List of current world boxing champions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of current male world boxing champions. Since at least John L. Sullivan, in the late 19th century, there have been world champions in professional boxing. The first of the current organizations to award a world title was the World Boxing Association (WBA), then known as the National Boxing Association (NBA), when it sanctioned its first title fight in 1921 between Jack Dempsey and Georges Carpentier for the world heavyweight championship.

There are now four major sanctioning bodies in professional boxing. The official rules and regulations of the WBA,[1] World Boxing Council (WBC),[2] International Boxing Federation (IBF),[3] and World Boxing Organization (WBO)[4] all recognize each other in their rankings and title unification rules. Each of these organizations sanction and regulate championship bouts and award world titles. American boxing magazine The Ring began awarding world titles in 1922.

There are 18 weight divisions. To compete in a division, a boxer's weight must not exceed the upper limit. Manny Pacquiao has won world championships in eight weight divisions, more than any other boxer in history. The Klitschko brothers, Vitali and Wladimir, held all four major titles in the heavyweight division from 2011 to 2013; they were the first brothers to hold versions of the heavyweight championship at the same time.[5]

Championships

When a champion, for reasons beyond his control such as an illness or injury, is unable to defend his title within the normal mandatory time, the sanctioning bodies may order an interim title bout and award the winner an interim championship. The WBA and WBC have often changed the status of their inactive champions to a "Champion in Recess" or "Champion Emeritus".

World Boxing Association

The World Boxing Association (WBA) was founded in 1921 as the National Boxing Association (NBA), a national regulating body of the United States. On August 23, 1962, the NBA became the WBA, which today has its head office in Panama.[6] According to WBA championship rules, when a champion also holds a title of one of the other three major sanctioning bodies in an equivalent weight division, that boxer is granted a special recognition of "Unified Champion", and is given more time between mandatory title defenses. The WBA Championships Committee and President may also designate a champion as a "Super Champion" or "Undisputed Champion" in exceptional circumstances;[1] the standard WBA title is then vacated and contested between WBA-ranked contenders. When a WBA "Regular Champion" makes between five and ten successful defenses, he may be granted the WBA "Super" title upon discretion of a vote of the WBA's board of governors.

World Boxing Council

The World Boxing Council (WBC) was founded in Mexico City, Mexico, on February 14, 1963, to establish an international regulating body.[7] The WBC established many of today's safety measures in boxing, such as the standing eight count,[8] a limit of 12 rounds instead of 15, and additional weight divisions. More information about the WBC's other titles including "Silver", "Diamond", "Emeritus", "Franchise", "Honorary", and "Supreme Champion" can be read at the WBC article.

International Boxing Federation

The International Boxing Federation (IBF) originated in September 1976 as the United States Boxing Association (USBA) when American members of the WBA withdrew to legitimize boxing in the United States with "unbiased" ratings.[9] In April 1983, the organization established an international division that was known as the United States Boxing Association-International (USBA-I).[9] In May 1984, the New Jersey–based USBA-I was renamed and became the IBF.[9]

World Boxing Organization

The World Boxing Organization (WBO) was founded in San Juan, Puerto Rico (which is a self-governing commonwealth of the United States) in 1988. In its early years the WBO's titles were not widely recognized. By 2012 when the Japan Boxing Commission officially recognized the governing body, it had gained similar status to the other three major sanctioning bodies. Its motto is "dignity, democracy, honesty."[10] When a WBO champion has reached "preeminent status", the WBO's Executive Committee may designate him as a "Super Champion".[11] However, this is only an honorary title and not the same as the WBA's policy of having separate "Super" and "Regular" champions. A WBO "Super Champion" cannot win or lose that recognition in the ring; it is merely awarded by the WBO.

The Ring

The boxing magazine The Ring awards its own belts. The original title sequence began from the magazine's first publication in the 1920s until its titles were placed on hiatus in 1989, continuing as late as 1992 in some divisions. When The Ring started awarding titles again in 2001, it did not calculate retrospective lineages to fill in the gap years, instead nominating a new champion.[12][13]

In 2007, The Ring was acquired by the owners of fight promoter Golden Boy Promotions,[14] which has publicized The Ring's world championships when they are at stake in fights it promotes (such as Joe Calzaghe vs. Roy Jones Jr. in 2008).[15] Since 2012, to reduce the number of vacant titles, The Ring allows fights between a number one or two contender; or alternatively a number three, four, or five contender to fill a vacant title. This has prompted further doubts about its credibility.[16][17][18] Some boxing journalists have been extremely critical of the new championship policy and state that if this new policy is followed, the Ring title may lose the credibility it once held.[19][20][21]

Current champions

The current champions in each weight division are listed below. Each champion's professional boxing record is shown in the following format: wins – losses – draws – no contests (knockout wins).

Heavyweight (+200 lb/+90.7 kg or +224 lb/+101.6 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Oleksandr Usyk
Super champion
24–0 (15 KO)
September 25, 2021
Oleksandr Usyk
24–0 (15 KO)
May 18, 2024
Oleksandr Usyk
24–0 (15 KO)
July 19, 2025
Fabio Wardley
20–0–1 (19 KO)
November 17, 2025
Oleksandr Usyk
24–0 (15 KO)
August 20, 2022
Murat Gassiev
Regular champion
33–2–0–1 (26 KO)
December 12, 2025
Agit Kabayel
Interim champion
27–0 (19 KO)
February 22, 2025

Bridgerweight (224 lb/101.6 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Muslim Gadzhimagomedov
6–0 (3 KO)
July 12, 2024
Kevin Lerena
30–4 (14 KO)
October 8, 2024
Georgiy Yunovidov
Interim champion
11–1 (7 KO)
July 5, 2025
Krzysztof Włodarczyk
Interim champion
66–4–1 (45 KO)
May 25, 2025

Cruiserweight/Junior heavyweight (200 lb/90.7 kg or 190 lb/86.2 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Gilberto Ramírez
Super champion
48–1 (30 KO)
March 30, 2024
Noel Mikaelian
28–3 (12 KO)
December 13, 2025
vacant Gilberto Ramírez
48–1 (30 KO)
November 16, 2024
Jai Opetaia
30–0 (23 KO)
July 2, 2022
Michał Cieślak
Interim champion
28–2–0–1 (22 KO)
June 28, 2025

Light heavyweight (175 lb/79.4 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Dmitry Bivol
Super champion
24–1 (12 KO)
February 22, 2025
David Benavidez
31–0 (25 KO)
April 7, 2025
Dmitry Bivol
24–1 (12 KO)
February 22, 2025
Dmitry Bivol
24–1 (12 KO)
February 22, 2025
Dmitry Bivol
24–1 (12 KO)
February 22, 2025
David Benavidez
Regular champion
31–0 (25 KO)
February 1, 2025
Albert Ramírez
Interim champion
22–0 (19 KO)
August 8, 2025
Callum Smith
Interim champion
31–2 (22 KO)
February 22, 2025

Super middleweight (168 lb/76.2 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Armando Reséndiz
16–2 (11 KO)
January 1, 2026
Christian M'billi
29–0–1 (24 KO)
January 27, 2026
vacant vacant vacant

Middleweight (160 lb/72.6 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Erislandy Lara
32–3–3 (19 KO)
May 1, 2021
Carlos Adames
24–1–1 (18 KO)
May 7, 2024
vacant Janibek Alimkhanuly
17–0 (12 KO)
August 26, 2022
vacant
Jesus Ramos
Interim champion
24–1 (19 KO)
December 6, 2025

Super welterweight / Junior middleweight (154 lb / 69.9 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Xander Zayas
23–0 (13 KO)
January 31, 2026
Sebastian Fundora
23–1–1 (15 KO)
March 30, 2024
Josh Kelly
18–1–1 (9 KO)
January 31, 2026
Xander Zayas
23–0 (13 KO)
July 26, 2025
vacant
Jaron Ennis
Interim champion
35–0–0–1 (31 KO)
October 11, 2025
Vergil Ortiz Jr.
Interim champion
24–0 (22 KO)
August 10, 2024

Welterweight (147 lb/66.7 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Rolando Romero
17–2 (13 KO)
August 1, 2025
Ryan Garcia
25–2–0–1 (20 KO)
February 22, 2026
Lewis Crocker
22–0 (11 KO)
September 13, 2025
Devin Haney
33–0–0–1 (15 KO)
November 22, 2025
vacant

Super lightweight/Junior welterweight (140 lb/63.5 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Gary Antuanne Russell
19–1 (17 KO)
March 1, 2025
Dalton Smith
19-0 (14 KO)
January 10, 2026
Richardson Hitchins
20–0 (8 KO)
December 8, 2024
Shakur Stevenson
25–0 (11 KO)
January 31, 2026
Shakur Stevenson
25–0 (11 KO)
January 31, 2026
Isaac Cruz
Interim champion
28–3-2 (18 KO)
July 19, 2025

Lightweight (135 lb/61.2 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
vacant vacant Raymond Muratalla
24–0 (17 KO)
June 9, 2025
Abdullah Mason
20–0 (17 KO)
November 22, 2025
vacant
Jadier Herrera
Interim champion
18–0 (16 KO)
January 10, 2026

Super featherweight/Junior lightweight (130 lb/59 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Anthony Cacace
26–1 (9 KO)
March 14, 2026
O'Shaquie Foster
24–3 (12 KO)
November 2, 2024
Emanuel Navarrete
40–2–1–1 (33 KO)
February 28, 2026
Emanuel Navarrete
40–2–1–1 (33 KO)
August 12, 2023
vacant

Featherweight (126 lb/57.2 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Brandon Figueroa
27–2–1 (20 KO)
February 7, 2026
Bruce Carrington
17–0 (10 KO)
January 31, 2026
Angelo Leo
26–1 (12 KO)
August 10, 2024
Rafael Espinoza
28–0 (24 KO)
December 9, 2023
vacant
Mirco Cuello
Interim champion
16–0 (13 KO)
August 8, 2025

Super bantamweight/Junior featherweight (122 lb/55.3 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Naoya Inoue
Super champion
32–0 (27 KO)
December 26, 2023
Naoya Inoue
32–0 (27 KO)
July 25, 2023
Naoya Inoue
32–0 (27 KO)
December 26, 2023
Naoya Inoue
32–0 (27 KO)
July 25, 2023
Naoya Inoue
32–0 (27 KO)
December 26, 2023
Victor Santillan
Interim champion
16–2 (7 KO)
February 21, 2026

Bantamweight (118 lb/53.5 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Seiya Tsutsumi
13–0–3 (8 KO)
December 1, 2025
Takuma Inoue
21–2 (5 KO)
November 24, 2025
José Salas
17–0 (11 KO)
December 13, 2025
Christian Medina
26–4 (19 KO)
September 14, 2025
vacant

Super flyweight/Junior bantamweight (115 lb/52.2 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Jesse Rodriguez
23–0 (16 KO)
November 22, 2025
Jesse Rodriguez
23–0 (16 KO)
June 29, 2024
Willibaldo García
23–5–2–1 (13 KO)
May 23, 2025
Jesse Rodriguez
23–0 (16 KO)
July 19, 2025
Jesse Rodriguez
23–0 (16 KO)
June 29, 2024
David Jiménez
Interim champion
18–1 (12 KO)
April 20, 2024

Flyweight (112 lb/50.8 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Ricardo Sandoval
27–2 (18 KO)
July 30, 2025
Ricardo Sandoval
27–2 (18 KO)
July 30, 2025
Masamichi Yabuki
19–4 (18 KO)
March 29, 2025
Anthony Olascuaga
12–1 (9 KO)
July 20, 2024
vacant
Jonathan González
Interim champion
29–4–1–1 (14 KO)
January 3, 2026
Galal Yafai
Interim champion
9–1 (7 KO)
July 26, 2025

Light flyweight/Junior flyweight (108 lb/49 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
René Santiago
15–4 (9 KO)
December 17, 2025
Shokichi Iwata
16–2 (12 KO)
March 15, 2026
Thanongsak Simsri
39–1 (34 KO)
June 19, 2025
René Santiago
15–4 (9 KO)
March 13, 2025
vacant

Minimumweight/Mini flyweight/Strawweight (105 lb/47.6 kg)

WBA WBC IBF WBO The Ring
Oscar Collazo
Super champion
14–0 (11 KO)
November 16, 2024
Melvin Jerusalem
25–3 (12 KO)
March 31, 2024
Pedro Taduran
19–4–1 (13 KO)
July 28, 2024
Oscar Collazo
14–0 (11 KO)
May 27, 2023
Oscar Collazo
14–0 (11 KO)
November 16, 2024
Ryūsei Matsumoto
Regular champion
8–0 (5 KO)
September 14, 2025

See also

References

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