Good Hyrox Time for a 50 Year Old (50-54) — Open + Pro Benchmarks
Around 14% slower than the open baseline. Strength holds best; long-run aerobic ceiling lowers.
From 50, athletes typically lose about 14% off the open baseline. Lifters who started Hyrox after 50 often hold strong sled and lunge splits but struggle with the 8 km running cumulative load. The fix is more Z2 running, not more strength.
These benchmarks scale the 25-34 population baseline by a factor of 1.140×. The slowdown comes mostly from running pace, not station output.
Hyrox finish times at 50
Total race-time benchmarks by performance level and division. Times include 1 km running × 8, all 8 stations, and roughly 5 minutes of total transition time.
| Level | Open Men | Open Women | Pro Men | Pro Women |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner | 1:51:11 | 2:04:33 | 1:46:09 | 1:59:21 |
| Average | 1:28:15 | 1:38:37 | 1:24:24 | 1:34:39 |
| Competitive | 1:19:48 | 1:29:09 | 1:16:31 | 1:25:36 |
| Elite | 1:07:22 | 1:14:58 | 1:04:35 | 1:12:15 |
Beginner = bottom ~25% of finishers in band. Average = population median. Competitive = top ~25%. Elite = top ~5-10%.
Use the calculator with your real numbers
Drop your 5K time, bench press, deadlift, and bodyweight into the calculator and get a predicted finish time, station-by-station splits, and a peer benchmark for your level.
Open the calculator →How the 50-year-old curve works
Hyrox aging follows the same pattern as endurance running. Output stays high into the late 30s, then race-day pace starts to fall about 1% per year through the 40s, accelerating to roughly 2% per year through the 50s.
What does not follow that curve is strength. Sled push, sled pull, and wall ball times age 30-50% slower than running pace. The implication for 50-54 athletes: defend your running base. A masters athlete who keeps running 30-40 km per week often holds a competitive Hyrox time long after peers who only lift have fallen off.
Training priorities at 50
- Z2 running 2-3x/week — the single highest-leverage masters intervention.
- One weekly threshold session — keeps the lactate ceiling from collapsing.
- 2x/week strength — heavy enough to keep sled output, brief enough to recover from.
- Recovery emphasis — sleep, protein at 1.6-1.8 g/kg, and one full rest day weekly.
For a structured plan tuned to your level, the intermediate plan works for most 50-54 year-olds. If you're new to structured training, start with the beginner plan.