hyrox race photos

Hyrox Race Photos & Results: How to Find Yours

Find your HYROX® race photos and results fast. Here's where to access splits, finish times, and photos after your event.

RX
ROXBASE Team
··11 min read·

After the Finish Line: Finding Your HYROX® Photos and Results

You crossed the finish line. The timer stopped. Now you want two things: your official time and a photo that proves you were there.

Both are available — usually within hours of your race — but neither lives in one obvious place. HYROX® results are published through the app and the official website, photos arrive from a network of event photographers, and your chip-timing data goes deeper than a single finish time. This guide covers where to find everything, how to read what the data actually tells you, and how to turn your results into a concrete plan for the next race.

If you are still building toward your first race and want to understand how the event works, the HYROX® race day guide covers the full day-of experience from warm-up to finish line.


Where to Find Your Official HYROX® Results

The HYROX® App

The fastest place to access your results is the HYROX® app, available for iOS and Android. Results are published directly to the app — typically within a few hours of race completion, and in most cases before the event day has ended. You do not need to wait for an email or refresh a website repeatedly.

Once you are logged into your athlete account, open your race history. Your most recent event appears at the top. The app displays your official finish time, division placement, age group placement, and — critically — your full split breakdown across every station and every run segment.

If your time does not appear immediately, this usually means chip data is still being processed for your wave. Give it a few hours before assuming a problem. If your result is missing after 24 hours, contact the event organizer directly using the details in your confirmation email.[1]

The HYROX® Website

The official HYROX® results portal at HYROX®.com provides searchable results by event. You can look up your own time or search for any other athlete by name. The website results typically mirror the app data and are useful if you want to share a direct link to your result with friends or on social media.

The website also allows you to compare your performance across multiple events if you have raced more than once. Athletes building toward a time goal can use this view to track improvement across race cycles.

For a detailed walkthrough of how to search the results portal, including how to find your placement within your division and age group, the HYROX® results lookup guide covers the full search process.

The Event Page and Email Confirmation

Some HYROX® events publish a temporary results portal specific to that race, separate from the main HYROX®.com results database. This is more common for newer regional events or events run by local organizers under HYROX® license. Your post-race confirmation email will typically include a link to the specific results page for that event.

Keep your confirmation email accessible until results have been published and verified. It contains the event organizer's contact details, which you will need if there is a discrepancy in your recorded time or splits.


Where to Find Your Race Photos

Official Event Photographers

HYROX® events partner with professional photographers who are positioned throughout the venue — at station entries and exits, along the running track, and near the finish line. This coverage means most athletes get at least 10 to 15 usable shots, often more.

The photos are not released immediately. The typical timeline is 48 to 72 hours after the event, though some events release galleries faster. Watch for an email from the event or from the photographer directly — this is usually how you are notified that your gallery is available.

Photos are searchable by bib number on the photographer's platform. Enter your bib number and you will see all images associated with your timing chip data. This is more reliable than searching by name, which can produce mismatches in large events with similar names.[2]

Most galleries offer free preview images with a watermark, with paid downloads available in high resolution. Pricing varies by photographer and package. Some events include a fixed number of free digital downloads as part of the entry package — check your registration confirmation to see if this applies to your event.

Social Media

The official HYROX® social accounts — @HYROX® on Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook — publish race highlights from events within 24 to 48 hours. If you were photographed near the front of a wave, finished a station in a notable way, or were caught in a dramatic moment on the track, you may appear in official HYROX® content.

Search the event-specific hashtag, typically formatted as #HYROX®cityname (e.g., #HYROX®London, #HYROX®Chicago), to find community-shared photos and videos. Spectators and fellow athletes frequently post content that official channels miss — particularly candid shots mid-station that professional photographers do not always capture.

If you had a spectator attending your race, ask them to share any photos to the event hashtag. Other athletes often find and comment on photos of themselves through community hashtag searches.[3]

ROXBASE Profile

Your ROXBASE athlete profile aggregates your public HYROX® results and can be shared with training partners or doubles partners. If you are looking to find a training group or competition partner, a completed profile with verifiable race results is one of the strongest signals you can offer. Understanding your pacing data is also useful when evaluating a potential partner — the HYROX® beginners guide covers how new athletes can set realistic time expectations that make partner matching straightforward.


How to Read Your Results: A Station-by-Station Breakdown

Your finish time is the headline, but the split data underneath it is where the actual information lives. HYROX® chip timing records every station split and every run split individually, which means your results page is a detailed performance map of your entire race.

Understanding the Split Structure

A standard HYROX® result contains:

  • Run 1 through Run 8: Your 1 km run time for each running segment
  • Station 1 through Station 8: Your time at each functional station (SkiErg, Sled Push, Sled Pull, Burpee Broad Jump, Rowing, Farmers Carry, Sandbag Lunges, Wall Balls)
  • Total running time: Sum of all eight run segments
  • Total station time: Sum of all eight station times
  • Overall time: Total running time + total station time + any transitions

This structure lets you identify exactly where your race was won or lost. A finish time of 85 minutes looks identical on a leaderboard to another athlete's 85 minutes — but the split breakdown might show one athlete ran powerfully and struggled at stations, while the other moved slowly through runs but completed stations efficiently. These are completely different athletes who need completely different training prescriptions.

Spotting Fade Patterns in Run Splits

The most common structural problem in HYROX® races is run fade — run splits that start fast and slow progressively as the race goes on. Compare your Run 1 time to your Run 7 and Run 8 times. If you lost 45 seconds or more per kilometer across the race, aerobic base or pacing strategy is the primary limiter.

For detailed guidance on how to set run paces that hold across all eight segments, the HYROX® pacing strategy guide covers target pace ranges by finish time goal, pacing strategy errors that most athletes make in their first race, and how to build a negative-split approach.

Identifying Station Inefficiencies

Slow station splits come from two sources: load capacity (you were not strong enough to move through the station at the required weight) and technique (you moved inefficiently, rested excessively, or broke up reps in a way that cost time).

Look at your station splits relative to your run fitness. If your run splits are competitive for your finish time but your station splits are disproportionately slow, the problem is station-specific — either strength, technique, or both. If the opposite is true, your running is the limiter.

For athletes who regularly lose time at specific stations, the HYROX® training mistakes guide identifies the most common errors athletes carry into races from training — including common form breakdowns that are fast in the gym but slow on race day.


How to Use Your Results to Plan Better Training

Results data is most valuable when you use it to make specific, actionable training decisions. Here is how to go from splits to a training plan.

Calculate Your Running-to-Station Time Ratio

Add up your total running time and your total station time separately. Most well-prepared athletes in the 75–90 minute range will have running and station times within about 10 minutes of each other. A large imbalance — say, running time is 40 minutes and station time is 50 minutes — signals a clear priority for your next training block.

Set a Specific Target for Each Segment

Based on your splits, identify the three segments where you lost the most time relative to your overall pace. These are your priority stations and run positions for training. Rather than a vague goal to "get better at wall balls," commit to a specific time target: e.g., completing 100 wall balls in under 5:30 without breaking. This is the kind of target you can train to directly.[4]

Assess Pacing Discipline

Calculate the standard deviation of your run splits. If your run splits vary widely — some under 4:30/km, some over 5:30/km — you are not pacing consistently. Consistent pacing in HYROX® almost always leads to a faster finish time than an aggressive start that results in late-race fade.

Plan Your Next Training Block

With your split data, you can build a targeted training block that addresses your actual limiters rather than training what is already working. The HYROX® training plan guide covers how to structure a 12- to 16-week build that periodizes running base, station strength, and race-specific conditioning in sequence.

If you are in your first race cycle and want a foundation to build from, the beginners guide to HYROX® covers how to build from zero HYROX® experience toward your first finish, including how to set realistic first-race time goals based on your current fitness markers.

Use Results to Calibrate Your Division

If you finished your Open race significantly under the median Open time for your gender and age group, Pro may be the appropriate next step — but only if your split data shows that the station loads were not a limiting factor. If your station splits were competitive but your run splits were slow, continue in Open and focus on running. If your station splits were fast and your run splits were strong, you have the profile to attempt Pro. Check the what is HYROX® guide for the full breakdown of division load differences.[5]


After the Race: Sharing and Saving Your Data

Saving Your Results

HYROX® results are accessible through the app and website indefinitely, but it is worth saving a screenshot or PDF of your full split breakdown for offline reference. Athlete profiles have occasionally had data migration issues during platform updates. A local copy of your splits means you have the reference even if the platform changes.

Sharing on Social Media

The HYROX® app includes a share function that generates a branded results card with your time and key splits. This is the cleanest way to share your result rather than a screenshot. If you are posting splits to social, include the event hashtag — it contributes to the community record of the race and helps other athletes who are researching typical times for that event and city.

Submitting Corrections

If your official result contains an error — wrong division, missing station split, or a time that does not match your watch data — contact the event organizer within 48 to 72 hours of results publication. Corrections become significantly harder to process after this window, as the timing data from the event provider is typically archived.


Frequently Asked Questions

How long after a HYROX® race are results published?

In most cases, results appear in the HYROX® app within a few hours of race completion, with the majority of athletes seeing their results before the event day is over. Wave results are typically processed sequentially. If your wave ran late in the day, results may not appear until the following morning.

Where do I find my bib number to search for photos?

Your bib number is on your race bib and is also listed in your confirmation email and in the HYROX® app under your registration details. The number printed on the front of your bib is the one that photographers use for keywording — search this exact number on the photographer's platform for best results.

Can I see other athletes' split times, not just my own?

Yes. The HYROX® results portal at HYROX®.com allows you to search by name or bib number for any athlete who raced at a given event. This is useful for comparing your splits against athletes who finished near you in the overall results, or for reviewing the splits of athletes you train with.

What should I do if my result appears wrong?

First, verify the issue is not a display delay — give it 24 hours after results publication before concluding there is an error. If the problem persists, contact the event organizer directly using the contact details in your registration email. Provide your bib number, full name, division, and a description of the discrepancy. If you have GPS or heart rate data from a watch, this can help the organizer cross-reference against timing chip records.

How do I access results from past HYROX® races I competed in?

Your full race history, including split data from every HYROX® event you have completed, is stored in your HYROX® athlete profile in the app. Log in and open race history. Events are listed chronologically. If a past result is missing, it may have been registered under a different email address — if you have changed emails, contact HYROX® support to consolidate your history under one account.


Sources

  1. HYROX® chip timing data is typically transmitted from the event timing provider to the results platform in real time during the race. Post-race processing finalizes and publishes the data, a step that usually takes between 1 and 4 hours depending on event size and the volume of athletes completing simultaneously.

  2. Official HYROX® event photographers use bib number recognition software alongside manual keywording to associate images with athletes. Bib-based searches are more reliable than name searches because they rely on visual identification from the race itself rather than registration data matching.

  3. Community hashtag activity at HYROX® events has grown substantially as the format has expanded. Major city events now generate thousands of user posts per event day across Instagram and TikTok, making the event hashtag a genuine secondary source for race photos beyond the official gallery.

  4. Target-based training for individual HYROX® stations is most effective when the targets are derived from your own race splits rather than generic benchmarks. Generic benchmarks assume an average fitness profile; your personal splits tell you your specific capacity under race fatigue conditions, which is more relevant data for training prescription.

  5. The load difference between Open and Pro is substantial — Pro sled push is typically 40 kg heavier for men and proportionally heavier for women. Athletes who have only trained at Open loads and attempt Pro without specific training at Pro-level loads face a meaningful injury and performance risk at those stations.

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