 23 years old, she is widely considered the most complete HYROX athlete in the women’s field, combining elite running speed with exceptional station efficiency.
The Women’s Pro world record is now subject to 100 wall ball reps, following the rule change implemented from September 2024. Records set before that date used 75 reps and are not directly comparable. Like Rončević, Wietrzyk also entered the 2026 World Championships in Stockholm as the season’s fastest — but the Elite 15 Singles title went to Alyssa McElheny (USA), with Wietrzyk taking silver.
Open Division World Records
The Open division HYROX world record on the men’s side still belongs to Alexander Rončević — 50:38 set in Cologne in April 2024. What makes this number extraordinary is that the Open division uses lighter loads than Pro, which allows faster overall times. Rončević, who teaches primary school when not racing, set this mark as a demonstration of what is possible when running economy and station efficiency are optimized together.
Combined with his Pro world record (51:59, Warsaw Major), this makes Rončević the only athlete in HYROX history to simultaneously hold both the Men’s Pro and Men’s Open world records.
On the women’s side, Lauren Weeks set the Open record at 55:38 in Washington DC in March 2025 — the first Women’s Open record set under the new 100 wall ball standard. Weeks has publicly stated she believes she can go faster, making this one of the most likely records to fall in the near term.
| Division | Athlete | World Record | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| Men’s Open | Alexander Rončević (AUT) | 50:38 | Cologne, April 2024 |
| Women’s Open | Lauren Weeks (USA) | 55:38 | Washington DC, March 2025 |
Curious how your Open time compares to these benchmarks? The HYROX average time by age group article gives you realistic targets based on thousands of real race results — not just elite outliers.
Doubles Division World Records
The Doubles HYROX world record landscape is the most dynamic in the sport — records in this format fall multiple times per season as elite athletes pair up in new combinations. The Men’s Pro Doubles record of 47:40 set by Alexander Rončević and Tim Wenisch in London in March 2026 is particularly notable: it’s faster than the Men’s Open Doubles world record, and both athletes are individual world champions. Due to a new nationality rule taking effect next season, the pair’s win at the Stockholm World Championships in June 2026 was also the last time they will be permitted to race together — they closed out their partnership with the Elite 15 Men’s Doubles title in 48:57.37.
| Division | Athletes | World Record | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| Men’s Pro Doubles | Rončević / Wenisch | 47:40 | London, March 2026 |
| Women’s Pro Doubles | Weeks / Tafuto | 52:11 | Warsaw, April 2026 |
| Men’s Open Doubles | Williamson / Eisenlauer | 47:57 | Berlin, 2025 |
| Women’s Open Doubles | Martin / Sheridan | 53:21 | Brisbane, April 2026 |
| Mixed Open Doubles | Learn / Fkiaras | 49:13 | Melbourne, Dec 2025 |
Both Pro Doubles world record holders won their respective Elite 15 Doubles titles at the 2026 World Championships: Rončević & Wenisch (Men’s, 48:57.37) and Weeks & Tafuto (Women’s, 53:31.79). Neither pair broke their own world record at Stockholm — the championship times were slower than their record-setting performances earlier in the season.
For full details on how loads and formats work across all doubles categories, the HYROX divisions guide covers every format in depth.
Relay Division World Records
Relay HYROX world records represent the absolute ceiling of team coordination in the sport. Each of the four athletes completes two 1 km runs and two workout stations — meaning every transition and every handoff is a potential time loss or gain. The Men’s Relay record of 45:43, set in London in December 2025, is the fastest any HYROX team has completed a full race in any format.
| Division | Team | World Record | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| Men’s Relay | Olsen / Røssland / Woods / White | 45:43 | London, Dec 2025 |
| Women’s Relay | Hill / Stockley / Geddes / Falconer | 51:26 | London, Dec 2025 |
| Mixed Relay | Ifversen / Bent / Wietrzyk / Botterill | 46:47 | Warsaw, April 2026 |
How HYROX World Records Are Broken
Every HYROX world record shares the same underlying mechanics. The fastest athletes are not simply fitter — they have optimized three variables that most recreational athletes never fully address: running economy under fatigue, transition efficiency, and pacing strategy across all 8 rounds.
Records at the Pro level are typically broken one to three times per season, most often at flagship World Series events and Majors — London, Hamburg, Warsaw, Frankfurt, Chicago, and Dubai — where the strongest international fields converge. At the Open and age-group level, records fall more frequently as the sport attracts more competitive athletes each season.
HYROX world records can only be set at official World Series events with certified chip timing — not at regional qualifiers or local events. A fast time at a smaller event does not count as an official record regardless of how it compares numerically.
The three pillars behind every record performance: running pace management across 8 km (the fastest athletes maintain sub-4:00/km splits throughout), station execution with zero wasted movement, and the ability to produce near-maximal strength output after sustained cardiovascular stress. For a deep dive into running pace strategy, see the HYROX running pace guide.
How Does Your Time Compare?

The HYROX world record is not a realistic target for most athletes — and it should not be. What matters is understanding where your time sits relative to realistic division benchmarks, and which specific limiter is costing you the most minutes.
For Open Men, a finish under 1:15:00 is considered strong for a recreational athlete. Under 1:05:00 is competitive for age-group prizes at most events. For Open Women, under 1:20:00 is solid and under 1:12:00 is competitive at regional level. These benchmarks are based on global race data — not world record comparisons.
| Level | Open Men | Open Women |
|---|---|---|
| World Record | 50:38 | 55:38 |
| Elite / Top 1% | ~58:00–1:02:00 | ~1:05:00–1:10:00 |
| Competitive | 1:02:00–1:12:00 | 1:10:00–1:20:00 |
| Strong Recreational | 1:12:00–1:25:00 | 1:20:00–1:35:00 |
| Average | ~1:30:00 | ~1:35:00 |
For a full breakdown by age group and division, the HYROX average finishing time guide gives you precise benchmarks based on real race data. And if you want to estimate your own finish time before race day, the HYROX finish time estimator is the fastest way to set a realistic target.
3 Things Most Athletes Get Wrong About World Records
Understanding what the HYROX world record actually represents — and what it does not — is more useful than chasing it blindly. Most athletes misread these numbers in ways that hurt their training.
- Comparing Open and Pro records directly. The Men’s Open record (50:38) is faster than the Men’s Pro record (51:59) because Open uses lighter loads. They are not directly comparable. Pro is harder — the lighter load in Open allows faster overall times, not a lower standard of fitness.
- Ignoring the rule change context for Women’s records. All Women’s Open and Pro records set before September 2024 used 75 wall ball reps rather than 100. Pre-2024 women’s times are not comparable to current records. The benchmark effectively reset from that date.
- Assuming the world record holder always wins the World Championship. Stockholm 2026 proved otherwise — Rončević and Wietrzyk both held world records entering the event, and neither won the Elite 15 Singles title. Championship racing rewards tactics and execution on the day, not season-long times alone.
- Using world record splits as a training target. Elite athletes run sub-4:00/km on every segment. For most recreational athletes, that pace is unsustainable for a single kilometre — let alone eight. Use average station splits by division as a training benchmark, not world record data.
Quick Action Plan
Use this 5-step plan to put HYROX world record context to work for your own training.
- Identify your division and gender — find the relevant world record from the tables above and note the gap between that time and the competitive benchmark for your level.
- Use realistic benchmarks, not world records — set your race target based on age-group averages using the HYROX average time by age group guide.
- Identify your primary limiter — slow stations or slow runs? World record athletes are elite at both. Most recreational athletes have one obvious leak. Fix that first.
- Study the station splits — use the HYROX station times guide to see where the fastest athletes gain time relative to average. That is where your training investment should go.
- Lock in your next race — progress only happens with a start line ahead of you. Use HYTRACK to get alerted the moment tickets go on sale in your region before they sell out.
FAQ — HYROX World Record
What is the current HYROX world record?
The current Men’s Pro HYROX world record is 51:59, set by Alexander Rončević (Austria) at the Warsaw Major in April 2026 — the first sub-52-minute finish in HYROX history. The Women’s Pro record is 54:25, set by Joanna Wietrzyk (Australia) at the same Warsaw Major.
Who holds the HYROX world record for Men’s Open?
Alexander Rončević of Austria holds the Men’s Open HYROX world record at 50:38, set in Cologne in April 2024. Combined with his Pro record, this makes him the only athlete to simultaneously hold both the Men’s Pro and Men’s Open world records.
Is the Men’s Open record faster than the Pro record?
Yes — 50:38 (Open) is faster than 51:59 (Pro), but the comparison is not straightforward. Open uses lighter station loads, which reduces muscular fatigue and allows faster overall times. Pro is the harder format. The two records reflect different performance profiles, not a ranking of athlete quality.
Did Alexander Rončević win the 2026 World Championships?
No, not in Singles. Rončević entered Stockholm holding the men’s world record (51:59) but finished 6th in the Elite 15 Singles final (54:18), won by Dylan Scott in 53:47. Rončević did win a world title in Stockholm, however — he and Tim Wenisch claimed the Elite 15 Men’s Doubles title in 48:57.37, the same partnership that holds the Men’s Pro Doubles world record (47:40).
Has anyone run a sub-50 HYROX?
Not in an official sanctioned singles event as of June 2026. The current closest time is Alexander Rončević’s 51:59 in the Pro division — the same athlete also holds the closest Open time, at 50:38. In Doubles, Rončević and Wenisch’s 47:40 is already under 50 minutes for two athletes combined. Several analysts believe a sub-50 Pro singles finish could be theoretically possible within the next few seasons as training methodology and athlete depth continue to develop.
Where are HYROX world records usually broken?
HYROX world records are most often broken at flagship World Series events and Majors with the strongest international fields — London, Hamburg, Warsaw, Frankfurt, Chicago, and Dubai. Records can only be set at official World Series events with certified chip timing, not at regional qualifiers. No singles world record fell at the 2026 World Championships in Stockholm, despite both record holders racing — both Rončević and Wietrzyk finished off the top of the podium in Singles.
How do Women’s Open records compare before and after 2024?
From September 2024, HYROX changed the Women’s Open and Women’s Doubles standard from 75 wall ball reps to 100. This effectively reset the Women’s Open record baseline. Any time set before that date used a different standard and is not directly comparable to current records. Lauren Weeks’ 55:38 in March 2025 is the first official Women’s Open record under the current 100 rep standard.
What is a realistic HYROX time goal for a recreational athlete?
For most recreational athletes in Open, a realistic first-race target is between 1:20:00 and 1:40:00 depending on your fitness background. A strong recreational time is sub-1:15:00 for men and sub-1:20:00 for women. World record pace is not a useful personal benchmark — use the average finishing time guide for targets that are both motivating and achievable.
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