Hyrox has launched a Science Advisory Council and released its first report as the fitness-racing powerhouse pushes to become an event in the Olympics
After spending the last eight years sprinting from heart-pumping hobby to global phenomenon, Hyrox just added a new layer: science.
The fast-growing fitness racing brand has established the Hyrox Science Advisory Council (SAC) and published its first Science of Hyrox Report, a move that signals the sport is gearing up for something bigger than mass participation.
Hyrox has its eyes on becoming an Olympic event by 2032, and it’s bringing in leading academics and practitioners to help make the case, guiding research that supports athlete development, safety and performance.
The timing aligns with a broader trend in the fitness and wellness space, with brands increasingly forming internal science councils and tapping researchers, physiologists and medical advisors to validate their approach and strengthen credibility.
Hyrox says its own council, which launched this week at Hyrox London and is chaired by Ralf Iwan, head of the Hyrox365 Academy, will play a foundational role in shaping the sport’s long-term evolution.
credit: Hyrox
“As Hyrox continues to evolve into a globally recognized competitive sport, its growth must be underpinned by rigorous, evidence-based research and inclusive performance science,” Iwan said. “This council comprises a distinguished panel of leading academic experts from diverse fields and institutions around the world and I am looking forward to the groundbreaking work ahead and the invaluable contributions this council will make to the scientific foundation of Hyrox.”
“Together, we will drive innovation, enhance understanding, and elevate the sport we are all so passionate about,” Iwan added.
The group includes experts from Manchester Metropolitan University, AUT in New Zealand, ETH Zurich and Loughborough University and together will produce its annual report, host a Symposium and oversee up to five research projects.
Dr. Adam Storey of the Sports Performance Research Institute of New Zealand at AUT said the sport’s standardization is fundamental and gives Hyrox scientific credibility.
“That’s what allows data to accumulate and insights to deepen over time,” Dr. Storey, a self-described “athlete-scientist,” said. “It’s the same principle that made marathon running or Olympic lifting global benchmarks. Through the Science Advisory Council, we’re turning competition into data.”
Their first major deep dive will be presented at the Hyrox Coaches Summit in March 2026.
Building on the work of the SAC, Hyrox director of sport Mintra Tilly and Elite 15 coach Anthony Peressini will help translate the research into application for athletes and event design, integrating those insights into the Hyrox365 Academy and broader coaching system.
One of the report’s key findings confirms that running is the primary performance driver in Hyrox. In a simulated race, more than half of the median 86-minute finish time came from the run segments, and faster athletes showed higher VO2 max and lower body-fat percentages.
The report also highlights growing evidence that concurrent training models like Hyrox deliver benefits across ages, with several studies showing especially strong improvements in cardiovascular health, strength and functional fitness among middle-aged and older adults.