Home boxing conditioning plan

Boxing conditioning you can do at home

Build the engine, power and footwork behind the boxer — mostly at home and outdoors. Roadwork and conditioning for the rounds, fast feet for movement, and strength for power, with very little equipment.

Train the athlete behind the boxer

Boxing is rounds of repeated output, fast feet and explosive power. This plan builds the physical engine behind that — roadwork and conditioning intervals for stamina, footwork drills for speed, and strength work for power that holds up late.

It's physical preparation that complements your skill work with a boxing coach — your in-ring craft stays with them; this builds the body that carries it.

Minimal equipment, done at home and outdoors

Roadwork, footwork and bodyweight conditioning need almost nothing, and the strength work runs on a pair of dumbbells. Where a heavy bag would normally feature, your coach names a substitute so you're never stuck.

Log your sessions and your coach guides progression — building the engine and power while keeping enough recovery to stay sharp.

A real boxing plan

A real boxing conditioning plan, built by your coach

This is an actual plan from a GetMyCoach coach — read why it's built this way, then see the first weeks day by day. Yours is built around your level, your gear and your week.

Example plan
Your coach

Golden Age Heavyweight Coach

Boxing coach

I am your Golden Age Heavyweight Coach. We will build your engine the way the old heavyweights did - roadwork, bag rounds, rope and footwork, and honest functional strength - with mobility to keep you durable. A physical-preparation coach in the classic heavyweight tradition - the engine, work capacity and durability behind the boxer. Building a deep aerobic base, heavy-bag work capacity, footwork, functional strength and injury-prevention mobility for boxing.

Most weeks lead with roadwork and bag-round conditioning, add footwork and functional strength, and protect it all with mobility. A calibration week sets honest effort and movement quality before pushing; volume builds steadily, then deloads so the work sticks.

1

Roadwork builds the engine every boxer relies on

2

Heavy-bag rounds for work capacity, paced like rounds

3

Footwork and rope for rhythm and foot speed

Why this plan

Why this plan fits you

Goal
Boxing Conditioning
Experience
Intermediate
Training days
4 / week
Equipment
Dumbbells, Outdoor running space, Resistance bands, Pull-up bar, Floor space for mat work, Bodyweight-only space

This plan is built for your goal: Boxing Conditioning. It's matched to intermediate experience and 4 training days a week, so the workload fits where you are now. and uses the equipment you have (running shoes, dumbbells, run route and resistance bands). Golden Age Heavyweight Coach tuned the volume so progress stays steady.

Your split

Why your week is built this way

You're training a Boxing Roadwork / Boxing Bag Conditioning / Strength & power / Mobility & injury prevention split. Grouping the week this way lets each muscle group be trained hard, then fully recover before its next session.

1Boxing Roadwork

A focused session targeting this part of your week.

2Boxing Bag Conditioning

A focused session targeting this part of your week.

3Strength & power

A focused session targeting this part of your week.

4Mobility & injury prevention

A focused session targeting this part of your week.

Exercise choices

Why these exercises

Build a deep aerobic base with even-paced roadwork, develop work capacity with steady heavy-bag rounds (output for conditioning, not skill), sharpen footwork with rope and movement drills, and back it with functional, mostly bodyweight strength. Progress by adding rounds and minutes before intensity, then deload.

Progression

How you'll get stronger

Progressive overload

Alright, champ, listen up! This isn't just a workout; it's a blueprint to build your boxing engine. Each week, I'm going to challenge you a bit more, steadily increasing the volume and intensity of your roadwork, bag rounds, and functional strength exercises. We're climbing, building your stamina, power, and footwork, ensuring you're always ready for the next bell.

For example

When the work starts to feel easier, add reps inside 12–15, then a small amount of weight — only when your form and recovery stay solid.

Each set lists an RPE/RIR target — how many reps you should have left in the tank. Higher RPE means closer to failure; it keeps your effort honest without guessing.

Rhythm

Frequency & recovery

Why this many days

You selected 4 training sessions per week. Your plan blends roadwork and heavy-bag conditioning, footwork and agility, strength and power, and mobility for injury prevention — physical preparation for boxing.

Rest & recovery

Remember, a fighter isn't built in the gym alone; recovery is just as crucial as the work itself. I've built in dedicated rest days and lighter weeks to let your body heal, adapt, and come back stronger, preventing injuries and keeping you sharp.

Day by day

The first 4 weeks, day by day

Browse each week day by day — rest days included, so you see the full rhythm.

AI Coach Assistant

Ask about your session, swap an exercise, or change your week

Your week
Boxing Bag Conditioning

Today's Guidance

40 min

Today's training

This session moves your plan forward.

Main session

Boxing Bag Conditioning

~40 min · RPE 6–7 (vigorous to hard)

The main set is today's training — this is where your engine actually improves, so settle in and hold the target.

Today — how to progress: Hold today's target pace and effort. Once it feels comfortably repeatable, nudge the pace or duration up next time.

  1. Step 1 of 3 · Warm-upWarm-upView

    Coach guidance

    10 min: easy movement, light shadow movement and a few easy bag touches to raise your heart rate.

    Target effort
    RPE 3–4 (light)

    Log your result

    Create your free account to save your training.

  2. Step 2 of 3 · Main workNow

    Steady cardio — your choice of machine

    Coach guidance

    • Build work capacity and conditioning on the bag — steady, repeatable rounds that train your engine and output.
    • 6 rounds of 3 min a strong, repeatable output on the bag / 1 min rest (RPE 6–7). Keep a consistent output across every round — pace it like rounds, not a…
    • Where (your choice): Heavy bag · Free-standing bag · Aqua / pole bag · Shadow boxing (no bag)
    • Progression: We add a round (or hold rounds and lift the output) as the weeks build, then deload to recover the hands and shoulders.
    • Targets: RPE 6–7 · upper zone 3
    Target effort
    RPE 6–7 (vigorous to hard)

    Log your result

    Create your free account to save your training.

  3. Step 3 of 3 · CooldownCool-downView

    Coach guidance

    6 min easy movement and light breathing until you recover.

    Target effort
    RPE 2–3 (very light to light)

    Log your result

    Create your free account to save your training.

Frequently asked questions

Is this boxing coaching or fitness?
It's physical preparation — conditioning, strength and power, footwork and mobility for boxing. It complements your work with a boxing coach rather than replacing it; your in-ring skill work stays with them.
What equipment do I need?
Very little. Roadwork, rope-style footwork and bodyweight conditioning need almost nothing; a pair of dumbbells covers the strength work. Where a heavy bag would feature, your coach names a substitute.
I'm not a competitive boxer — is that okay?
Yes. Whether you box for fitness or train seriously, the plan is built around your conditioning level and the days you can train.
Is it free?
Yes — GetMyCoach is free during early access. Build a plan and start training, no invite needed.

This is an example plan for illustration only — it is not medical advice and is not personalized to your injuries, limitations, or training history. Build your own plan to get coaching tailored to you.

Build your boxing plan

Tell your coach your level and your gear, and preview a boxing conditioning plan built for you — free during early access.