High jump
The high jump is a track and field event in which competitors must leap unaided from one foot over a horizontal bar, measuring four meters in length and placed at progressively increasing heights, without knocking it off its supports.[1] The athlete begins with a curved approach run, plants one foot for takeoff near the base of the uprights supporting the bar, arches their body over it during flight, and lands safely on a cushioned mat beyond.[2] A successful jump requires clearing the bar without touching it or the standards with any body part; competitors receive three attempts at each height, and three consecutive failures result in elimination.[1] The event originated in Scotland during the early 19th century as informal competitions and gained formal structure with the first recorded events in the mid-1800s, becoming a staple of athletics meets.[2] It debuted as an Olympic discipline for men at the 1896 Athens Games and for women at the 1928 Amsterdam Olympics, where heights were measured in increments starting from a qualifying bar, typically around 1.80 meters for men and 1.60 meters for women in major competitions.[1] The International Association of Athletics Federations (now World Athletics) ratified its first official men's world record in 1912 at 2.00 meters by George Horine of the United States, marking the beginning of standardized record-keeping.[1] Early techniques included the straight-on approach and the scissors method, where the jumper scissored their legs over the bar, but these were largely supplanted in the 20th century by more efficient styles like the eastern cut-off, western roll, and straddle (belly roll), which allowed athletes to roll their bodies parallel to the bar.[2] The modern era began with the revolutionary Fosbury Flop, invented by American Dick Fosbury, who won the 1968 Olympic gold by arching backward over the bar and landing on his shoulders, a technique that now dominates due to its biomechanical advantages in maximizing clearance height.[1] Current world records stand at 2.45 meters for men, set by Javier Sotomayor of Cuba in 1993, and 2.10 meters for women, achieved by Yaroslava Mahuchikh of Ukraine in 2024, both outdoors under World Athletics rules.[1] Notable athletes include Romania's Iolanda Balaș, who set 14 world records between 1958 and 1961 and held the women's record until 1971, and Qatar's Mutaz Essa Barshim, a three-time Olympic medalist who shared gold at the 2020 Tokyo Games by mutual agreement rather than a jump-off.[1] The event emphasizes precision, speed, and flexibility, with competitions often decided by tiebreakers based on the fewest failures at prior heights or, if needed, a sudden-death jump-off at higher increments.[2]Rules and equipment
Basic rules
The high jump is a track and field event in which athletes attempt to leap over a horizontal crossbar placed at increasing heights, using a one-footed takeoff and without dislodging the bar from its supports.[2] The objective is to clear the highest possible height, with the athlete required to pass entirely over the bar without touching it or the supporting uprights in a way that causes the bar to fall.[1] Competitions begin at a starting height determined by meet officials, often tailored to the entrants' abilities, such as approximately 2.00 m for elite men and 1.80 m for elite women, though this varies by event level.[1] The bar is then raised incrementally after each round, with a minimum increase of 2 cm per height for both men and women to ensure progressive challenge while maintaining fairness.[3] Each competitor receives three consecutive attempts to clear the current height; a successful clearance allows progression to the next height, while a pass forfeits attempts at that level but preserves eligibility for higher ones.[1] Failure to clear the height on all three attempts results in elimination from the competition.[2] Jump height is officially measured as the vertical distance from the level of the takeoff surface to the lowest edge of the crossbar where it rests on the pegs of the uprights.[3] A valid jump requires the takeoff to be executed on one foot only; using both feet simultaneously constitutes a foul and counts as a failed attempt.[2] Other fouls include knocking the bar off its supports, touching the uprights or their bases with hands, feet, or any part of the body before clearing the bar, or stepping on the crossbar itself during the approach or takeoff, any of which results in a failed attempt.[2] An athlete is eliminated from the competition after three failures at the same height (except in case of a tie for first place).[3] While the core rules governing attempts, clearances, and fouls apply uniformly, distinctions exist between indoor and outdoor competitions primarily in venue setup and bar support mechanisms. Outdoor events utilize uprights anchored directly to the synthetic track surface with a spacious landing area behind the bar, whereas indoor events occur in fully enclosed facilities with uprights positioned atop the foam landing mats to accommodate limited space, and the bar may employ flexible clips or pegs designed to minimize injury risk from falls.[3] These adaptations ensure safety and feasibility without altering the fundamental judging criteria.[2]Tie-breaking procedures
In high jump competitions governed by World Athletics, ties occur when multiple athletes achieve the same best height, and rankings are determined through a series of tie-breaking criteria outlined in the Technical Rules (Rule 181 for vertical jumps). The primary tie-breaker is the fewest number of failed attempts (misses) at the final cleared height, rewarding efficiency at the decisive bar setting.[3] If athletes remain tied after the primary criterion, the secondary tie-breaker applies: the fewest total misses across all heights attempted in the competition. This evaluates overall performance consistency from the qualification rounds through the final.[3] A tertiary tie-breaker, if still tied, favors the athlete with the fewest jumps at the height last cleared. If these criteria still result in a deadlock—typically for placements beyond first—the athletes share the position without further resolution.[4] For ties specifically at first place, World Athletics rules mandate a jump-off under Rule 181, commencing at the next height above the tied clearance (usually in 2 cm or 5 cm increments as decided by officials), with one attempt per round until one athlete succeeds while others fail. However, in Olympic events since a 2009 rule amendment, tied athletes may opt to share the gold medal mutually, avoiding the jump-off; a notable example is the 2020 Tokyo men's final, where Qatar's Mutaz Essa Barshim and Italy's Gianmarco Tamberi agreed to co-champions after exhausting other tie-breakers.[3][2] These procedures apply uniformly to senior and junior competitions under World Athletics jurisdiction, with no substantive variations specified in the rulebook for age categories, though junior events may adjust starting heights or progression for developmental purposes without altering tie resolution.[5]Equipment and facilities
The horizontal bar in high jump competitions is a circular, smooth implement measuring 3.98m to 4.02m in length and 29 mm to 31 mm (30 mm ± 1 mm) in diameter, constructed from fiberglass or another non-metallic material, with a maximum weight of 2kg.[6] It is designed to sag no more than 20mm when in position and no more than 70mm under a 3kg load, ensuring it falls easily upon contact.[6] The bar rests on horizontal pegs, each no more than 13mm in diameter and extending no more than 55mm from the uprights, which are spaced 4.00m to 4.04m apart.[6] Upright standards supporting the bar are adjustable in 1cm increments up to at least 2.40m and must extend at least 10cm above the bar height for stability.[6] They feature rigid metallic bases with lower sections padded to prevent injury, and the supports for the bar pegs are flat, smooth, and measure 40mm wide by 60mm long without springs or rubber.[6] The landing area consists of foam mats at least 6m long, 4m wide, and 0.70m thick for major competitions, positioned with the front edge approximately 0.10m behind the plane of the uprights and covered by a spike-proof protective layer.[6][7] For world rankings eligibility, the mats must be at least 6m x 6m x 0.80m, with front sections no less than 2m deep and sides angled at 45° to 48°.[6] The takeoff area forms part of the runway, which must be a firm, level synthetic surface at least 15m long (preferably 25m or more for major events) with a minimum width of 16m in a semicircular layout centered on the uprights.[6][7] The surface may have a maximum downward inclination of 1:167 (0.6%) over the final 15m and lateral inclination of 1:100, marked by 50mm-wide white lines.[6][7] Height measurements use a calibrated steel tape or scientific instrument, taken perpendicularly from the ground to the lowest point of the bar in whole centimeters, with records verified to 0.01m accuracy by an accredited body.[6] Indoor facilities must conform to general enclosed stadium requirements, including a 200m oval track or equivalent, adequate lighting, heating, and ventilation, with all equipment adhering to outdoor specifications unless space constraints necessitate certified adaptations for safety.[6]History
Early development
The origins of the high jump trace back to ancient activities associated with Greek warfare, where jumping over obstacles was a valued skill for soldiers navigating the rugged terrain, though formalized events in the ancient Olympics primarily featured the long jump with halteres weights around 708 BCE.[8] By the 19th century, the high jump emerged as a distinct competitive event in Scotland, with the first recorded contests occurring in the early 1800s during Highland Games, where participants typically cleared heights around 1.65 meters using either straight-on approaches or rudimentary scissor-kick techniques.[9] The scissor kick, involving a sideways approach and leg motion resembling closing scissors over the bar, gained popularity through Irish and Scottish traditions, later popularized in the United States by Irish-American immigrants who integrated it into emerging track and field meets.[10] The event was formalized internationally with its inclusion in the first modern Olympic Games in Athens in 1896, where American Ellery Clark won the gold medal with a leap of 1.81 meters using the scissor style, marking the highest competitive height recorded at that time. In the late 19th century, innovations began to evolve the technique; Irish-American athlete Michael Sweeney introduced the Eastern cut-off in 1895, a refinement of the scissor that involved rotating the body to a more horizontal position over the bar for better clearance, setting a world record of 1.97 meters that stood for over a decade.[11] In the United States, the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU), founded in 1888 to standardize amateur sports, played a key role in promoting the event through national championships, where winning heights remained below 2 meters until George Horine achieved that milestone in 1912 using an early form of the Western roll.[12] Women's high jump made its Olympic debut at the 1928 Amsterdam Games, with Canadian Ethel Catherwood securing gold at 1.59 meters using the scissor technique, reflecting growing inclusion of female athletes in track and field despite earlier resistance.[13] These early developments established the foundational approach and takeoff mechanics that would pave the way for subsequent innovations, such as the straddle technique in the mid-20th century.[10]Introduction of the straddle and Fosbury Flop
The straddle technique emerged in the 1930s as a successor to the Western roll, becoming the dominant high jump style by the 1940s and 1950s, with athletes clearing the bar face-down and parallel to it by rotating the torso around the bar while keeping the body stretched along its length.[14] This method allowed for more efficient clearance by permitting parts of the legs to pass below the bar height, raising the jumper's center of gravity relative to the bar.[15] A variant known as the dive straddle, which involved tilting the trunk to drop the head and upper body below the bar for even higher hip clearance, gained prominence around 1960.[14] The straddle reached its peak with Soviet athlete Valeriy Brumel, who revolutionized the technique through a fast run-up and precise execution, setting six world records between 1961 and 1963 using the straddle style.[16] His final mark of 2.28 m, achieved in Moscow on July 21, 1963, during a USA-USSR meet, stood as the world record for nearly a decade and represented the zenith of straddle performance.[16][17] In 1968, American Dick Fosbury introduced the Fosbury Flop at the Mexico City Olympics, a backward-arching technique that involved taking off from the "wrong foot," curving the approach to generate rotation, and arching the body over the bar while landing on the back and shoulders.[18][19] Fosbury, who developed the style as a high school sophomore in 1963, cleared 2.24 m on his third attempt to win gold and set an Olympic record, outjumping competitors using traditional methods.[18] The Fosbury Flop spread rapidly, with 28 of 40 competitors adopting it at the 1972 Munich Olympics, marking the shift to majority usage by the early 1970s.[18] The last world record set with the straddle technique came from Soviet jumper Vladimir Yashchenko, who cleared 2.35 m indoors in Milan on March 18, 1978, at age 19.[20] Fosbury's innovation necessitated rule changes, including deeper foam landing pits to accommodate safe back landings, evolving from earlier sawdust or wood-chip surfaces that had limited such styles.[21][22]Post-1968 evolution and records
Following the widespread adoption of the Fosbury Flop technique after Dick Fosbury's Olympic victory in 1968, high jump records progressed rapidly in both men's and women's events, reflecting innovations in training and biomechanics. In the men's competition, the outdoor world record advanced from Fosbury's 2.24 m mark through incremental improvements, including Igor Paklin's 2.41 m in 1985, and multiple elevations by Javier Sotomayor of Cuba, culminating in his 2.45 m jump on July 27, 1993, in Salamanca, Spain, which remains unbroken as of 2025.[23] Sotomayor also holds the men's indoor world record at 2.43 m, set on March 4, 1989, in Budapest, Hungary.[24] For women, the outdoor record evolved from Ulrike Meyfarth's 2.00 m in 1972 to Stefka Kostadinova's 2.09 m in 1987 in Rome, a mark that stood for 37 years until Yaroslava Mahuchikh of Ukraine cleared 2.10 m on July 7, 2024, in Paris.[25] The women's indoor record is 2.08 m, achieved by Kajsa Bergqvist of Sweden in 2006 in Arnstadt, Germany.[26] Technological and methodological advancements have further shaped the event's evolution. Post-1968 training regimens increasingly incorporated plyometrics—explosive exercises like depth jumps and bounding—to enhance power output and reactive strength, contributing to higher clearances by improving takeoff velocity and vertical impulse.[27] Video analysis, enabled by accessible recording technology from the 1980s onward, allowed athletes and coaches to refine approach angles, plant foot positioning, and arch curvature in real time, optimizing the Flop's efficiency. More recently, footwear innovations, including carbon fiber plates introduced in spikes around 2020, have provided greater stiffness and energy return during the penultimate stride and takeoff, potentially adding centimeters to jumps by reducing energy loss in the lower leg.[28] These developments, combined with biomechanical research emphasizing center-of-mass trajectories, have pushed physiological boundaries while maintaining the event's technical purity.[29] Doping scandals, particularly in Eastern Bloc countries during the 1980s and 1990s, cast a shadow over record progressions and prompted regulatory reforms. State-sponsored programs in East Germany and other Soviet-aligned nations systematically administered anabolic steroids and other performance enhancers to athletes, including high jumpers, to dominate international competitions; an estimated 9,000 athletes were affected from 1973 to 1989, leading to numerous stripped medals and health issues like infertility and organ damage.[30] Revelations after the Berlin Wall's fall in 1989 exposed these practices, resulting in the World Anti-Doping Agency's formation in 1999 and stricter testing protocols, including out-of-competition checks and biological passports by the 2000s, which helped restore credibility but slowed apparent progress in elite heights.[31] The sport has also seen greater globalization, with emerging talents from Africa and Asia challenging traditional European and North American dominance. Qatar's Mutaz Essa Barshim exemplifies this shift, clearing 2.43 m in 2014 in Doha—tying the second-highest mark ever—and sharing Olympic gold in 2021 after both he and Italy's Gianmarco Tamberi cleared 2.37 m in Tokyo, a gesture of sportsmanship that highlighted the event's international spirit.[32] Barshim's achievements, including three world titles and the Asian record, underscore investments in training facilities across the Middle East and Africa, where jumpers like South Africa's Hestrie Cloete and Jamaica's Dwight Stones-inspired successors have elevated regional standards.[33] In recent decades, elite men's performances have plateaued around 2.40 m, with the highest clearance since 2009 being 2.43 m by Mutaz Essa Barshim in 2014 and no marks above that since, attributed to human physiological limits on explosive power, muscle recruitment, and joint torque during takeoff, despite optimized techniques.[34] Women's heights similarly stabilized post-1987 until Mahuchikh's breakthrough, reflecting ceilings in vertical force production and recovery from high-impact landings, though ongoing refinements in nutrition and periodization continue to support consistent medal-round jumps near 2.00 m.[35] This stagnation has sparked discussions on rule tweaks, like adjustable bar heights, to sustain competitiveness.Technique
Approach phase
The approach phase in the high jump begins with the jumper accelerating along a J-shaped runway, typically consisting of a straight segment followed by a curved path that directs momentum toward the takeoff point. This layout, often spanning 8 to 12 strides for elite athletes, allows for gradual acceleration while generating centrifugal force to facilitate rotation over the bar. For a right-handed jumper—who takes off on the left foot—the curve bends to the left, with the initial 4 to 6 steps on the straightaway building speed perpendicular to the bar before transitioning into the arc during the final 4 to 6 steps.[36][37][38] During the acceleration phase, which comprises the first 3 to 5 steps, the jumper focuses on reaching maximum horizontal velocity, typically 7 to 8 m/s for men and 6 to 7.5 m/s for women, through a tall, upright posture and powerful arm pumping to maintain rhythm. As the curve begins, body positioning shifts: the trunk leans inward toward the curve's center (often 2.9° to 8.2° for top performers) while the head remains aligned over the hips, preventing excessive sideways tilt that could disrupt balance. The step pattern emphasizes controlled strides, with the penultimate step featuring a forward trunk incline and the final step planting the takeoff foot at an angle of approximately 28.5° relative to the bar to optimize directional control.[39][40][38] Balancing speed and control is critical, with the optimal approach angle to the bar ranging from 20° to 30° to ensure the jumper enters the curve without losing momentum. Common errors include over-curving, which causes the takeoff foot to plant too far inside the intended line and reduces forward drive, or under-curving, leading to a shallow arc that misaligns the body parallel to the bar rather than perpendicular for lift. These misalignments often stem from inconsistent stride length or poor lean initiation, resulting in suboptimal centrifugal force. In indoor settings, where runways may be constrained to shorter lengths (minimum 15 m but often effectively reduced by facility limits), jumpers adapt by using 8 to 10 steps with a tighter radius to maintain velocity.[37][41][42][43]Takeoff mechanics
The takeoff phase in the high jump represents the critical moment of propulsion, where the athlete plants the takeoff foot to convert horizontal momentum from the approach into vertical lift through a single-leg extension. This explosive action typically occurs with the plant foot positioned approximately 1-2 meters from the bar, though the exact distance varies based on individual anthropometrics and approach speed.[44] The foot is angled at 45 degrees relative to the takeoff mat to optimize force direction and prevent slippage, with the knee initially flexed to about 140-150 degrees upon ground contact, allowing eccentric loading before rapid extension.[36][45] Force generation during takeoff relies on vertical impulse produced by the extension of the takeoff leg, where ground reaction forces peak at 5-6 times body weight in elite athletes, primarily in the vertical direction to maximize upward acceleration.[44] This impulse arises from coordinated plantarflexion and knee extension, redirecting the athlete's center of mass upward while minimizing horizontal braking. Arm action plays a key role in initiating body rotation, with both arms driven vigorously upward and slightly backward—often reaching near-vertical positions overhead—to counterbalance the free leg swing and enhance angular momentum around the bar's axis.[46] At liftoff, hip height typically measures 1.5-1.8 meters in top performers, positioning the center of mass at around 1.4 meters, with its trajectory designed to peak after bar clearance in the Fosbury Flop technique for efficient height utilization.[45][47] Key biomechanical factors include ankle dorsiflexion during the initial plant, which facilitates shock absorption and energy storage in the Achilles tendon (optimal range around 20-30 degrees relative to neutral for force transmission), and knee extension that approaches full straightening (170-180 degrees at toe-off) to propel the body vertically.[48][45] These joint actions ensure efficient energy transfer from the ground, with the takeoff leg angle at touchdown often near 48 degrees to balance speed and lift. To develop this power, athletes incorporate plyometric drills such as box jumps, which build explosive leg extension, and hurdle hops, which enhance single-leg stability and rapid force application under dynamic conditions.[49][50][51]Bar clearance and landing
Following takeoff, the high jumper enters the aerial phase, where the body follows a parabolic flight trajectory determined by gravity and initial velocity, with the center of mass reaching its peak height slightly before the bar. In the Fosbury Flop technique, the jumper's center of mass passes 10-20 cm below the bar height, achieved through pronounced body arching that lowers the effective height of the center of mass relative to the bar. This allows clearance of heights exceeding the jumper's own stature, as the torso and limbs navigate over the bar while the center of mass remains below it.[52][53] During bar negotiation, the jumper rotates approximately 180 degrees in the air, initiated by the takeoff lean and curved approach, positioning the body supine with the head tilted back and hips thrust forward over the bar. The spine arches deeply, and the neck extends to maximize the curvature, enabling the shoulders and hips to clear sequentially while the legs trail and then kick upward. This rotation adheres to the conservation of angular momentum, where the initial rotational momentum from takeoff is preserved in flight, facilitating the backward somersault without additional torque, though somersaulting momentum is primarily generated during the takeoff phase rather than the run-up.[54][55] Upon clearing the bar, the jumper descends in a controlled supine fall onto the landing mats, often rolling slightly to distribute impact forces across the back and shoulders. This landing protocol, made possible by the introduction of deeper foam pits following the adoption of the Fosbury Flop in the late 1960s, replaced earlier sand or sawdust surfaces and evolved into modern engineered foam systems up to 1 meter deep for enhanced shock absorption and safety. However, the arching motion and high-impact landing can lead to lower back strain, a common injury risk among high jumpers due to repetitive spinal hyperextension and compressive forces on landing.[56][57]Records and rankings
All-time top lists
The all-time top lists for high jump encompass the highest verified performances by senior athletes, ratified by World Athletics according to strict criteria including official competition status, proper equipment and facilities conforming to technical rules, accurate measurement by qualified officials, and compliance with anti-doping regulations.[3] These lists distinguish between outdoor and indoor events, reflecting environmental differences such as wind assistance (prohibited indoors) and bar setup. Only legal jumps—where the athlete clears the bar without knocking it off—are included, with performances verified through video, doping tests, and documentation.[23]Men's outdoor
The men's outdoor all-time top list is led by Javier Sotomayor's world record of 2.45 m set in Salamanca, Spain, on 27 July 1993, a mark that remains unbeaten after over three decades.[58] Mutaz Essa Barshim's 2.43 m from Brussels on 5 September 2014 ranks second, highlighting Qatar's prominence in the event. The list features several ties at lower heights, with athletes achieving 2.38 m or better, spanning from the 1980s to the 2020s. Performances are concentrated in Europe and North America, underscoring global competitive hubs.| Rank | Mark | Athlete | Date | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2.45 m | Javier Sotomayor (CUB) | 27 Jul 1993 | Salamanca (ESP) |
| 2 | 2.43 m | Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) | 5 Sep 2014 | Bruxelles (BEL) |
| 3 | 2.42 m | Patrik Sjöberg (SWE) | 30 Jun 1987 | Stockholm (SWE) |
| 4 | 2.41 m | Igor Paklin (URS) | 4 Sep 1985 | Kobe (JPN) |
| 5= | 2.40 m | Rudolf Povarnitsyn (URS) | 11 Aug 1985 | Donetsk (URS) |
| 5= | 2.40 m | Sorin Matei (ROU) | 20 Jun 1990 | Bratislava (TCH) |
| 5= | 2.40 m | Charles Austin (USA) | 7 Aug 1991 | Zürich (SUI) |
| 5= | 2.40 m | Vyacheslav Voronin (RUS) | 5 Aug 2000 | London (GBR) |
| 5= | 2.40 m | Derek Drouin (CAN) | 25 Apr 2014 | Des Moines, IA (USA) |
| 5= | 2.40 m | Andrii Protsenko (UKR) | 3 Jul 2014 | Lausanne (SUI) |
| 11= | 2.39 m | Zhu Jianhua (CHN) | 10 Jun 1984 | Eberstadt (FRG) |
| 11= | 2.39 m | Dietmar Mögenburg (FRG) | 24 Feb 1985 | Köln (FRG) |
| 11= | 2.39 m | Ralf Sonn (GER) | 1 Mar 1991 | Berlin (GER) |
| 11= | 2.39 m | Gianmarco Tamberi (ITA) | 15 Jul 2016 | Monaco (MON) |
| 15= | 2.38 m | Gennadiy Avdeyenko (URS) | 7 Mar 1987 | Indianapolis, IN (USA) |
| 15= | 2.38 m | Sergey Malchenko (URS) | 4 Sep 1988 | Banská Bystrica (TCH) |
| 15= | 2.38 m | Dragutin Topić (YUG) | 1 Aug 1993 | Beograd (YUG) |
| 15= | 2.38 m | Steve Smith (GBR) | 4 Feb 1994 | Wuppertal (GER) |
| 15= | 2.38 m | Wolf-Hendrik Beyer (GER) | 18 Mar 1994 | Weinheim (GER) |
Women's outdoor
Yaroslava Mahuchikh holds the women's outdoor world record at 2.10 m, achieved in Paris on 7 July 2024, surpassing Stefka Kostadinova's long-standing 2.09 m from Rome in 1987.[59] The top 25 includes athletes at 2.03 m or higher, with notable ties at 2.08 m and 2.06 m, reflecting steady progression in Eastern Europe and beyond. Recent jumps, such as Nicola Olyslagers' 2.04 m in Zürich on 27 August 2025, indicate ongoing advancements.| Rank | Mark | Athlete | Date | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2.10 m | Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR) | 7 Jul 2024 | Paris (FRA) |
| 2 | 2.09 m | Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) | 30 Aug 1987 | Roma (ITA) |
| 3 | 2.08 m | Blanka Vlašić (CRO) | 31 Aug 2009 | Zagreb (CRO) |
| 4= | 2.07 m | Lyudmila Andonova (BUL) | 20 Jul 1984 | Berlin (GDR) |
| 4= | 2.07 m | Anna Chicherova (RUS) | 22 Jul 2011 | Cheboksary (RUS) |
| 6= | 2.06 m | Hestrie Cloete (RSA) | 31 Aug 2003 | Paris (FRA) |
| 6= | 2.06 m | Yelena Slesarenko (RUS) | 28 Aug 2004 | Athina (GRE) |
| 6= | 2.06 m | Ariane Friedrich (GER) | 14 Jun 2009 | Berlin (GER) |
| 6= | 2.06 m | Mariya Lasitskene (ANA) | 6 Jul 2017 | Lausanne (SUI) |
| 10= | 2.05 m | Tamara Bykova (URS) | 22 Jun 1984 | Kiev (URS) |
| 10= | 2.05 m | Inga Babakova (BLR) | 15 Sep 1995 | Tokyo (JPN) |
| 10= | 2.05 m | Chaunté Lowe (USA) | 26 Jun 2010 | Des Moines, IA (USA) |
| 13= | 2.04 m | Silvia Costa (CUB) | 9 Sep 1989 | Barcelona (ESP) |
| 13= | 2.04 m | Alina Astafei (ROM) | 3 Mar 1995 | Berlin (GER) |
| 13= | 2.04 m | Venelina Veneva-Mateeva (BUL) | 2 Jun 2001 | Kalamata (GRE) |
| 13= | 2.04 m | Irina Gordeyeva (RUS) | 19 Aug 2012 | Eberstadt (GER) |
| 13= | 2.04 m | Brigetta Barrett (USA) | 22 Jun 2013 | Des Moines, IA (USA) |
| 13= | 2.04 m | Nicola Olyslagers (AUS) | 27 Aug 2025 | Zürich (SUI) |
| 19= | 2.03 m | Ulrike Meyfarth (FRG) | 21 Aug 1983 | London (GBR) |
| 19= | 2.03 m | Louise Ritter (USA) | 8 Jul 1988 | Austin, TX (USA) |
| 19= | 2.03 m | Tatyana Babashkina (RUS) | 30 May 1995 | Bratislava (SVK) |
Men's indoor
The men's indoor all-time list tops at 2.43 m by Mutaz Essa Barshim in Stockholm on 18 February 2014, equaling his outdoor best under controlled conditions.[60] Igor Paklin's 2.41 m from Moscow on 2 March 1986 ranks second, with multiple athletes tied at 2.40 m, including Stefan Holm (Madrid, 2005) and Ivan Ukhov (Piraeus, 2009). The top 25 extends to 2.36 m, with venues primarily in Europe during winter seasons, emphasizing the event's peak in enclosed facilities like arenas in Germany and Sweden. Representative top performances include:- 2.43 m: Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT), Stockholm (SWE), 18 Feb 2014
- 2.41 m: Igor Paklin (URS), Moskva (URS), 2 Mar 1986
- 2.40 m: Stefan Holm (SWE), Madrid (ESP), 6 Mar 2005; Ivan Ukhov (RUS), Piraeus (GRE), 25 Feb 2009; several others tied
- 2.39 m: Dietmar Mögenburg (FRG), Köln (FRG), 24 Feb 1985
- 2.38 m: Steve Smith (GBR), Wuppertal (GER), 4 Feb 1994
Women's indoor
Kajsa Bergqvist's 2.08 m in Arnstadt, Germany, on 4 February 2006, leads the women's indoor list, a height matched by few and highlighting technical mastery in low-ceiling venues.[61] Heike Henkel's 2.07 m from Karlsruhe in 1992 ties for third, while seasonal peaks often occur in February-March during European indoor circuits, as seen with Tia Hellebaut and Jennifer Suhr both clearing 2.05 m in 2007 and 2011, respectively—marks that underscored that year's competitive intensity. The top 25 reaches 2.03 m, with ties at 2.05 m and 2.04 m, reflecting slower but consistent evolution indoors compared to outdoor advances. Representative top performances include:- 2.08 m: Kajsa Bergqvist (SWE), Arnstadt (GER), 4 Feb 2006
- 2.07 m: Heike Henkel (GER), Karlsruhe (GER), 8 Feb 1992
- 2.06 m: Ariane Friedrich (GER), various indoor meets, 2009
- 2.05 m: Tia Hellebaut (BEL), Birmingham (GBR), 3 Mar 2007; Jennifer Suhr (USA), Albuquerque, NM (USA), 3 Feb 2011 (tied seasonal peak)
- 2.04 m: Antonietta Di Martino (ITA), Banská Bystrica (SVK), 9 Feb 2011
Season's best performances
Season's best performances in the high jump are tracked annually by World Athletics, reflecting the highest ratified marks achieved in outdoor and indoor competitions each year. These benchmarks highlight yearly progress, influenced by factors such as major events like the Olympics and World Championships, which often produce peak efforts due to heightened competition and optimal conditions. For instance, the 2024 Paris Olympics spurred exceptional results, including a women's world record.[63]Men's Outdoor Season's Bests
In the 1980s and 1990s, men's outdoor high jump saw frequent elite performances, with season's bests commonly surpassing 2.40 m amid intense rivalries and technical advancements post-Fosbury Flop. Representative peaks include Igor Paklin's 2.44 m in 1985 at the Goodwill Games in Moscow and Javier Sotomayor's 2.45 m world record in 1993 in Salamanca, Spain, marking the era's zenith.[58][64] Post-2000, such heights became rarer, with no season's best exceeding 2.40 m after 1995, reflecting challenges like doping regulations and evolving training. Recent years show stabilization around 2.35-2.37 m, as seen in the table below for 2023-2025:| Year | Athlete | Height | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) | 2.35 m | Doha Diamond League, Doha (QAT) |
| 2024 | Gianmarco Tamberi (ITA) | 2.37 m | European Championships, Roma (ITA) |
| 2025 | Hamish Kerr (NZL) | 2.36 m | World Championships, Tokyo (JPN) |
Women's Outdoor Season's Bests
The 1980s and 1990s represented a golden age for women's high jump, with season's bests pushing boundaries, exemplified by Stefka Kostadinova's 2.09 m world record in 1987 at the World Championships in Rome. Other notable peaks include Heike Henkel's 2.05 m in 1991 at the World Championships in Tokyo.[59][67] Since 2000, season's bests have hovered between 2.00-2.06 m, with a breakthrough in 2024 via Yaroslava Mahuchikh's 2.10 m world record at the Diamond League in Paris, boosted by Olympic motivation. Recent examples include:| Year | Athlete | Height | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR) | 2.06 m | Diamond League, Monaco (MON) |
| 2024 | Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR) | 2.10 m | Diamond League, Paris (FRA) |
| 2025 | Nicola Olyslagers (AUS) | 2.04 m | Diamond League Final, Zürich (SUI) |
Indoor Season Specifics
Indoor seasons, governed by distinct rules like no wind assistance, yield slightly lower but comparable marks, tracked separately by World Athletics. The 2025 indoor season's bests were set at the World Indoor Championships in Nanjing, with Sanghyeok Woo (KOR) clearing 2.31 m for men and Nicola Olyslagers (AUS) achieving 1.97 m for women, both season-leading efforts.[69] In 2024, indoor bests included Hamish Kerr's 2.36 m at the Glasgow World Indoors for men and Yaroslava Mahuchikh's 2.00 m overall indoor mark.[70][71]Annulled marks and controversies
Several high-profile men's high jump performances have been annulled due to doping violations, particularly from retests of samples collected in the late 2000s and early 2010s. Russian athlete Andrey Silnov, who won the gold medal at the 2008 Beijing Olympics with a clearance of 2.34 m, was stripped of that achievement in 2013 after his sample tested positive for stanozolol during a reanalysis.[72] Similarly, Ivan Ukhov of Russia lost his 2012 London Olympic gold medal (cleared at 2.29 m) and had all results from July 2009 to December 2014 annulled following a positive test for Turinabol revealed in 2019 retests.[73] Alexander Shustov, the 2010 European champion, received a four-year ban in 2020 for a doping violation from a 2012 sample, resulting in the annulment of his performances during that period, including his personal best of 2.32 m.[74] Other notable cases include East German jumper Gerd Wessig, whose 1980 Olympic gold (2.36 m) and subsequent marks came under scrutiny after documents revealed his involvement in the GDR's state-sponsored doping program, though formal annulments were not pursued due to the era's testing limitations.[75] In the women's high jump, doping-related annulments have also reshaped historical outcomes. Anna Chicherova of Russia was stripped of her 2008 Beijing Olympic bronze medal (2.00 m) in 2017 after retesting confirmed the presence of Turinabol in her sample.[76] Tamara Bykova, the Soviet world record holder from the mid-1980s with a best of 2.05 m set in 1984, faced suspension in 1990 for testing positive for ephedrine at the Goodwill Games, leading to questions about her earlier achievements amid the era's widespread use of performance-enhancing substances, though her records were not retroactively annulled.[77] Additional cases from the 1980s, such as Bulgarian high jumper Lyudmila Andonova's 18-month ban in 1985 for amphetamine use, highlighted systemic issues in Eastern Bloc athletics, paralleling the Ben Johnson scandal in sprinting and contributing to broader suspicions of doped performances during that decade.[78] Doping controversies in high jump echo the 1980s scandals, where state-orchestrated programs in East Germany and the Soviet Union evaded detection, but retests in the 2010s—enabled by advanced analytical methods—have annulled marks from the 2008 and 2012 Olympics. These reanalyses, targeting stored samples, exposed long-term use of anabolic steroids like Turinabol, resulting in over a dozen Russian track and field medals, including high jump ones, being revoked.[79] Measurement controversies in high jump have occasionally arisen over technical aspects like bar deflection and height verification, particularly indoors where air currents might subtly affect stability. Debates have centered on whether minimal bar touches constitute failures, with officials relying on visual judgment and video review to determine if the bar was dislodged or merely deflected without falling.[80] Wind assistance, while not formally measured in high jump as in horizontal jumps, has sparked informal discussions in enclosed venues, though World Athletics rules do not adjust marks for it due to the event's vertical nature. In response to these issues, World Athletics (formerly IAAF) implemented stricter verification protocols since 2000, including the adoption of the World Anti-Doping Code in 2003, which standardized testing and enabled indefinite sample storage for reanalysis.[81] Further enhancements in the late 2000s introduced the athlete biological passport in 2009 and mandatory out-of-competition testing, reducing evasion opportunities and prompting retroactive annulments.[82] These annulments have significantly impacted all-time lists by removing tainted performances, leading to medal reallocations—such as Canadian Derek Drouin's upgrade from bronze to silver in the 2012 Olympics—and restoring credibility to rankings, though they underscore ongoing challenges in maintaining record integrity.[83]Major championships
Olympic medalists
The high jump has been a men's event at the Summer Olympics since the inaugural 1896 Games in Athens, where Ellery Clark of the United States won gold with a leap of 1.81 m. The women's event debuted in 1928 in Amsterdam, with Ethel Catherwood of Canada claiming the first gold at 1.59 m. Medalists in both events are determined by the highest successful clearance, with ties resolved by fewer misses at lower heights or, in rare cases, shared awards. Winning heights have shown remarkable progression, reflecting advances in technique, training, and equipment. For men, the gold medal height doubled from 1.81 m in 1896 to 2.36 m in 2024, with the Fosbury Flop revolutionizing bar clearance after 1968. Women's performances followed suit, rising from 1.59 m to 2.00 m over the same span, though early barriers like limited participation and societal constraints slowed initial growth.[84][85] A historic tie occurred in the men's 2020 Tokyo final, where Mutaz Essa Barshim of Qatar and Gianmarco Tamberi of Italy shared gold at 2.37 m after both declined a jump-off, marking the first dual gold in Olympic high jump since 1992.Men's Olympic Medalists
| Year | Gold | Height | Silver | Height | Bronze | Height |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 (Paris) | Hamish Kerr (NZL) | 2.36 m | Shelby McEwen (USA) | 2.36 m | Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) | 2.34 m |
| 2020 (Tokyo) | Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) Gianmarco Tamberi (ITA) | 2.37 m | - | - | Maksim Nedasekau (BLR) | 2.37 m |
| 2016 (Rio) | Derek Drouin (CAN) | 2.38 m | Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) | 2.36 m | Bogdan Bondarenko (UKR) | 2.33 m |
| 2012 (London) | Ivan Ukhov (RUS) | 2.38 m | Erik Kynard (USA) | 2.33 m | Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) Derek Drouin (CAN) Robbie Grabarz (GBR) | 2.29 m |
| 2008 (Beijing) | Andrey Silnov (RUS) | 2.36 m | Germaine Mason (GBR) | 2.34 m | Yaroslav Rybakov (RUS) | 2.34 m |
| 2004 (Athens) | Stefan Holm (SWE) | 2.36 m | Matt Hemingway (USA) | 2.34 m | Jaroslav Bába (CZE) | 2.34 m |
| 2000 (Sydney) | Sergey Klyugin (RUS) | 2.35 m | Javier Sotomayor (CUB) | 2.32 m | Abderahmane Hammad (ALG) | 2.32 m |
| 1996 (Atlanta) | Charles Austin (USA) | 2.39 m | Artur Partyka (POL) | 2.37 m | Steve Smith (GBR) | 2.35 m |
| 1992 (Barcelona) | Javier Sotomayor (CUB) Patrik Sjöberg (SWE) | 2.34 m | - | - | Hollis Conway (USA) Tim Forsyth (AUS) Artur Partyka (POL) | 2.34 m |
| 1988 (Seoul) | Gennadiy Avdeyenko (URS) | 2.38 m | Hollis Conway (USA) | 2.36 m | Rudolf Povarnitsin (URS) Patrik Sjöberg (SWE) | 2.36 m |
| 1984 (Los Angeles) | Dietmar Mögenburg (FRG) | 2.35 m | Patrik Sjöberg (SWE) | 2.33 m | Zhu Jianhua (CHN) | 2.31 m |
| 1980 (Moscow) | Gerd Wessig (GDR) | 2.36 m | Jacek Wszoła (POL) | 2.31 m | Jörg Freimuth (GDR) | 2.31 m |
| 1976 (Montreal) | Jacek Wszoła (POL) | 2.25 m | Greg Joy (CAN) | 2.23 m | Dwight Stones (USA) | 2.21 m |
| 1972 (Munich) | Jüri Tarmak (URS) | 2.23 m | Stefan Junge (GDR) | 2.21 m | Dwight Stones (USA) | 2.21 m |
| 1968 (Mexico City) | Dick Fosbury (USA) | 2.24 m | Ed Caruthers (USA) | 2.22 m | Valentin Gavrilov (URS) | 2.20 m |
| 1964 (Tokyo) | Valeriy Brumel (URS) John Thomas (USA) | 2.18 m | - | - | John Rambo (USA) | 2.16 m |
| 1960 (Rome) | Robert Shavlakadze (URS) Valeriy Brumel (URS) | 2.16 m | - | - | John Thomas (USA) | 2.14 m |
| 1956 (Melbourne) | Charles Dumas (USA) | 2.12 m | Chilla Porter (AUS) | 2.10 m | Igor Kashkarov (URS) | 2.08 m |
| 1952 (Helsinki) | Walter Davis (USA) | 2.04 m | Ken Wiesner (USA) | 2.01 m | José Telles da Conceição (BRA) | 1.98 m |
| 1948 (London) | John Winter (AUS) | 1.98 m | Bjørn Røse (NOR) | 1.95 m | George Stanich (USA) | 1.95 m |
| 1936 (Berlin) | Cornelius Johnson (USA) | 2.03 m | Dave Albritton (USA) | 2.00 m | Delos Thurber (USA) | 2.00 m |
| 1932 (Los Angeles) | Duncan McNaughton (CAN) Robert Van Osdel (USA) Simeon Toribio (PHI) | 1.97 m | - | - | - | - |
| 1928 (Amsterdam) | Bob King (USA) | 1.94 m | Ben Hedges (USA) | 1.91 m | Claude Ménard (FRA) | 1.91 m |
| 1924 (Paris) | Harold Osborn (USA) | 1.98 m | Leroy Brown (USA) | 1.95 m | Pierre Lewden (FRA) | 1.92 m |
| 1920 (Antwerp) | Richmond Landon (USA) | 1.93 m | Harold Muller (USA) | 1.90 m | Bo Ekelund (SWE) | 1.90 m |
| 1912 (Stockholm) | Alma Richards (USA) | 1.93 m | Hans Liesche (GER) | 1.91 m | George Horine (USA) | 1.89 m |
| 1908 (London) | Harry Porter (USA) | 1.90 m | Geo André (FRA) Con Leahy (GBR) István Somodi (HUN) | 1.88 m | - | - |
| 1904 (St. Louis) | Samuel Jones (USA) | 1.80 m | Garrett Serviss (USA) | 1.77 m | Paul Weinstein (GER) | 1.77 m |
| 1900 (Paris) | Irving Baxter (USA) | 1.90 m | Patrick Leahy (GBR) | 1.78 m | Irvin Phillips (HUN) | 1.75 m |
| 1896 (Athens) | Ellery Clark (USA) | 1.81 m | James Connolly (USA) Robert Garrett (USA) | 1.65 m | - | - |
Women's Olympic Medalists
| Year | Gold | Height | Silver | Height | Bronze | Height |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 (Paris) | Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR) | 2.00 m | Nicola Olyslagers (AUS) | 2.00 m | Iryna Gerashchenko (UKR) Eleanor Patterson (AUS) | 1.95 m |
| 2020 (Tokyo) | Mariya Lasitskene (ROC) | 2.04 m | Nicola McDermott (AUS) | 2.02 m | Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR) | 2.00 m |
| 2016 (Rio) | Ruth Beitia (ESP) | 1.97 m | Mirela Demireva (BUL) | 1.97 m | Blanka Vlašić (CRO) | 1.97 m |
| 2012 (London) | Anna Chicherova (RUS) | 2.05 m | Brigetta Barrett (USA) | 2.03 m | Svetlana Shkolina (RUS) | 2.03 m |
| 2008 (Beijing) | Tia Hellebaut (BEL) | 2.05 m | Blanka Vlašić (CRO) | 2.05 m | Anna Chicherova (RUS) | 2.03 m |
| 2004 (Athens) | Yelena Slesarenko (RUS) | 2.06 m | Hestrie Cloete (RSA) | 2.02 m | Viktoriya Styopina (RUS) | 2.02 m |
| 2000 (Sydney) | Yelena Yelesina (RUS) | 2.01 m | Hestrie Cloete (RSA) | 2.01 m | Kajsa Bergqvist (SWE) Oana Pantelimon (ROU) | 1.99 m |
| 1996 (Atlanta) | Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) | 2.05 m | Niki Bakogianni (GRE) | 2.03 m | Inha Babakova (UKR) | 2.01 m |
| 1992 (Barcelona) | Heike Henkel (GER) | 2.02 m | Galina Astafei (ROU) | 2.00 m | Ioamnet Quintero (CUB) | 1.97 m |
| 1988 (Seoul) | Louise Ritter (USA) | 2.03 m | Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) | 2.01 m | Tamara Bykova (URS) | 1.99 m |
| 1984 (Los Angeles) | Ulrike Meyfarth (FRG) | 2.02 m | Sara Simeoni (ITA) | 2.00 m | Joni Huntley (USA) | 1.97 m |
| 1980 (Moscow) | Sara Simeoni (ITA) | 1.97 m | Urszula Kielan (POL) | 1.94 m | Jutta Kirst (GDR) | 1.94 m |
| 1976 (Montreal) | Rosemarie Ackermann (GDR) | 1.93 m | Sara Simeoni (ITA) | 1.91 m | Yordanka Blagoeva (BUL) | 1.91 m |
| 1972 (Munich) | Ulrike Meyfarth (FRG) | 1.92 m | Yordanka Blagoeva (BUL) | 1.88 m | Ilona Gusenbauer (AUT) | 1.88 m |
| 1968 (Mexico City) | Miloslava Rezková (TCH) | 1.82 m | Antonina Okorokova (URS) | 1.80 m | Valentina Kozyr (URS) | 1.80 m |
| 1964 (Tokyo) | Iolanda Balaș (ROU) | 1.90 m | Michele Brown (AUS) | 1.80 m | Taisiya Chenchik (URS) | 1.78 m |
| 1960 (Rome) | Iolanda Balaș (ROU) | 1.85 m | Jarosława Jóźwiakowska (POL) Dorothy Shirley (GBR) | 1.71 m | - | - |
| 1956 (Melbourne) | Mildred McDaniel (USA) | 1.76 m | Thelma Hopkins (GBR) Maria Itkina (URS) | 1.67 m | - | - |
| 1952 (Helsinki) | Esther Brand (RSA) | 1.67 m | Sheila Lerwill (GBR) | 1.65 m | Aleksandra Chudina (URS) | 1.63 m |
| 1948 (London) | Alice Coachman (USA) | 1.68 m | Dorothy Tyler (GBR) | 1.68 m | Micheline Ostermeyer (FRA) | 1.61 m |
| 1936 (Berlin) | Ibolya Csák (HUN) | 1.60 m | Dorothy Tyler (GBR) | 1.60 m | Elfriede Kaun (GER) | 1.60 m |
| 1932 (Los Angeles) | Jean Shiley (USA) | 1.65 m | Babe Didrikson (USA) | 1.65 m | Eva Dawes (CAN) | 1.60 m |
| 1928 (Amsterdam) | Ethel Catherwood (CAN) | 1.59 m | Lien Gisolf (NED) | 1.56 m | Mildred Wiley (USA) | 1.56 m |
World Championships medalists
The World Athletics Championships high jump events have showcased elite performances since the inaugural edition in 1983, with medals awarded biennially (skipping 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic). The men's competition has highlighted technical evolution, particularly the Fosbury Flop technique, while the women's event has seen consistent high clearances influenced by Eastern European training traditions. Notable host influences include the 1993 Stuttgart Championships, where optimal conditions contributed to Javier Sotomayor's world record clearance of 2.45 m en route to gold. Dominance patterns reveal strong contributions from Cuban and American athletes in the men's event, with Cuba securing multiple golds through Sotomayor's era-defining jumps, and the United States producing versatile jumpers like Charles Austin and Jesse Williams. In the women's competition, athletes from Russia (including under ANA status) and Ukraine have led, amassing over 20 combined medals through figures like Mariya Lasitskene and Yaroslava Mahuchikh.Men's Medalists
| Year | Location | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1983 | Helsinki | Hennadiy Avdyeyenko (URS) 2.32 m | Tyke Peacock (USA) 2.32 m | Zhu Jianhua (CHN) 2.29 m |
| 1987 | Rome | Patrik Sjöberg (SWE) 2.38 m | Hennadiy Avdyeyenko (URS) 2.37 m | Igor Paklin (URS) / Valentin Moskvine (URS) 2.34 m (shared) |
| 1991 | Tokyo | Charles Austin (USA) 2.38 m | Javier Sotomayor (CUB) 2.36 m | Hollis Conway (USA) 2.34 m |
| 1993 | Stuttgart | Javier Sotomayor (CUB) 2.40 m | Artur Partyka (POL) 2.37 m | Steve Smith (GBR) 2.37 m |
| 1995 | Gothenburg | Troy Kemp (BAH) 2.38 m | Javier Sotomayor (CUB) 2.35 m | Artur Partyka (POL) 2.34 m |
| 1997 | Athens | Javier Sotomayor (CUB) 2.37 m | Artur Partyka (POL) 2.35 m | Tim Forsyth (AUS) 2.32 m |
| 1999 | Seville | Vyacheslav Voronin (RUS) 2.36 m | Mark Boswell (CAN) 2.36 m | Martin Buß (GER) 2.36 m |
| 2001 | Edmonton | Martin Buß (GER) 2.36 m | Yaroslav Rybakov (RUS) 2.34 m | Igor Lapshin (RUS) 2.32 m |
| 2003 | Saint-Denis | Jacques Freitag (RSA) 2.35 m | Stefan Holm (SWE) 2.35 m | Mark Boswell (CAN) 2.34 m |
| 2005 | Helsinki | Yuriy Krymarenko (UKR) 2.34 m | Víctor Moya (CUB) 2.34 m | Stefan Holm (SWE) 2.32 m |
| 2007 | Osaka | Donald Thomas (BAH) 2.35 m | Yaroslav Rybakov (RUS) 2.35 m | Kyriakos Ioannou (CYP) 2.35 m |
| 2009 | Berlin | Yaroslav Rybakov (RUS) 2.32 m | Kyriakos Ioannou (CYP) 2.32 m | Sylwester Bednarek (POL) 2.32 m |
| 2011 | Daegu | Jesse Williams (USA) 2.35 m | Aleksey Dmitrik (RUS) 2.35 m | Trevor Barry (BAH) 2.33 m |
| 2013 | Moscow | Bohdan Bondarenko (UKR) 2.41 m | Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) 2.40 m | Derek Drouin (CAN) 2.40 m |
| 2015 | Beijing | Derek Drouin (CAN) 2.34 m | Bohdan Bondarenko (UKR) / Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) 2.33 m (shared) | - |
| 2017 | London | Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) 2.35 m | Danil Lysenko (ANA) 2.35 m | Majdeddin Ghazal (SYR) 2.32 m |
| 2019 | Doha | Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) 2.37 m | Mikhail Akimenko (ANA) 2.35 m | Ilya Ivanyuk (ANA) 2.35 m |
| 2022 | Eugene | Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) 2.37 m | Woo Sang-hyeok (KOR) 2.35 m | Andriy Protsenko (UKR) 2.33 m |
| 2023 | Budapest | Gianmarco Tamberi (ITA) / JuVaughn Harrison (USA) 2.36 m (shared) | - | Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) 2.33 m |
| 2025 | Tokyo | Hamish Kerr (NZL) 2.36 m | Woo Sang-hyeok (KOR) 2.34 m | Jan Štefela (CZE) 2.31 m |
Women's Medalists
| Year | Location | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1983 | Helsinki | Tamara Bykova (URS) 2.00 m | Ulrike Meyfarth (FRG) 1.99 m | Louise Ritter (USA) 1.97 m |
| 1987 | Rome | Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) 2.09 m | Tamara Bykova (URS) 2.04 m | Susanne Beyer (GDR) 2.00 m |
| 1991 | Tokyo | Heike Henkel (GER) 2.01 m | Yelena Yelesina (URS) 2.00 m | Inha Babakova (URS) 1.98 m |
| 1993 | Stuttgart | Ioamnet Quintero (CUB) 2.00 m | Silvia Costa (CUB) 1.99 m | Sigrid Kirchmann (AUT) 1.99 m |
| 1995 | Gothenburg | Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) 2.01 m | Alina Astafei (GER) 2.00 m | Inha Babakova (UKR) 1.97 m |
| 1997 | Athens | Hanne Haugland (NOR) 2.00 m | Inha Babakova (UKR) 1.98 m | Yang Yu-ling (CHN) 1.97 m |
| 1999 | Seville | Inha Babakova (UKR) 2.00 m | Yelena Yelesina (RUS) 2.00 m | Svetlana Lapina (RUS) 1.98 m |
| 2001 | Edmonton | Hestrie Cloete (RSA) 2.00 m | Inha Babakova (UKR) 1.97 m | Kajsa Bergqvist (SWE) 1.97 m |
| 2003 | Saint-Denis | Hestrie Cloete (RSA) 2.00 m | Marina Kuptsova (RUS) 2.00 m | Kajsa Bergqvist (SWE) 1.99 m |
| 2005 | Helsinki | Kajsa Bergqvist (SWE) 2.02 m | Chaunté Howard (USA) 2.00 m | Emma Green (SWE) 2.00 m |
| 2007 | Osaka | Blanka Vlašić (CRO) 2.03 m | Anna Chicherova (RUS) 2.00 m | Kajsa Bergqvist (SWE) 2.00 m |
| 2009 | Berlin | Blanka Vlašić (CRO) 2.02 m | Ariane Friedrich (GER) 2.02 m | Antonietta Di Martino (ITA) 2.00 m |
| 2011 | Daegu | Anna Chicherova (RUS) 2.05 m | Blanka Vlašić (CRO) 2.03 m | Antonietta Di Martino (ITA) 2.00 m |
| 2013 | Moscow | Brigetta Barrett (USA) 2.00 m | Anna Chicherova (RUS) 2.00 m | Svetlana Shkolina (RUS) 1.99 m |
| 2015 | Beijing | Mariya Kuchina (RUS) 2.01 m | Blanka Vlašić (CRO) 1.99 m | Anna Chicherova (RUS) 1.99 m |
| 2017 | London | Mariya Lasitskene (ANA) 2.01 m | Yuliya Levchenko (UKR) 2.00 m | Kamila Lićwinko (POL) 1.99 m |
| 2019 | Doha | Mariya Lasitskene (ANA) 2.04 m | Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR) 2.00 m | Vashti Cunningham (USA) 1.99 m |
| 2022 | Eugene | Eleanor Patterson (AUS) 2.02 m | Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR) 2.01 m | Elena Vallortigara (ITA) 1.99 m |
| 2023 | Budapest | Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR) 2.00 m | Eleanor Patterson (AUS) 1.99 m | Nicola Olyslagers (AUS) 1.98 m |
| 2025 | Tokyo | Nicola Olyslagers (AUS) 2.00 m | Maria Żodzik (POL) 2.00 m | Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR) Angelina Topic (SRB) 1.97 m (shared) |
World Indoor Championships medalists
The World Indoor Athletics Championships, held biennially since 1985, have showcased elite high jump performances under controlled indoor conditions, often yielding marks comparable to or exceeding outdoor results due to optimal arena setups and reduced environmental variables.[88] European athletes have dominated the medal tallies, securing over 70% of gold medals in both men's and women's events through 2025, reflecting strong regional training infrastructures and historical depth in the discipline.[89][90] Key achievements include multiple championship records set during the event, such as Javier Sotomayor's men's indoor world record of 2.43 m in 1989 in Budapest and Stefka Kostadinova's women's championship record of 2.05 m in 1987 in Indianapolis, both of which remain unbeaten at the championships.[91] Venues like Belgrade's Štark Arena in 2022 have facilitated high-quality jumps, with Woo Sang-hyeok clearing 2.34 m for gold amid favorable track and atmospheric conditions that supported personal bests across field events.Men's Medalists
| Year | Gold | Height | Silver | Height | Bronze | Height |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1985 | Patrik Sjöberg (SWE) | 2.32 m | Javier Sotomayor (CUB) | 2.30 m | Othmane Belfaa (ALG) | 2.27 m |
| 1987 | Igor Paklin (URS) | 2.38 m | Gennady Avdeyenko (URS) | 2.38 m | Jan Žvara (TCH) | 2.34 m |
| 1989 | Javier Sotomayor (CUB) | 2.43 m | Dietmar Mögenburg (FRG) | 2.35 m | Patrik Sjöberg (SWE) | 2.35 m |
| 1991 | Hollis Conway (USA) | 2.40 m | Artur Partyka (POL) | 2.37 m | Javier Sotomayor (CUB) | 2.31 m |
| 1993 | Javier Sotomayor (CUB) | 2.41 m | Patrik Sjöberg (SWE) | 2.39 m | Stephen Smith (GBR) | 2.37 m |
| 1995 | Javier Sotomayor (CUB) | 2.38 m | Lambros Papakostas (GRE) | 2.35 m | Tony Barton (GBR) | 2.32 m |
| 1997 | Charles Austin (USA) | 2.35 m | Lambros Papakostas (GRE) | 2.32 m | Dragutin Topić (YUG) | 2.32 m |
| 1999 | Javier Sotomayor (CUB) | 2.36 m | Vyacheslav Voronin (RUS) | 2.36 m | Charles Austin (USA) | 2.33 m |
| 2001 | Stefan Holm (SWE) | 2.32 m | Andriy Sokolovskyy (UKR) | 2.29 m | Staffan Strand (SWE) | 2.29 m |
| 2003 | Stefan Holm (SWE) | 2.35 m | Yaroslav Rybakov (RUS) | 2.33 m | Hennadiy Moroz (BLR) | 2.30 m |
| 2004 | Stefan Holm (SWE) | 2.35 m | Yaroslav Rybakov (RUS) | 2.32 m | Stefan Vasilache (ROU) | 2.25 m |
| 2006 | Yaroslav Rybakov (RUS) | 2.37 m | Andrey Tereshin (RUS) | 2.35 m | Linus Thörnblad (SWE) | 2.33 m |
| 2008 | Stefan Holm (SWE) | 2.36 m | Yaroslav Rybakov (RUS) | 2.34 m | Kyriakos Ioannou (CYP) | 2.30 m |
| 2010 | Ivan Ukhov (RUS) | 2.36 m | Yaroslav Rybakov (RUS) | 2.31 m | Dusty Jonas (USA) | 2.31 m |
| 2012 | Dimitrios Chondrokoukis (GRE) | 2.33 m | Andrey Silnov (RUS) | 2.33 m | Ivan Ukhov (RUS) | 2.31 m |
| 2014 | Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) | 2.38 m | Ivan Ukhov (RUS) | 2.38 m | Andriy Protsenko (UKR) | 2.36 m |
| 2016 | Gianmarco Tamberi (ITA) | 2.36 m | Robert Grabarz (GBR) | 2.33 m | Erik Kynard (USA) | 2.33 m |
| 2018 | Danil Lysenko (ANA) | 2.36 m | Mutaz Essa Barshim (QAT) | 2.33 m | Mateusz Przybylko (GER) | 2.29 m |
| 2022 | Woo Sang-hyeok (KOR) | 2.34 m | Loïc Gasch (SUI) | 2.31 m | Gianmarco Tamberi (ITA) | 2.31 m |
| 2024 | Hamish Kerr (NZL) | 2.36 m | Shelby McEwen (USA) | 2.28 m | Woo Sang-hyeok (KOR) | 2.28 m |
| 2025 | Woo Sang-hyeok (KOR) | 2.31 m | Hamish Kerr (NZL) | 2.28 m | Raymond Richards (JAM) | 2.28 m |
Women's Medalists
| Year | Gold | Height | Silver | Height | Bronze | Height |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1985 | Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) | 1.97 m | Susanne Lorentzon (SWE) | 1.94 m | Debbie Brill (CAN) / Danuta Bułkowska (POL) / Silvia Costa (CUB) | 1.90 m |
| 1987 | Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) | 2.05 m | Sabine Beyer (GDR) | 2.02 m | Emilka Dragieva (BUL) | 2.00 m |
| 1989 | Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) | 2.02 m | Tamara Bykova (URS) | 2.00 m | Heike Redetzky (FRG) | 1.94 m |
| 1991 | Heike Henkel (GER) | 2.00 m | Tamara Bykova (URS) | 1.97 m | Heike Balz (GER) | 1.94 m |
| 1993 | Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) | 2.02 m | Heike Henkel (GER) | 2.02 m | Inha Babakova (BLR) | 2.00 m |
| 1995 | Alina Astafei (GER) | 2.01 m | Britt Taubenheim (GER) | 1.99 m | Heike Henkel (GER) | 1.99 m |
| 1997 | Stefka Kostadinova (BUL) | 2.02 m | Inha Babakova (BLR) | 2.00 m | Hanne Haugland (NOR) | 2.00 m |
| 1999 | Tatyana Teplitskaya (BUL) | 1.99 m | Zuzana Hlavonova (CZE) | 1.96 m | Tisha Waller (USA) | 1.96 m |
| 2001 | Kajsa Bergqvist (SWE) | 2.00 m | Inha Babakova (BLR) | 2.00 m | Venelina Veneva (BUL) | 1.96 m |
| 2003 | Kajsa Bergqvist (SWE) | 2.01 m | Yelena Yelesina (RUS) | 1.99 m | Anna Chicherova (RUS) | 1.99 m |
| 2004 | Yelena Slesarenko (RUS) | 2.04 m | Anna Chicherova (RUS) | 2.00 m | Blanka Vlašić (CRO) | 1.97 m |
| 2006 | Yelena Slesarenko (RUS) | 2.02 m | Blanka Vlašić (CRO) | 2.00 m | Ruth Beitia (ESP) | 1.98 m |
| 2008 | Blanka Vlašić (CRO) | 2.03 m | Yelena Slesarenko (RUS) | 2.01 m | Vita Styopina (UKR) | 2.01 m |
| 2010 | Blanka Vlašić (CRO) | 2.00 m | Ruth Beitia (ESP) | 1.98 m | Chaunté Lowe (USA) | 1.98 m |
| 2012 | Chaunté Lowe (USA) | 1.98 m | Antonietta Di Martino (ITA) | 1.95 m | Anna Chicherova (RUS) / Ebba Jungmark (SWE) | 1.95 m |
| 2014 | Mariya Kuchina (RUS) | 2.00 m | Ruth Beitia (ESP) | 2.00 m | Kamila Lićwinko (POL) | 2.00 m |
| 2016 | Vashti Cunningham (USA) | 1.96 m | Ruth Beitia (ESP) | 1.96 m | Kamila Lićwinko (POL) | 1.96 m |
| 2018 | Mariya Lasitskene (ANA) | 2.01 m | Vashti Cunningham (USA) | 1.93 m | Alessia Trost (ITA) | 1.93 m |
| 2022 | Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR) | 2.02 m | Eleanor Patterson (AUS) | 2.00 m | Nadezhda Dubovitskaya (KAZ) | 1.98 m |
| 2024 | Nicola Olyslagers (AUS) | 1.99 m | Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR) | 1.97 m | Lia Apostolovski (SLO) | 1.95 m |
| 2025 | Nicola Olyslagers (AUS) | 1.97 m | Eleanor Patterson (AUS) | 1.97 m | Yaroslava Mahuchikh (UKR) | 1.95 m |
Notable athletes
Most decorated competitors
Among the most decorated competitors in high jump history, Qatari athlete Mutaz Essa Barshim stands out for his remarkable consistency across major international championships. As of 2025, Barshim has secured four Olympic medals—silver in 2012, silver in 2016, gold in 2021, and bronze in 2024—making him the first high jumper to achieve this feat. He has also amassed six World Championship medals, including three outdoor golds (2017, 2019, 2022) and one outdoor bronze (2023), plus one indoor gold (2014) and one indoor silver (2018). These totals aggregate to 10 major medals from the Olympics, World Championships (outdoor and indoor), highlighting his dominance over a career spanning from 2010 to the present.[92][93][94] Swedish high jumper Stefan Holm is another pinnacle of longevity, collecting nine major medals during his peak from 2000 to 2008. Holm earned two Olympic medals—a gold in 2004 and silver in 2008—alongside two outdoor World Championship silvers (2003, 2005) and four World Indoor Championship golds (2001, 2003, 2004, 2008). He also claimed one European Championship silver in 2002, underscoring his reliability in producing top-three finishes across events. His success emphasized technical precision and endurance rather than raw height, as he stood at just 1.80 meters.[95][96] On the women's side, Russian Yelena Yelesina amassed seven major medals, blending Olympic success with strong World and European performances over her career from 1990 to 2003. Yelesina won Olympic gold in 2000 and earned two outdoor World Championship silvers (1997, 2001), complemented by one World Indoor silver (2003). Her European haul included one Indoor gold (1990), one outdoor silver (1994), and one Indoor silver (2002), totaling one Olympic medal and six from World and European championships. This tally reflects her versatility in both indoor and outdoor formats.[97][98] South African Hestrie Cloete (later Els) secured six major medals through her powerful performances from 1998 to 2006, often highlighted by multiple silvers in elite fields. Cloete claimed two Olympic silvers (2000, 2004) and two World Championship golds (2001, 2003), with her 2003 victory setting a personal best of 2.06 meters. Additional accolades came from one World Indoor silver (2001) and one African Championship gold (2002), aggregating to four from Olympics and Worlds plus regionals. Her career exemplified sustained excellence, with back-to-back World titles as a rare achievement for women.[99][100][101]| Athlete | Olympics | World Outdoor | World Indoor | European | Total Major Medals |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mutaz Barshim (QAT, men) | 4 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 10 |
| Stefan Holm (SWE, men) | 2 | 2 | 4 | 1 | 9 |
| Yelena Yelesina (RUS, women) | 1 | 2 | 1 | 3 | 7 |
| Hestrie Cloete (RSA, women) | 2 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 5* |