Chloe Kim
Chloe Kim (born April 23, 2000) is an American professional snowboarder specializing in the halfpipe event.[1]Kim achieved international prominence by winning the gold medal in women's snowboard halfpipe at the 2018 Winter Olympics in PyeongChang, South Korea, at the age of 17, making her the youngest woman in history to claim an Olympic gold in snowboarding.[2] She defended her title successfully at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, China, securing back-to-back Olympic golds in the discipline.[2] Beyond the Olympics, Kim is the first snowboarder to win major titles across all four premier competitions: the Olympics, FIS Snowboarding World Championships, Winter Youth Olympic Games, and X Games, where she has earned eight gold medals.[2][3] Of Korean descent with parents who immigrated from South Korea, she has been a dominant force in the sport since her youth, consistently landing high-difficulty tricks that have elevated the technical standards of women's halfpipe snowboarding.[2]
Early life
Family background and upbringing
Chloe Kim was born on April 23, 2000, in Long Beach, California, to Jong Jin Kim and Boran Kim, South Korean immigrants who relocated to the United States in pursuit of improved economic prospects.[4][5] Her father arrived in California in 1982, taking minimum-wage jobs to finance his studies at El Camino College in Torrance before securing employment as a machinery operator.[5][6] The family settled in Torrance, a suburb in the Los Angeles area with a notable Korean-American community, where Kim was raised in a bilingual environment, speaking both English and Korean at home.[4][7] This upbringing blended Korean traditions—such as familial references to her birth in the auspicious Year of the Dragon—with the realities of American immigrant life, fostering a dual cultural identity.[5] Jong Jin Kim's commitment to family priorities involved substantial personal trade-offs, including leaving stable employment when financial pressures mounted, which underscored the sacrifices common among first-generation immigrant households striving for upward mobility.[8][5] These efforts reflected a broader pattern of parental investment in children's potential amid economic constraints faced by Korean immigrants in Southern California during that era.[9]Introduction to snowboarding
Chloe Kim was introduced to snowboarding at age four through family outings to Mountain High resort in Southern California's San Gabriel Mountains, where her father purchased her first board from eBay and joined her as a novice rider.[10] [4] This initial exposure ignited a profound passion for the sport, with Kim quickly demonstrating natural coordination and balance that surpassed typical beginners, progressing from basic runs to more technical maneuvers through repeated, self-initiated practice sessions.[11] Her father's active involvement, learning alongside her despite his own inexperience, provided immediate encouragement and modeled commitment, establishing a causal foundation for her sustained engagement.[12] To capitalize on her aptitude, the family adopted an intensive training regimen centered at Mammoth Mountain, approximately 300 miles north, involving weekly six-hour drives initiated by her father to access superior terrain and coaching resources unavailable locally.[13] This dedication intensified around middle school, when her parents shifted to homeschooling to eliminate scheduling conflicts and enable near-daily snowboarding, allowing Kim to log thousands of hours on the slopes—far exceeding peers reliant on weekend trips—and refine techniques like aerial spins and rail grinds through deliberate repetition.[14] [15] The move reflected parental recognition of snowboarding's demands for volume-based skill acquisition, where environmental access and unstructured practice time directly correlated with proficiency gains, unhindered by institutional education constraints. These foundational efforts culminated in early amateur successes in regional events by approximately age ten, where Kim's consistent execution of advanced tricks—such as frontside 540s—highlighted her obsessive drive and technical reliability, drawing initial sponsorship interest from brands evaluating young talent via competition footage and metrics like spin completion rates.[16] Her self-motivated pursuit, evidenced by prioritizing slope time over social activities, combined with familial logistics to transition her from recreational rider to competitive prospect, setting the trajectory for professional entry without reliance on formal academies.[11]Snowboarding career
Early competitions and breakthroughs (2013-2015)
In 2013, at age 13, Chloe Kim joined the U.S. Snowboarding team and began competing in higher-level junior events, marking her entry into structured elite development pathways.[1] Her first major victory came on March 6, 2014, when she won the women's halfpipe event at the Pop-Tarts U.S. Revolution Tour stop in Mammoth Mountain, California, outperforming competitors like Maddie Mastro as a 13-year-old rookie.[17] This win demonstrated her early amplitude in airs and rotational control in spins, setting a foundation for progression from junior to professional circuits. Breakthroughs accelerated in 2015. On January 24, Kim secured gold in women's snowboard superpipe at X Games Aspen, scoring highly with consistent high airs and becoming the youngest athlete ever to win an X Games medal at age 14.[18] Later that year, on March 7 at the Burton US Open in Vail, Colorado, she earned second place in halfpipe finals by landing her first competitive frontside 1080, a three-rotation spin that highlighted her technical edge in amplitude and switch landings over established pros.[19] These results evidenced her rapid skill acquisition through repetitive halfpipe runs emphasizing risk-calibrated progression in spin counts and grab variations.[20]X Games and Dew Tour dominance (2015-2022)
Chloe Kim achieved remarkable dominance in the women's snowboard halfpipe at the X Games from 2015 to 2022, securing six gold medals and tying Kelly Clark's record for the most wins in the event by that period.[2] [21] Her first victory occurred at X Games Aspen 2015, where she scored 92 points on her third run, incorporating high-amplitude frontside 1080s that established her as a prodigy capable of outperforming seasoned competitors through superior spin control and air height.[22] [18] Subsequent triumphs in 2016, 2018, 2019, 2020, and 2021 featured consistent scores above 90, driven by adaptations to judging emphases on rotational difficulty and stylistic grabs, such as methods, which enhanced her amplitude and execution under variable pipe conditions.[23] Kim's quantitative edge was evident in her average final-run scores routinely exceeding 90 out of 100 across these events, a threshold rarely matched by peers and attributable to causal factors like refined equipment setups—stiffer boards for increased pop—and proactive trick progression, including seamless linkages of 900s and 1080s with inverted variations.[24] This innovation directly correlated with her podium perfection in eight of nine appearances by 2021, underscoring a mechanical advantage in generating speed retention and rotational torque absent in competitors' approaches.[23] At the Dew Tour, Kim further exemplified elite non-Olympic prowess with golds in 2017, 2018, and 2021, highlighted by method grabs in her 2017 winning run that amplified style points under criteria rewarding amplitude and grab variety.[25] [26] In the 2021 Copper Mountain final, she overcame falls in her first two runs to post a 96.00 on the third, featuring a frontside 1080 tail grab into a cab 900 and switch backside 540, demonstrating adaptive recovery and precision that propelled her past close rivals by a single point.[27] [28] These victories, with scores often in the mid-90s, reflected her ability to leverage halfpipe geometry and personal biomechanics for sustained rotational stability, setting her apart in events where judging evolved to prioritize clean landings and creative amplitude.[29]Olympic performances (2018 and 2022)
At the 2018 Winter Olympics in PyeongChang, South Korea, Chloe Kim competed in the women's snowboard halfpipe event on February 12, posting a score of 93.75 on her first final run to establish an early lead with a sequence including a frontside 1080 and cab 1080.[30] [31] On her second run, she elevated her performance to 98.25 points by executing back-to-back 1080s, a near-perfect score that clinched the gold medal ahead of China's Liu Jiayu (89.75) and the United States' Arielle Gold (83.50).[32] [33] At age 17, Kim became the youngest woman to win Olympic gold in snowboarding, demonstrating technical precision honed through prior X Games successes without reported injuries impeding her pre-Olympic training.[3] [34] Kim defended her title at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing on February 9, topping qualifying with 87.75 on her first run before falling on the second.[35] In the final, her opening run scored 94.00 via a method air into a frontside 1080, cab 900, switch backside 540, and cab 1080, positioning her ahead of Spain's Queralt Castellet (90.25 for silver).[36] [37] She fell on her subsequent attempts to attempt more amplitude and rotation, such as a frontside 1440, but retained the lead to secure back-to-back golds as the first woman in Olympic halfpipe history.[35] This followed a nearly two-year competitive hiatus after an ankle injury in 2019, during which she focused on recovery and academic pursuits at Princeton University before resuming training.[36] [38]Post-Olympic achievements and records (2023-2025)
In 2024, Chloe Kim returned to competition after a post-Olympic hiatus, achieving a milestone at X Games Aspen on January 26 by landing the first 1260 (three-and-a-half rotations) by a woman in halfpipe history during her winning run, securing her seventh SuperPipe gold medal with a score of 95.25.[39][40] This performance coincided with the 10-year anniversary of her Aspen debut in 2014, where she earned silver at age 13.[24] Kim continued her dominance in 2025, winning gold in women's SuperPipe at X Games Aspen on January 26 with a score exceeding 90 points across runs incorporating advanced rotations, marking her eighth X Games gold and establishing her as the woman with the most victories in the discipline.[41][42] Later that year, on March 29 at the FIS Snowboard World Championships in Engadin, Switzerland, she claimed her third halfpipe gold with a first-run score of 93.50, outperforming competitors by over five points and clinching an early quota for the 2026 Winter Olympics.[43][44] These results demonstrated sustained technical progression, including consistent execution of high-difficulty spins under variable conditions. As of October 2025, Kim's preparation for the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympics emphasizes a revised regimen post-hiatus, incorporating mental health strategies to sustain motivation and reduce burnout, which correlated with her 2025 season's undefeated major event record and elevated trick completion rates above 90% in finals.[45][46] This approach, informed by prior Olympic pressures, prioritizes process-oriented training over outcome fixation, yielding empirically verifiable outcomes like her World Championships margin of victory.[10]Awards and honors
Competitive medals and titles
Chloe Kim has secured two Olympic gold medals in women's snowboard halfpipe, winning the event at the 2018 PyeongChang Games with a score of 98.25 on her final run and defending her title at the 2022 Beijing Games as the first woman to claim back-to-back victories in the discipline.[47][2] At the FIS Snowboard World Championships, Kim earned three gold medals in halfpipe: in 2019 at Solitude, Utah; 2021 at Aspen, Colorado; and 2025 at Engadin, Switzerland, completing a three-peat in the event.[44][43] She holds eight X Games gold medals in women's snowboard superpipe (halfpipe equivalent), tying Shaun White for the most in X Games history, with her eighth victory coming at Aspen in January 2025; her X Games record also includes one silver and one bronze across nine appearances prior to that event.[24][21]| Competition | Discipline | Medals/Titles |
|---|---|---|
| Winter Youth Olympic Games (2016, Lillehammer) | Halfpipe & Slopestyle | 2 × Gold (first woman to win two snowboarding golds at a single YOG)[2][3] |
| LAAX Open (FIS World Cup) | Halfpipe | 5 × Gold (including 2025 win, where she landed the first women's double cork 1080 in competition)[48][49] |
Records and milestones
Chloe Kim secured Olympic gold in the women's halfpipe at the 2018 PyeongChang Games at age 17, establishing her as the youngest female snowboarder to win Olympic gold in the discipline with a score of 98.25 points.[2] [47] [3]
In X Games superpipe events, Kim amassed eight gold medals by January 2025, setting the record for the most wins by a woman and breaking a prior tie with Kelly Clark.[21] [50]
She pioneered technical innovation by landing the first cab 1260 by a woman in halfpipe competition during X Games Aspen 2024, executing it on her victory lap after securing her seventh superpipe title.[39] [51]
Kim holds the highest score record in women's Winter X Games Snowboard SuperPipe at 98.00 points, achieved in Oslo in February 2016.[52]
Her X Games participation demonstrates longevity, spanning from her debut silver medal in 2014—making her the youngest Winter X Games medalist ever—to the 10-year anniversary of that start in 2024, with consistent podium finishes across nine prior appearances (seven golds, one silver, one bronze).[24] [53]
Personal life
Family and relationships
Chloe Kim was born to immigrant parents from South Korea, with her father, Jong Jin Kim, arriving in the United States in 1982 carrying approximately $800 and initially working minimum-wage jobs to establish the family in Long Beach, California.[54][55] Her mother, Boran Yun Kim, joined in building a stable home that emphasized opportunity and perseverance, reflecting the parents' own trajectory from modest beginnings to supporting their daughter's athletic pursuits.[56] Jong Jin Kim played a pivotal role in Kim's early career by quitting his engineering position around 2008 to manage her training logistics, including long drives from Southern California to Tahoe-area mountains where she honed her halfpipe skills starting at age eight; this hands-on commitment, combined with the family's willingness to relocate temporarily for access to elite facilities, directly facilitated her transition from recreational boarding to competitive dominance.[5][9] The parents instilled a rigorous work ethic through modeled sacrifice and cultural values of diligence, which Kim has cited in interviews as foundational to her discipline and resilience in high-stakes environments.[57][58] Kim maintains close ties with her family, including a sister whose 2024 wedding she publicly celebrated as a joyful family milestone.[59] In personal relationships, she dated professional skateboarder Evan Berle from 2020 to 2022, prioritizing privacy amid her public career.[60] By mid-2025, unconfirmed reports linked her to NFL defensive end Myles Garrett following joint appearances at events like the Crunchyroll Anime Awards, though no official statements have verified a partnership.[61][62]Mental health challenges and resilience
Following her gold medal win in the women's halfpipe at the 2018 Winter Olympics in PyeongChang, Chloe Kim experienced severe depression and anxiety, exacerbated by intense training regimens and the pressures of early fame. She described feeling profoundly burnt out, to the point of throwing her Olympic gold medal into the trash as a symbolic rejection of the achievement that left her feeling empty and lost. This post-Olympic downturn, which Kim attributed to overcommitment without adequate personal time, prompted her to take an extended break from competitive snowboarding starting in 2019, lasting approximately 22 months through 2021, during which she enrolled at Princeton University for a mental reset.[63][64][65] After defending her Olympic title in Beijing in 2022, Kim again faced exhaustion from a demanding schedule, leading her to skip the entire 2022-23 season to prioritize mental recovery and avoid burnout. During this period, she contemplated retirement, resenting the sport that had dominated her life and struggling with poor personal decisions amid lingering low mood. Kim later reflected that these breaks were essential to rebuild intrinsic motivation, as prolonged high-stakes training had eroded her enjoyment without sufficient recovery periods.[66][67][57] Kim's resilience manifested through self-directed adjustments, including modified training emphasizing cardio, recovery, and reduced intensity to rediscover joy in snowboarding independent of competitive outcomes. By early 2025, she credited personal discipline—such as daily self-reminders of her initial passion and structured downtime—for enabling a strong return, evidenced by podium finishes in major events like the 2024 X Games and 2025 Dew Tour, without reliance on external therapeutic interventions. This approach underscores her emphasis on internal causal drivers like balanced effort over perpetual grind.[68][57][65]Media presence and endorsements
Filmography and public appearances
Chloe Kim has extended her athletic profile through select acting cameos and voice roles, primarily in family-oriented and action-oriented media that align with her youth appeal and snowboarding persona. Her post-2018 Olympic visibility prompted appearances in mainstream entertainment, including a minor role as an "Angel Recruit" in the 2019 film Charlie's Angels, directed by Elizabeth Banks.[69] She also provided her voice for a self-portrayed character in the animated series Scooby-Doo and Guess Who? in 2020, marking her entry into voice acting for children's programming.[69] In music media, Kim featured as herself in Maroon 5's 2018 music video for "Girls Like You," which amassed over two billion views and highlighted celebrity cameos alongside her Olympic gold medal achievement.[10] Additional television spots include guest roles in Yara Shahidi's Day Off (2022) and reality-style formats like Ridiculousness (2018), where she showcased her personality through comedic segments tied to her sports feats.[69] Public talk show appearances surged following her PyeongChang gold, with a notable segment on The Ellen DeGeneres Show in March 2022, where she discussed her pet dog and post-Olympic life under guest host Leslie Jones.[70] She has also participated in documentary-style features, such as the 2023 PBS series Groundbreakers, which profiled her as a trailblazing female athlete alongside discussions on mental health and role modeling in sports.[71] These media engagements, often self-referential to her snowboarding career, have reinforced her brand without overshadowing competitive priorities.[72]| Year | Title | Medium | Role/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | "Girls Like You" (Maroon 5) | Music video | Cameo as herself[10] |
| 2019 | Charlie's Angels | Film | Angel Recruit (cameo)[69] |
| 2020 | Scooby-Doo and Guess Who? | TV series (animated) | Voice of Chloe Kim[69] |
| 2022 | Yara Shahidi's Day Off | TV series | Guest appearance[69] |
| 2023 | Groundbreakers | Documentary series | Featured athlete, self[71] |