Alexandra Ignatova (2025) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Native name | Александра Вячеславовна Игнатова (Russian) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Full name | Alexandra Vyacheslavovna Ignatova | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Other names | Alexandra Trusova (maiden name)
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| Born | (2004-06-23)23 June 2004 (age 21) Ryazan, Ryazan Oblast, Russia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Home town | Moscow, Russia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Height | 1.65 m (5 ft 5 in)[1] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Coach | Eteri Tutberidze,Sergei Dudakov | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Skating club | Eteri Tutberidze Figure Skating Centre | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Began skating | 2008 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Alexandra "Sasha"Vyacheslavovna Ignatova (néeTrusova; Russian:Александра Вячеславовна Игнатова née Трусова,IPA:[ɐlʲɪˈksandrəˈtrusəvə]; born 23 June 2004) is a Russianfigure skater. She is the2022 Olympic silver medalist, the2021 World bronze medalist, aEuropean silver[2] (2022) and bronze (2020) medalist, the2019 Grand Prix Final bronze medalist, the2019 Skate Canada champion, the2019 Rostelecom Cup champion, the2019 CS Ondrej Nepela Memorial champion, the2021 U.S. Classic champion, and the2021 Skate America champion. Domestically, she is the2022 Russian national champion, the2019 silver medalist, and the2020 and2021 bronze medalist. At the junior level, she has been a two-time Junior World Champion (2018 and2019), the2018 Junior Grand Prix Final champion, the2019 Junior Grand Prix Final silver medalist, a four-time champion on theJunior Grand Prix series, and a two-timeRussian Junior national champion.
Trusova is credited for leading the ladies figure skating technical revolution and being the new face of women's figure skating[3] by becoming the first female skater to land thequadLutz, quadflip, and quadtoe loop jumps; the second to land the quadSalchow (afterMiki Ando); and the first to land two and three ratified quads in a free skate, achieved at the2018 Junior World Championships and the2019 Nepela Trophy, respectively.[4][5][6] She is also the first woman to land a quad at the Olympic Winter Games, and the first woman to land four and five quads in a free skate, achieved at the Beijing Winter Olympics 2022. She currently holds fourGuinness World Records, the fourth in recognition of her landed quadruple flip at the 2019 ISU Grand Prix Final.[7] Her technical score of 92.35 points in the free skate at the2018 Junior Worlds was thehighest recorded in women's singles skating at the junior and senior level until the GOE (Grade of Execution) system was changed at the end of2017–18 season.
Additionally, Trusova is recognized as the youngest woman to become aWorld Junior champion and aJunior Grand Prix Final champion following her wins at the 2018 World Junior Championship and the 2018 Junior Grand Prix Final at the age of 13.[8] At the2018 JGP Lithuania, she became the first female skater to land a quadruple jump in combination after performing a quad toe loop and triple toe loop.[9] At the2018 JGP Armenia, she became the first female skater to land a quad Lutz jump in international competition.[10] She is also the first female skater to backload a quad in combination, which she accomplished atSkate Canada 2019, landing a quad Toe in combination with a triple Salchow. Trusova currently has thesecond highest free skating score of any female skater, with 177.13. Trusova is the first and only female skater competing with four differentquadruple jumps—toe loop,Salchow,flip andLutz—and the first to score above 100 points in technical elements, with 100.20 in the free skate at2019 Skate Canada and an Olympic record 106.16 at the 2022 Olympics.
Sasha Trusova was born on 23 June 2004 inRyazan into a sports family.[11] She has two younger brothers, Egor and Ivan. A passionate dog lover, Trusova owns seven dogs: achihuahua named Tina, who often accompanied her to competitions;[12] ahusky named Jack; aminiature royal poodle named Lana, which she received at theRostelecom Cup in recognition of her victory at the2019 World Junior Figure Skating Championships and for landing her first triple Axel in practice; abasenji named Alita; asecond miniature poodle named Cruella (nicknamed Ella);[13] aBichon Frisé named Selma; and most recently, atoy poodle named Smoke. Both Ella and Selma were gifts from fans in China.[citation needed]
A short biography detailing her career throughout her teenage years was published in Russian under the title Alexandra Trusova.The Girl Who Fights Gravity: And Changes the World of Women’s Figure Skating, with an English translation released in March 2021.[14][15]
Trusova was in a relationship withMark Kondratiuk, the 2022 Beijing Olympic team event bronze medalist, from May 2022 until the summer of 2023.[16][17] In late 2023, she began a relationship with fellow Russian figure skaterMakar Ignatov. On June 17, 2024, Trusova and Ignatov announced their engagement, and they were married on August 17, 2024, after which Trusova adopted the surname Ignatova.[18]
On March 22, 2025, the couple publicly announced via Instagram that they were expecting their first child. On August 6, 2025, the couple welcomed their first child, a son.[19] Trusova started recovery shortly after giving birth, and began regaining her jumps, currently working on triple jumps in combinations.[20]
Trusova began learning to skate in 2008 at the age of four.[11] She initially trained inRyazan under the guidance of Olga Shevtsova before relocating toMoscow in 2015, where she was coached by Alexander Volkov.[21] In 2016, she joined the Khrustalny (Crystal) rink, where she began training underEteri Tutberidze andSergei Dudakov.[11]
Trusova placed fourth at the2017 Russian Junior Championships, finishing sixth in the short program and fourth in the free skate.[22]

Trusova debuted internationally in August 2017 at a2017–18 ISU Junior Grand Prix (JGP) competition inBrisbane, Australia. Ranked first in both the short program and free skate, she won the gold medal ahead of teammateAnastasia Gulyakova.[23] She landed an underrotatedquadruple Salchow in her free program. Her total score of 197.69 points was thethird highest ever achieved by a women's single skater on the junior level at the time, behind onlyAlina Zagitova andMarin Honda. She then finished first atJGP Belarus and qualified for the Junior Grand Prix Final.[24][25]
At the2017–18 Junior Grand Prix Final, Trusova scored 73.25 points, breaking the junior women's world record for the short program. In the free skate, she scored 132.36 points, approximately half a point less than what her teammate and training partner,Alena Kostornaia, scored. However, Trusova won the overall competition due to her 1.5 point-lead from the short program.[26] In January 2018, Trusova won the gold medal at the2018 Russian Junior Championships after placing first in the short program and third in the free skate. She again narrowly beat her training partner and silver medalist, Kostornaia, by a margin of 0.6 points.[27]
In March 2018, Trusova competed at the2018 Junior Worlds, where she won the gold medal after placing first in both the short program and free skate. Her free skate score of 153.49 points set the new world record for the junior free program, and her total score of 225.52 points was also the new world record for the junior combined total score. At the competition, Trusova became the first female skater to land thequadtoe loop, the second to land the quadSalchow behindMiki Ando, and the first to land two ratified quads in a free skate.[4] Herquadruple jump was the first ratified in 16 years since Ando's in 2002. Trusova's technical score of 92.35 points in the free skate at the2018 Junior World was the highest recorded in women's figure skating at the time at both the junior and senior levels. Her total score of 225.52 would have placed her first in thesenior women's World Championships that year as well, despite significantly lower program component scores and the absence of a choreographic sequence.[28] This is the first time anything like this has ever happened with someone from juniors.[citation needed]

Trusova began the season by competing in the2018 Junior Grand Prix (JGP) series. At her first Junior Grand Prix event of the season, she won the gold medal inKaunas,Lithuania. She ranked first in both the short program and the free skate and won the gold medal by 30 points over silver medalistKim Ye-lim.[29] As of September 2018, her scores at the competition are the highest achieved in an international junior women's competition. There, Trusova became the first female skater to land aquad in combination—a quad toe loop and triple toe loop that received 16.14 points. She also became the first female skater to attempt aquad Lutz in a competition, which she landed but not ratified due to under rotation.[9][30]
At her second Junior Grand Prix event of the season, she won another gold medal inYerevan,Armenia. Again she placed first in both the short program and free skate, winning the gold medal by 33 points over silver medalist and teammateAlena Kanysheva. Trusova surpassed her own free skate world record score and became the first female skater to land aquadruple Lutz in international competition (teammateAnna Shcherbakova landed two quadruple Lutz jumps several days earlier in a domestic competition).[10] With two Junior Grand Prix gold medals, Trusova qualified for the2018–19 Junior Grand Prix Final.[31]
At the JGP Final, she won the silver medal after placing second in both the short program and free skate.[32] This time, she was outscored by Kostornaia by approximately 2.5 points. In the free skate, Trusova landed a clean quad toe loop but stepped out of her first quad Lutz and fell on a second, underrotated quad Lutz.[33]
At the2019 Russian Championships, Trusova placed second in the short program and second in the free skate, winning the silver medal overall.[34] In the free skate, she landed a quad Lutz but fell on an underrotated quad toe loop, finishing behind Shcherbakova by 0.07 points. Trusova stated after the competition that she planned to work more on her quad jumps before the2019 Junior World Championships.[35]
Trusova successfully defended her Junior World title at the2019 World Junior Championships, placing second in the short program to Shcherbakova and winning the free skate.[36]

Trusova made her international senior debut at the2019 CS Ondrej Nepela Memorial, where she won the gold medal and set several new world records. In the free skate, she became the first woman ever to land three quadruple jumps when she landed a quad Lutz and two quad toe loops, the second of which was in combination. She set a newfree skate record of 163.78 points and a new combined total record of 238.69 points. Her technical element score (TES) of 98.34 points in the free skate was also the new world record. She earned 14.72 points for her quadruple Lutz, a new record for the highest valued single jump by a female skater which was phenomenal.
On October 5, Trusova skated in the team competition at theJapan Open, where she won the event with four quads—a quad Salchow, quad Lutz, quad toe-triple toe combination, and quad toe-Euler-triple Salchow combination—scoring over 160 points. Since it was not an official ISU competition, her historic number of quads landed was not officially recognized as the first in international competition.
Trusova made herISU Grand Prix debut at the2019 Skate Canada International, where she won the gold medal after placing third in the short program and first in the free skate.[37][38] At the competition, having performed quad toe loop-triple toe loop and quad toe loop-Euler-triple Salchow combinations, she became the first woman to land two quad-triple jump combinations in one program at an ISU-sanctioned international competition. She also became the first woman to land a quad-triple jump combination in the second half of the free skate. At the same competition, she set the new free skating record of 166.62 points and a new combined total record of 241.02 points. Her TES of 100.20 points in the free skate was also the new world record.[39] At her second Grand Prix, the2019 Rostelecom Cup, Trusova placed second in the short program behindEvgenia Medvedeva.[40] She placed first in the free skate despite falling on her opening quad Salchow attempt and another fall on a triple combination and won her second Grand Prix gold medal.[41]

Trusova's results qualified her for theGrand Prix Final inTurin. Skating in the short program, Trusova opted to attempt thetriple Axel in competition for the first time but underrotated it and fell. Consequently, she placed fifth in the segment, fourteen points behind first-place Kostornaia. Trusova said that the decision to introduce the triple Axel had been taken in light of its being landed "more or less consistently" in practices in the preceding week and remarked, "I like to risk, and without risking, I wouldn't achieve what I have by this moment".[42] In the free skate, Trusova attempted the quadflip in competition for the first time, landing it cleanly, alongside a quad Lutz and a quad toe loop, but doubled an intended quad Salchow and fell on a second quad toe attempt. She became the first female skater to attempt five quads in a free skate and the first to attempt four different types of quads. Third in the free, won the bronze medal behind Kostornaia and Shcherbakova.[43]
At the2020 Russian Championships, Trusova placed third in the short program, opting not to attempt the triple Axel.[44] The free skate proved a struggle, with two falls on her quad Lutz and quad flip attempts and doubling on her first attempted quad toe loop. She eventually landed her second quad toe attempt, as well as her remaining triple jumps, and remained in third place. She was "not pleased" with the performance and said she hoped to master the quadloop by the end of the season.[45]
Competing at the2020 European Championships, Trusova doubled and turned out of a planned triple Axel. She scored 74.95 points and placed third in that segment behind Kostornaia and Shcherbakova.[46] In the free skate, she fell on two planned quads but landed her quad toe-triple toe combination successfully. She placed third overall behind her two teammates and won the bronze medal.[47] Trusova was also assigned to compete at the2020 World Championships inMontreal, which were cancelled as a result of theCOVID-19 pandemic.
On May 6, 2020, it was announced by Russian media outlets Nevasport and Sport24 that Trusova had decided to part ways with coach Eteri Tutberidze in favor of joiningEvgeni Plushenko's academy. Trusova was joined in the departure by coach Sergei Rozanov, as well as novice training-mates Veronika and Alyona Zhilina.[48][49] According to Sport24, Trusova chose to leave the Tutberidze group due to lack of attention from Tutberidze herself during the months following the cancellation of the World Championships, as well as her overall dissatisfaction with her position in the training group.[49]
Trusova performed at the 2020 Russian Test Skates and successfully executed a quad toe in combination.[50] At the second stage of the Russian Cup held inMoscow, Trusova made a mistake on her triple Axel jump in the short program and placed third behindKamila Valieva andDaria Usacheva. However, in the free skate, Trusova cleanly executed two quadruple toe-loops, one in combination, and won the free skate to win gold. At the fourth stage inKazan, she stepped out on her opening triple Axel in the short program and placed second behind Kostornaia. In the free skate, Trusova cleanly landed three quads but fell on a fourth, as well as one a triple jump. Despite these mistakes, Trusova scored 171.21 points and won her second straight competition.[51]

In the short program at the2020 Rostelecom Cup, Trusova fell on a downgraded triple Axel and, as a result, placed third behind Kostornaia andElizaveta Tuktamysheva with a score of 70.81, which was her lowest international result since September 2017.[52] She encountered similar problems in the free skate, falling four times and receiving negative grades of execution on two other jumping passes. Her final score of 198.93 saw her drop down to fourth place, unprecedented for Trusova in international competition, and her first off-podium finish since the2017 Russian Junior Championships.[53]
Competing at the2021 Russian Championships, Trusova placed fourth in the short program behind Shcherbakova, Valieva, and Usacheva.[54] She landed two quad Lutzes in the free skate, placing third in the segment and winning the bronze medal. Speaking afterward about dealing with injury, she said that "two quads in the long program is very little for me, and I'll try to do more, but for today, this was the maximum content that I was able to do".[55]
With theEuropean Championships cancelled, Trusova instead participated in the2021 Channel One Trophy, a televised team event. Trusova was elected for the Time of Firsts team captained byEvgenia Medvedeva and placed fourth in the short program, the only woman on her team to skate cleanly.[56] In the free skate, she made errors on both quad Lutz attempts, placing third in the segment, and her team finished in second place overall.[57]
Trusova was selected to compete for the Russian Federation at the2021 World Championships in March 2021 inStockholm, where she was considered a favorite to make the podium.[58] In the short program, Trusova placed twelfth after putting a hand down on her triple Lutz due to overrotation, consequently failing to execute the second part of her jump combination.[59] In her free skate, she attempted five quads, falling on two of them; however, due to the high base value of her program, mistakes by other medal contenders, and her successful landing of three of her quads, Trusova was able to finish third overall for the bronze medal, 8.57 points ahead fourth-place skaterKaren Chen. On the podium alongside Shcherbakova and Tuktamysheva, this was only the second time that a single country had swept the women's podium at the World Championships, after the United States in1991.[60] On May 1, it was announced that Trusova was returning to the Sambo-70 training center under previous coach Tutberidze.[61]

Trusova picked music from the American filmCruella for her free program, having watched it three times beforehand and persuading her coaches. She debuted her programs for the Olympic season at the 2021 Russian Test skates in September held inChelyabinsk, where she cleanly executed a five-quad free program for the first time in a public event. However, she said afterward, "this is not a competition, so I'm not completely satisfied".[62] The following week, Trusova competed at the2021 U.S. Classic at theSkating Club of Boston, where she made mistakes on four out of five planned quads but narrowly took the gold medal over South Korean skaterPark Yeon-jeong.[63] In late October, it was reported that Trusova had suffered a leg injury shortly before the2021 Skate America, which did not allow her to train at her maximum. Despite the injury, Trusova decided to compete and placed first in the short program with a personal best of 77.69 and won the free skate by opening with a quad Lutz.[64] In early November, Trusova decided to withdraw from her second Grand Prix assignment, the2021 NHK Trophy.[65]
Returning to competition at the2022 Russian Championships, Trusova placed fifth in the short program after botching her triple Axel attempt. She rallied in the free skate despite two jump errors, placing second in the segment and winning the silver medal behind Kamila Valieva. Speaking afterward, she noted "the quad toe did not work" but was "still happy with the result".[66] On 13 January 2023, Valieva was stripped of her gold medal for doping (trimetazidine) and Trusova was elevated to gold.[67][68] At theEuropean Championships inTallinn, Trusova placed third in the short program despite falling on her triple Axel attempt again. She landed two out of her four planned quads in the free skate, winning her second European bronze medal. Despite medaling, she said she was "not happy with the skate" due to the errors.[69] On January 20, Trusova was officially named to theRussian Olympic team.[70]
Competing in thewomen's event short program at the2022 Winter Olympics, Trusova fell on an underrotated triple Axel attempt and received an edge call on her triple flip but still placed fourth in the segment, 5.24 points behind third-placeKaori Sakamoto.[71] In the free program, Trusova landed all five of the quads planned in her program, albeit receiving an edge call on her quad flip and negative grade of execution on her quad toe-loop and final solo quad Lutz. She placed first in the segment, setting Olympic scoring records of 106.16 for the technical component and 177.13 overall. However, she placed second overall behind teammate Shcherbakova, winning a silver medal in the event. Trusova became the first woman to land a quad flip and land a quad Lutz at the Olympics, the first woman to land four and five quads in competition, as well as the first woman to land four and five quads in one program at the Olympics.[72]
In early March 2022, the ISU banned all figure skaters and officials from Russia and Belarus from attending theWorld Championships due to theRussia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in late February, as a result of which Trusova was not allowed to participate in the competition at the end of March.[73]

Trusova opened her fourth senior season at the September 2022 Russian test skate event held in Moscow. She skated the short program segment, debuting a new program toAnnie Lennox'scover of "I Put a Spell on You" byJay Hawkins, but withdrew from the free skate due to an ongoing back injury.
On 1 October, it was reported byTASS that Trusova had again decided to part ways with coaches Eteri Tutberidze, Daniil Gleikhengauz, and Sergei Dudakov, this time in favor of joining Svetlana Sokolovskaya's group atCSKA.[74]
As Russia remained banned from international competition during the 2022-2023 season, Trusova opted to compete on the Russian Grand Prix series (a series of all-Russian competitions in the same format as the international Grand Prix series). Trusova was assigned to the second and fifth stages of the series.
At the second stage of the Russian Grand Prix Series Trusova debuted two new programs. She ranked second in the short program behind Adelia Petrosian. In the free skate she attempted one quad lutz, but fell on the attempt, ranking third in the free skate and third overall behind Petrosian and Sofia Samodelkina.
At the fifth stage of the Russian Grand Prix held inSamara, Trusova ranked third in the short program after singling what was intended to be a double axel. In the free skate she again attempted one quad lutz, though it was again unsuccessful. She ranked second in the free skate segment and second overall.
Trusova withdrew from both the2023 Russian Championships and the 2023 Russian Grand Prix Final.[75]
It was announced that Trusova, now Ignatova, would partake in the 2024 Russian test skates, and that she had returned to training with Plushenko at his skating academy, Angels of Plushenko.

Ignatova debuted two new programs at the 2024 Russian Test Skates, both of which were choreographed by Nikita Mikhailov. Her short program was set to the J2 and Ilza version of the song "Bésame Mucho". She cleanly landed a double axel and a triple flip, but struggled on the third jumping pass, doubling out of the second half of the intended triple-triple combination. In the free skate, Ignatova attempted one quad lutz though the attempt was unsuccessful. She again struggled with her triple lutz-triple toeloop combination, making similar errors to the short program. Speaking to press after her free skate Ignatova said “The performance was bad, definitely, but better than in training, it was really bad in training. But before going to Novogorsk I didn't make any mistakes in the short. These are trial runs for me, I haven't decided yet whether I'll come back.”
It was announced in October 2024 that Ignatova would not make a comeback in the upcoming competitive season. An article written byRIA Novosti explained that although Ignatova would continue to train at the Angels of Plushenko Academy, she did not intend to skate competitively during the 2024–2025 season.
On 19 January 2026, Ignatova was listed as a participant, along side previous training mateKamila Valieva, for the Russian Jumping Tournament in February.[76]
On 20 January 2026, Ignatova announced she has returned to training withEteri Tutberitze. She shared in a YouTube video, "I decided to go to Eteri Georgievna because I trained with her for most of my career and it's more comfortable to practice and perform with her." She continues to say, "I want to comeback. I want to make my dream come true. Let's not say which one it is."[77]
Ignatova participated in theRussian Jumping Championship. In the women's quarter-finals she finished in 9th place, unable to advance to the semi-finals. In the duets category, where she was paired with her husbandMakar Ignatov, the pair finished in 5th place overall.[78]
Trusova's skating technique is distinguished by her ability to compete with a significant repertoire of quad jumps unrivaled by other female competitors as of 2022.[79] Such ability has made her especially competitive in her free skate performances due to the higher scoring of quad jumps in women's competition. The ISU currently does not allow quads in the women's short program, leading Trusova to rely on the execution of her quads exclusively during her free skate programs.[80] At the 2021 World Championships, she had planned five quad jumps in her free skate, managing to land three of them successfully and moving her from twelfth place after the short program to the bronze medal following her free skate.[79]
At the2018 JGP Lithuania, Trusova became the first female skater to land a quadruple jump in combination: a quad toe loop with a triple toe loop.[9] A few weeks later, she was the first female skater to land a quadruple Lutz jump in international competition, ratified at the2018 JGP Armenia.[10] Trusova is the first and currently only female skater competing with four different types ofquadruple jumps—toe loop,Salchow,flip, andLutz.[9][10]
In May 2022, Trusova spoke in an interview of her desire to train to be the first person to do a quintuple jump in competition.[81] When asked about the training, Trusova stated that in 2021 she did train the quintuple jump using the 'fishing pole' harness apparatus used in Russia. She currently prefers to attempt the jumps without using any harnesses, which she describes as awkward and creating impediments to improving her ability to master the new jump. In the interview, Trusova stated that the quintuple jump might be approached as a priority over her trying the quad Axel (which men have already tried in competition) because she has not yet mastered the triple Axel for use in competition.[81]
Trusova has representedAdidas as a brand ambassador since 2018. She has appeared in numerous digital advertisements for the brand,[82] including a 30-second advertisement for their "Impossible is Nothing" campaign in April 2021.[83] She became a brand ambassador for the Japanese-producedAjinomoto product Amino Vital in July 2020.[84] In January 2021, Swiss luxury watch brandMaurice Lacroix announced Trusova as the latest Friend of the Brand to join their ML Crew.[85] Trusova also became a spokesperson for the Russian-Belarusian brand of dairy products Verkhovye.[86] She partnered with Canadian jewelry brand Brilliance & Melrose in October 2021.[87]Trusova formerly used nude Risport Royal Pro boots, but as of late 2021 uses white Edea Piano boots with the same Jackson Ultima Matrix Supreme blades.[88]

| Season | Short program | Free skating | Exhibition |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024–2025 |
|
| |
| 2023–2024 | Did not compete this season |
| |
| 2022–2023 [89][90][91] |
|
|
|
| 2021–2022 [92] |
|
|
|
| 2020–2021 [93] |
|
|
|
| 2019–2020 [94] |
|
|
|
| 2018–2019 [95] |
|
| |
| 2017–2018 [11] |
|
|
|
| 2016–2017 |
|
| |
| 2015–2016 |
| ||
| 2014–2015 |
|
| |

Trusova has set four world record scores.
| Women's combined total[98] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Date | Score | Event | Note |
| 26 October 2019 | 241.02 | 2019 Skate Canada | This record was later broken byAlena Kostornaia at the2019–20 Grand Prix Final |
| 21 September 2019 | 238.69 | 2019 CS Nepela Memorial | She broke the previous record held byAlina Zagitova by 0.26 points. |
| Women's free skating[99] | |||
| Date | Score | Event | Note |
| 26 October 2019 | 166.62 | 2019 Skate Canada | She became the first woman ever to achieve a technical element score (TES) above 100 points (100.20 points). Broken byKamila Valieva at the2021 CS Finlandia Trophy. |
| 21 September 2019 | 163.78 | 2019 CS Nepela Memorial | She broke the previous record held byAlina Zagitova by about 5 points. |
Trusova has set six junior world record scores under the new +5/-5 GOE (Grade of Execution) system.
| Junior women's combined total[98] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Date | Score | Event | Note |
| 9 March 2019 | 222.89 | 2019 World Junior Championships | Broken by Kamila Valieva the following year. |
| 7 September 2018 | 221.44 | 2018 JGP Lithuania | She broke the previous record held byAnna Shcherbakova by more than 16 points. |
| Junior women's free skating[99] | |||
| Date | Score | Event | Note |
| 9 March 2019 | 150.40 | 2019 World Junior Championships | Broken by Kamila Valieva the following year. |
| 12 October 2018 | 146.81 | 2018 JGP Armenia | At this competition, Trusova became the first woman to land a 4Lz jump. |
| 7 September 2018 | 146.70 | 2018 JGP Lithuania | She broke the previous record held byAlena Kostornaia by more than 14 points. Trusova became the first woman to 4T+3T combo at this competition. |
| Junior women's short program[100] | |||
| Date | Score | Event | Note |
| 6 September 2018 | 74.74 | 2018 JGP Lithuania | She broke the previous record held byAnna Shcherbakova by about 1.6 points. |
Trusova had set three junior world record scores before season 2018–19. However, because of the introduction of the new +5/-5 GOE (Grade of Execution) system to replace the previous +3/-3 GOE system, the ISU decided that all statistics would start from zero from the 2018–19 onwards and that all previous statistics would be historical.[101]
| Junior women's combined total[102] | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Date | Score | Event | Note |
| 10 March 2018 | 225.52 | 2018 World Junior Championships | Standing junior world record score until the GOE system was changed on 1 July 2018. Trusova became the first junior woman to score above 210 points and 220 points. She broke the previous record held byAlina Zagitova by about 17 points. |
| Junior women's short program[103] | |||
| Date | Score | Event | Note |
| 7 December 2017 | 73.25 | 2017–18 Junior Grand Prix Final | Standing junior world record score until the GOE system was changed on 1 July 2018. Trusova broke the previous record set byAlena Kostornaia, which was skated only ten minutes earlier. |
| Junior women's free skating[104] | |||
| Date | Score | Event | Note |
| 10 March 2018 | 153.49 | 2018 World Junior Championships | Standing junior world record score until the GOE system was changed on 1 July 2018. Trusova became the first junior woman to score above 140 points and 150 points in free skating. She broke the previous record held byAlina Zagitova by more than 15 points. |
| External videos | |
|---|---|

GP:Grand Prix; CS:Challenger Series; JGP:Junior Grand Prix
| International[105] | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Event | 16–17 | 17–18 | 18–19 | 19–20 | 20–21 | 21–22 | 22–23 |
| Olympics | 2nd | ||||||
| Worlds | C | 3rd | |||||
| Europeans | 3rd | C | 2nd | ||||
| GPFinal | 3rd | ||||||
| GPSkate America | 1st | ||||||
| GPSkate Canada | 1st | ||||||
| GPRostelecom Cup | 1st | 4th | |||||
| GPNHK Trophy | WD | ||||||
| CSOndrej Nepela | 1st | ||||||
| U.S. Classic | 1st | ||||||
| International: Junior[105] | |||||||
| Junior Worlds | 1st | 1st | |||||
| JGPFinal | 1st | 2nd | |||||
| JGPArmenia | 1st | ||||||
| JGPAustralia | 1st | ||||||
| JGPBelarus | 1st | ||||||
| JGPLithuania | 1st | ||||||
| National[21] | |||||||
| Russian Champ. | 2nd | 3rd | 3rd | 1st | WD | ||
| Russian Junior Champ. | 4th | 1st | 1st | ||||
| Russian Cup Final | 3rd J | 2nd J | |||||
| Russian Youth Champ. | 3rd[106] | ||||||
| GPR Velvet Season | 3rd | ||||||
| GPR Volga Pirouette | 2nd | ||||||
| Team events[21] | |||||||
| Japan Open | 1st T 1st P | ||||||
| Channel One Trophy | 2nd T 3rd P | ||||||
| TBD = Assigned; WD = Withdrew; C = Event cancelled; B = ISU ban Levels: J = Junior T = Team result; P = Personal result. Medals awarded for team result only. | |||||||

Small medals for short and free programs awarded only atISU Championships. Personal bests highlighted inbold. Previous ISU world best are italicized.
| 2022–2023 season | ||||
| Date | Event | SP | FS | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 19–20 November 2022 | 2022 Cup of Russia Series, 5th Stage | 3 69.50 | 2 144.30 | 2 213.80 |
| 29–30 October 2022 | 2022 Cup of Russia Series, 2nd Stage | 2 70.20 | 3 138.35 | 3 208.55 |
| 2021–22 season | ||||
| Date | Event | SP | FS | Total |
| 15–17 February 2022 | 2022 Winter Olympics | 3 74.60 | 1 177.13 | 2 251.73 |
| 10–16 January 2022 | 2022 European Championships | 2 75.13 | 2 159.23 | 2 234.36 |
| 21–26 December 2021 | 2022 Russian Championships | 5 74.21 | 1 174.44 | 1[68] 248.65 |
| 22–24 October 2021 | 2021 Skate America | 1 77.69 | 1 154.68 | 1 232.37 |
| 22–26 September 2021 | 2021 Cup of Russia Series, 1st Stage domestic competition | 1 74.53 | WD | WD |
| 15–19 September 2021 | 2021 U.S. Classic | 1 74.75 | 1 142.05 | 1 216.80 |
| 2020–21 season | ||||
| Date | Event | SP | FS | Total |
| 22–28 March 2021 | 2021 World Championships | 12 64.82 | 1 152.38 | 3 217.20 |
| 5–7 February 2021 | 2021 Channel One Trophy | 4 77.86 | 3 163.33 | 2T/3P 241.19 |
| 25–26 December 2020 | 2021 Russian Championships | 4 75.76 | 3 170.61 | 3 246.37 |
| 20–22 November 2020 | 2020 Rostelecom Cup | 3 70.81 | 4 128.12 | 4 198.93 |
| 8–12 November 2020 | 2020 Cup of Russia Series domestic competition | 2 77.42 | 1 171.21 | 1 248.63 |
| 10–13 October 2020 | 2020 Cup of Russia Series, 2nd Stage domestic competition | 3 75.77 | 1 164.82 | 1 240.59 |
| 2019–20 season | ||||
| Date | Event | SP | FS | Total |
| 24–25 January 2020 | 2020 European Championships | 3 74.95 | 3 150.39 | 3 225.34 |
| 26–29 December 2019 | 2020 Russian Championships | 3 76.46 | 3 149.88 | 3 226.34 |
| 5–8 December 2019 | 2019–20 Grand Prix Final | 5 71.45 | 3 161.73 | 3 233.18 |
| 15–17 November 2019 | 2019 Rostelecom Cup | 2 74.21 | 1 160.26 | 1 234.47 |
| 25–27 October 2019 | 2019 Skate Canada International | 3 74.40 | 1 166.62 | 1 241.02 |
| 5 October 2019 | 2019Japan Open | — | 1 160.53 | 1T |
| 19–21 September 2019 | 2019 CS Ondrej Nepela Memorial | 1 74.91 | 1 163.78 | 1 238.69 |


Small medals for short and free programs awarded only atISU Championships. Previous ISU world best highlighted inbold.Historical ISU world best highlighted inbold with a * mark.
| 2018–19 season | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Date | Event | Level | SP | FS | Total |
| 21–26 March 2019 | 2019 Russian Winter Spartakiad domestic competition | Junior | 2 77.43 | 1 176.90 | 1 254.33 |
| 4–10 March 2019 | 2019 World Junior Championships | Junior | 2 72.49 | 1 150.40 | 1 222.89 |
| 1–4 February 2019 | 2019 Russian Junior Championships | Junior | 7 69.55 | 1 164.44 | 1 233.99 |
| 19–23 December 2018 | 2019 Russian Championships | Senior | 2 74.96 | 2 154.75 | 2 229.71 |
| 6–9 December 2018 | 2018–19 JGP Final | Junior | 2 74.43 | 2 140.77 | 2 215.20 |
| 9–10 November 2018 | 2018 Cup of Russia Series, 4th Stage,Kazan domestic competition | Senior | 2 74.53 | 1 157.71 | 1 232.24 |
| 10–13 October 2018 | 2018 JGP Armenia | Junior | 1 74.19 | 1 146.81 | 1 221.00 |
| 5–8 September 2018 | 2018 JGP Lithuania | Junior | 1 74.74 | 1 146.70 | 1 221.44 |
| 2017–18 season | |||||
| Date | Event | Level | SP | FS | Total |
| 5–11 March 2018 | 2018 World Junior Championships | Junior | 1 72.03 | 1 153.49* | 1 225.52* |
| 19–23 February 2018 | 2018 Russian Cup Final domestic competition | Junior | 6 65.78 | 1 143.14 | 2 208.92 |
| 23–26 January 2018 | 2018 Russian Junior Championships | Junior | 1 74.25 | 3 137.84 | 1 212.09 |
| 7–10 December 2017 | 2017–18 JGP Final | Junior | 1 73.25* | 2 132.36 | 1 205.61 |
| 21–25 November 2017 | 2017 Cup of Russia Series, 5th Stage,Moscow domestic competition | Junior | 2 69.13 | 1 135.57 | 2 204.70 |
| 27–31 October 2017 | 2017 Cup of Russia Series, 3rd Stage,Sochi domestic competition | Junior | 1 70.19 | 1 129.11 | 1 199.30 |
| 20–24 September 2017 | 2017 JGP Belarus | Junior | 1 69.72 | 1 126.60 | 1 196.32 |
| 23–26 August 2017 | 2017 JGP Australia | Junior | 1 65.57 | 1 132.12 | 1 197.69 |
| 2016–17 season | |||||
| Date | Event | Level | SP | FS | Total |
| 1–5 February 2017 | 2017 Russian Junior Championships | Junior | 6 64.95 | 4 129.65 | 4 194.60 |
The Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA) has decided to annul the result of figure skater Kamila Valieva at the Russian Championships. … The figure skater will be stripped of the gold medal of the Russian Championships, which was won on the day of a positive doping test in December 2021. … After the redistribution of awards, the gold medal will go to Alexandra Trusova, the silver will go to Anna Shcherbakova, and the bronze to Adelia Petrosyan.
| World Record Holders | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Women's Short Program 6 September 2018 – 27 September 2018 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's Free Skating 7 September 2018 – 22 September 2018 21 September 2019 – 10 October 2021 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's Total Score 7 September 2018 – 28 September 2018 21 September 2019 – 7 December 2019 | Succeeded by |
| World Junior Record Holders | ||
| Preceded by | Women's Junior Short Program 6 September 2018 – 6 December 2018 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's Junior Free Skating 7 September 2018 – 7 March 2020 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Women's Junior Total Score 7 September 2018 – 7 March 2020 | Succeeded by |
| Historical World Junior Record Holders (before season 2018–19) | ||
| Preceded by | Women's Junior Short Program 7 December 2017 – 1 July 2018 | Succeeded by The GOE system was changed. |
| Preceded by | Women's Junior Free Skating 10 March 2018 – 1 July 2018 | Succeeded by The GOE system was changed. |
| Preceded by | Women's Junior Total Score 10 March 2018 – 1 July 2018 | Succeeded by The GOE system was changed. |