Pick almost any class workout and it's one of two formats: EMOM or AMRAP. They're the bread and butter of functional fitness — and most people use them interchangeably, which is a mistake, because they're built to do different jobs.
Every minute, on the minute
In an EMOM, the clock sets the pace. At the top of each minute you do a prescribed chunk of work — say 12 kettlebell swings — then you rest for whatever's left in that minute. Finish in 35 seconds and you get 25 seconds off. Finish in 50 and you get 10. The faster and cleaner you move, the more you rest.
That structure makes EMOM a pacing tool. The rest is forced, so it's almost impossible to redline early, which makes it brilliant for accumulating volume with good form, practising a skill while slightly fatigued, or building work capacity without falling apart. The format does the pacing discipline for you.
As many rounds as possible
In an AMRAP, you get a time cap — 12 minutes, 20 minutes — and a sequence of movements you repeat on a loop. Your score is the total rounds and reps you rack up. There's no built-in rest. Any rest you take, you choose, and it comes straight out of your score.
That makes AMRAP a pacing test. It hands you the entire time budget and asks how wisely you'll spend it. Go out too hot and you'll be standing around in minute eight watching your score stall. Pace it well and your last round looks like your first. AMRAP doesn't just build the engine — it exposes whether you know how to drive it.
So which one should you do?
They're not rivals — they're tools for different days. Reach for an EMOM when you want structure: skill work, controlled volume, a hard session that stays tidy. Reach for an AMRAP when you want a test: a number to chase, a benchmark to revisit, a real read on your pacing and your engine.
If you're newer, lean on EMOMs first. The enforced rest protects your form and quietly teaches you what a sustainable pace feels like — exactly the instinct you'll need the day someone hands you a 20-minute AMRAP and walks away. Whichever you pick, log the score. An EMOM you completed at a heavier load or an AMRAP with one more round is the clearest possible proof you're getting fitter.
One format paces you; the other tests your pacing. Use EMOMs to build the engine cleanly and AMRAPs to find out how well you can drive it — then keep both scores so you can watch the numbers climb.