Most World's Strongest Woman Titles
Athletes with the most World's Strongest Woman championship titles.
Most World's Strongest Woman Titles is topped by Aneta Florczyk with 4 titles.
World's Strongest Woman is the premier title in women's strongman. As the women's side of the sport has grown into a fully professional circuit, a small group of athletes has separated itself by winning the WSW crown more than once. Repeat champions represent the rarest breed of strongwoman: competitors who combine peak strength, event versatility, competition strategy, and longevity at the highest level.
Winning World's Strongest Woman once requires everything to go right across a grueling multi-day competition. Winning it multiple times demands a level of sustained excellence that transcends any single performance, requiring athletes to adapt to evolving competition formats, new events, and the constant emergence of hungry challengers.
| # | Athlete | Country | Result | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Aneta Florczyk |
|
4 titles | 2003,2005,2006,2008 |
| 2 | Rebecca Roberts |
|
3 titles | 2021,2023,2024 |
| 3 | Donna Moore |
|
3 titles | 2016,2017,2019 |
| 4 | Andrea Thompson |
|
2 titles | 2018,2025 |
| 5 | Olga Liashchuk |
|
2 titles | 2017,2022 |
| 6 | Jill Mills |
|
2 titles | 2001,2002 |
| 7 | Annabelle Chapman |
|
1 title | 2021 |
| 8 | Jessica Fithen |
|
1 title | 2019 |
| 9 | Brooke Sousa |
|
1 title | 2018 |
| 10 | Britteny Cornelius |
|
1 title | 2016 |
World's Strongest Woman Champions: The Most Titles Won
The history of World's Strongest Woman is increasingly defined by its repeat champions. Donna Moore established the early benchmark with back-to-back titles, setting a standard of all-around dominance that the next generation has chased. Andrea Thompson and Olga Liaschuk pushed the event versatility and raw strength required to win at the top, while a wave of younger competitors has driven the qualifying standard higher year over year. Each champion has helped legitimize WSW as the defining contest in women's strongman.
The WSW format has matured rapidly. As the women's field has deepened, competitions have standardized around the same core events that define the men's side: the deadlift, atlas stones, log press, and farmer's walk, scaled to the women's division. This convergence means modern WSW champions are tested across the full breadth of strongman rather than a narrow slice of events, making multi-title runs a genuine measure of complete strength.
What unites all multiple WSW champions is their ability to perform consistently across diverse events. World's Strongest Woman is not a specialist's competition. An athlete who dominates one event but falters in others will not accumulate enough points to win. The champions on this list excelled because they had no significant weaknesses, could manage fatigue across multiple days of competition, and possessed the competitive intelligence to know when to conserve energy and when to push for maximum points.

