Women's Senior Weightlifting World Records
These are the current Women's weightlifting world records in the snatch, clean & jerk, and total, which is the sum of an athlete's best result in each discipline at a single competition.
For an athlete to officially claim a world record, she must lift at least one kilogram more than the "world standard"—a benchmark set by the IWF when new categories are established.
You can find the Men's world records here.
Women’s 48KG
- Snatch: 93KG, World Standard
- Clean & Jerk: 122KG, Ri Song-Gum (PRK) | 2025 World Championships
- Total: 213KG, Ri Song-Gum (PRK) | 2025 World Championships
Women’s 53KG
- Snatch: 99KG, World Standard
- Clean & Jerk: 126KG, World Standard
- Total: 223KG, World Standard
Women’s 58KG
- Snatch: 105KG, World Standard
- Clean & Jerk: 132KG, World Standard
- Total: 236KG, Kim Il-Gyong (PRK) | 2025 World Championships
Women’s 63KG
- Snatch: 111KG, Ri Suk (PRK) | 2025 World Championships
- Clean & Jerk: 142KG, Ri Suk (PRK) | 2025 World Championships
- Total: 253KG, Ri Suk (PRK) | 2025 World Championships
Women’s 69KG
- Snatch: 111KG, Song Kuk-Hyang (PRK) | 2025 World Championships
- Clean & Jerk: 150KG, Song Kuk-Hyang (PRK) | 2025 World Championships
- Total: 270KG, Song Kuk-Hyang (PRK) | 2025 World Championships
Women’s 77KG
- Snatch: 123KG, Olivia Reeves (USA) | 2025 World Championships
- Clean & Jerk: 155KG, Olivia Reeves (USA) | 2025 World Championships
- Total: 278KG, , Olivia Reeves (USA) | 2025 World Championships
Women’s 86KG
- Snatch: 129KG, World Standard
- Clean & Jerk: 162KG, World Standard
- Total: 289KG, World Standard
Women’s +86KG
- Snatch: 144KG, World Standard
- Clean & Jerk: 181KG, World Standard
- Total: 325KG, World Standard
-
Contact Us
Contact formOur friendly customer service team will be happy to answer any questions you have:
-
-
Shipping
Shipping information -
Returns
Returns information

