Alysa Liu

Alysa Liu
Alysa Liu at the 2025 World Championships
Born (2005-08-08) August 8, 2005
Clovis, California,
United States
EducationUniversity of California, Los Angeles
HometownRichmond, California
Height1.58 m (5 ft 2 in)
Figure skating career
Country United States
DisciplineWomen's singles
CoachPhillip DiGuglielmo
Massimo Scali
Skating clubSt. Moritz Skating Club, Oakland
Began skating2010
Highest WS2nd (2021–22)
Medal record
World Championships
2025 Boston Singles
2022 Montpellier Singles
U.S. Championships
2019 Detroit Singles
2020 Greensboro Singles
2025 Wichita Singles
World Team Trophy
2025 Tokyo Team
World Junior Championships
2020 Tallinn Singles
Junior Grand Prix Final
2019–20 Turin Singles
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese劉美賢
Simplified Chinese刘美贤
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinLiú Měixián

Alysa Liu (born August 8, 2005) is an American figure skater. She is the 2025 World champion, 2022 World bronze medalist, 2021 Nebelhorn Trophy champion, 2021 Lombardia Trophy champion, and a two-time U.S. national champion (2019, 2020). At age 16, she competed in the 2022 Winter Olympics, placing sixth. At the junior level, Liu is the 2020 World Junior bronze medalist, the 2019–20 Junior Grand Prix Final silver medalist, a two-time Junior Grand Prix champion, and the 2018 U.S. junior national champion.

Liu became the youngest-ever U.S. women's national champion when she won her first title at age 13. At age 14, she became the youngest skater to win two senior national titles. Liu is the first woman to win two consecutive U.S. titles since Ashley Wagner in 2012 and 2013. She is also the first woman to win the junior and senior titles back-to-back since Mirai Nagasu in 2008. When Liu won the 2025 World Championships in Boston, she became the first U.S. woman to win the world title in 19 years since Kimmie Meissner in 2006.

An accomplished jumper, Liu was the first American junior women's singles skater to successfully complete a triple Axel in international competition, the first American woman to land a quadruple jump, the first woman to complete both a quadruple jump and triple Axel in the same program, and the first woman to land a triple axel in combination with a triple toe loop in the short program. In 2019, Liu was named to the inaugural Time 100 Next list.