Mirra Andreeva Bio
Mirra Aleksandrovna Andreeva is a Russian professional tennis player born on 29 April 2007 in Krasnoyarsk, Russia. She has built one of the fastest-rising profiles in the women’s game, reaching a career-high WTA singles ranking of No. 5 on 14 July 2025 and climbing as high as No. 13 in doubles on 30 June 2025. A three-time WTA Tour singles titleholder, including two WTA 1000 crowns, she is also an Olympic silver medalist from the 2024 Paris Games.
Andreeva first drew global attention as a teenager with deep Grand Slam runs and a calm, attacking style that translated quickly to the WTA Tour. Residing and training in Cannes, France, she has already established herself as a fixture in the top 10 and is widely regarded as one of the defining players of her generation.
Early Life and Background
Mirra Andreeva was born on 29 April 2007 in Krasnoyarsk, a large city in Siberia. She began playing tennis at the age of six, an early start that gave her years of foundation before her professional debut. Her older sister, Erika Andreeva, is also a professional tennis player, and the siblings have shaped much of Mirra’s upbringing around the sport.
Although both sisters were born in Krasnoyarsk, the family later moved to Moscow so the children could access stronger training environments. In 2022, Mirra and Erika relocated again to the Elite Tennis Center in Cannes, France, the former training base of Daniil Medvedev. Mirra has since been based in Cannes, where she continues to refine her game.
Path to Tennis
Andreeva’s junior trajectory was historic. In May 2023 she reached the world No. 1 junior ranking, the highest level a teenage player can achieve. Earlier that year, she reached the final of the 2023 Australian Open girls’ singles, losing a three-set match to Alina Korneeva that ran three hours and 18 minutes, twenty-two minutes longer than the men’s final on the same day.
By April 2023, Andreeva had become the only player in the history of the ITF World Tennis Tour to win multiple titles at the W60 level or above before turning 16. Those results signaled that her transition to the WTA Tour would arrive quickly. Her professional career officially began in 2022.
Mirra Andreeva Career
Early Career (2022)
Andreeva made her WTA Tour main-draw debut at the Jasmin Open, where she received a wildcard into the singles draw. She pushed sixth seed Anastasia Potapova to three sets in a 2-hour and 35-minute battle but exited in the first round. The match confirmed that the teenager could compete at tour level and set the stage for her rapid rise.
2023: Wimbledon fourth round, top 50
At the 2023 Madrid Open, Andreeva received a wildcard at age 15 and ranked No. 194. She beat Leylah Fernandez for her first WTA Tour win, becoming the third youngest player to win a main-draw match at a WTA 1000 event behind Coco Gauff and CiCi Bellis. She followed that by upsetting 13th seed Beatriz Haddad Maia for her first top-20 victory and later defeated 17th seed Magda Linette on her 16th birthday before falling to eventual champion Aryna Sabalenka, climbing into the top 150.
Andreeva then qualified for the 2023 French Open, where she won her first Grand Slam match against Alison Riske-Amritraj and advanced to the third round, the youngest player to do so since Sesil Karatantcheva in 2005. At Wimbledon, she qualified again and reached the fourth round, the youngest to do so at the All England Club since Coco Gauff in 2019, by defeating Barbora Krejčíková and Anastasia Potapova. By September 2023, Andreeva had reached a career-high No. 57, and by October she had broken into the top 50.
2024: First career title, Olympic doubles silver, top 20
In January 2024, Andreeva reached her first WTA Tour quarterfinal at the Brisbane International and then her first Australian Open fourth round, beating Ons Jabeur for her first top-10 win. At 16 years and 263 days, she became the youngest player in the Open Era to hand a top-10 seed a first-set bagel at a major, the youngest to reach the fourth round at both Wimbledon and the Australian Open before turning 17 since Martina Hingis, Tatiana Golovin, and Coco Gauff.
The 2024 French Open marked her Grand Slam breakthrough. Andreeva defeated Victoria Azarenka, Peyton Stearns, Varvara Gracheva, and second seed Aryna Sabalenka to reach her first major semifinal, the youngest French Open semifinalist since Martina Hingis in 1997. She then claimed her maiden WTA title at the Iași Open, partnered Diana Shnaider to Olympic silver in Paris women’s doubles, and by October had cracked the top 20 as the youngest player to do so since Nicole Vaidišová in 2006.
2025: Youngest WTA 1000 champion, Wimbledon quarterfinal, top 5
Andreeva opened 2025 by winning her first WTA doubles title at the Brisbane International with Diana Shnaider and reaching the singles semifinals, which lifted her to a career-high No. 15. She reached the fourth round of the Australian Open before losing again to Aryna Sabalenka.
Her defining stretch came at the Dubai Championships, where, seeded 12th, she defeated Markéta Vondroušová, world No. 2 Iga Świątek, and Elena Rybakina to reach her first WTA 1000 final, the youngest finalist at that level since the format’s 2009 introduction. She beat Clara Tauson for the title and entered the top 10. At Indian Wells, she beat Aryna Sabalenka in three sets to become the 2025 Indian Wells champion. She also won her first WTA 1000 doubles title at the Miami Open with Diana Shnaider. At Wimbledon, seeded seventh, she reached the quarterfinals and on 14 July 2025 reached a career-high No. 5 in singles, the youngest player in the top 5 since Maria Sharapova.
Driving Style and Strengths
On court, Mirra Andreeva plays a composed, attacking baseline game built on early ball striking and clean footwork. She moves well on clay and hard courts, uses her forehand to redirect pace, and has shown rare composure in three-set battles against top opponents.
Notable Events and Milestones
Key milestones include her 2024 French Open semifinal run, the 2024 Olympic silver medal in women’s doubles with Diana Shnaider, her maiden WTA title at the 2024 Iași Open, and her 2025 Indian Wells trophy. She also became the youngest player to reach the top 5 since Maria Sharapova and the youngest to win a WTA 1000 title in the format’s history.
Mirra Andreeva Career Wins
Mirra Andreeva has collected three WTA Tour singles titles, including two WTA 1000 crowns at Dubai and Indian Wells in 2025, and her first career singles trophy at the 2024 Iași Open. She has also captured WTA doubles titles at the 2025 Brisbane International and the 2025 Miami Open with Diana Shnaider.
WTA Tour Highlights
Her first WTA title came at the 2024 Iași Open, where Elina Avanesyan retired injured in the third set of the final. In 2025, she followed with her first WTA 1000 title at the Dubai Championships by defeating Clara Tauson and then added the Indian Wells crown with a three-set win over Aryna Sabalenka. Her deepest Grand Slam run remains the 2024 French Open semifinal.
Other Wins & Performances
Andreeva reached the final of the 2024 Ningbo Open, losing in three sets to Daria Kasatkina, and has added multiple quarterfinal and semifinal results across WTA 1000 events, including Madrid, Beijing, and Miami. In juniors, she lifted the world No. 1 ranking and reached the 2023 Australian Open girls’ final.
Mirra Andreeva Family
Family Background and Racing Lineage
Mirra is the younger sister of Erika Andreeva, a fellow professional tennis player on the WTA Tour. Both sisters were born in Krasnoyarsk and later moved to Moscow to access better training resources, before relocating together to the Elite Tennis Center in Cannes, France, in 2022.
Personal Life
Since 2022, Mirra has trained at the Elite Tennis Center in Cannes, France, the former base of Daniil Medvedev, where she lives alongside her sister Erika. She balances her professional tennis career with her education and travels extensively on the WTA Tour.
2025 Season Performance
The 2025 season has been Mirra Andreeva’s most successful on the WTA Tour. She opened with a doubles title at the Brisbane International, a singles semifinal in Brisbane, and a fourth round at the Australian Open. Her Dubai run, capped by her first WTA 1000 singles title, pushed her into the top 10 at age 17.
Back-to-back WTA 1000 finals followed, including her Indian Wells triumph over Aryna Sabalenka, making her the youngest Indian Wells champion in tournament history. At the Miami Open, she added a WTA 1000 doubles title with Diana Shnaider to her season haul.
At Wimbledon, seeded seventh, Andreeva reached the quarterfinals, losing to Belinda Bencic, before reaching a career-high No. 5 ranking on 14 July 2025. With consistent results across all surfaces and a top-5 ranking secured mid-season, she enters the North American hard-court swing as one of the leading contenders on the WTA Tour.

