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Home » CrossFit News » The 2025 CrossFit Games Roster Features Athletes From 20 Countries — Here’s How It Breaks Down 

The 2025 CrossFit Games Roster Features Athletes From 20 Countries — Here’s How It Breaks Down 

Written by Emily Beers
Last updated on June 24th, 2025

This summer, 60 individual athletes from 20 different countries will compete at the CrossFit Games in Albany, NY.

Both the men’s and women’s divisions will feature athletes from 13 different countries, with the United States boasting the largest representation, comprising 13 men and 11 women slated to compete.

  • Australia has the next largest contingent with eight athletes, while the UK qualified five, Canada four, Brazil three, and Switzerland two.
  • Fourteen other countries have one athlete competing:
    • Germany
    • Russia
    • Italy
    • Poland
    • Spain
    • Mexico
    • Iran
    • Zimbabwe
    • Colombia
    • Finland
    • Korea
    • Albania
    • France
    • Ireland
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How This Compares to 2024

Last year, athletes from 25 different nations were represented at the CrossFit Games; however, the field was 25% larger in 2024, with 40 men and 40 women, compared to 30 men and 30 women this season.

Ultimately, the numbers are very similar from last season to this year. 

  • The men’s division was represented by 15 countries in 2024, while the women’s division was fielded by athletes from 17 different countries. 
  • Further, 14 countries sent just one athlete to the Games in 2024, the exact same as this season.

One Big Thing

For several years now, CrossFit has stated that one of its goals is to bring the sport to a global audience.

  • In 2019, this led them to invite national champions from every country to the CrossFit Games, an experiment that was abandoned the following year.

While 2019 was an anomaly season, invitations to the CrossFit Games have long been regionally based, ensuring athletes from all parts of the world are represented, even if it’s just one athlete from a particular region. 

This year, for the first time since the early days of the sport, this was not the case.

Remind me: Four of the 10 independently run In-Person Qualifying-Events (IPQEs) did choose to place regional restrictions on their competitions, but it was not a requirement put in place by CrossFit. 

  • Furthermore, the In-Affiliate Semifinals, hosted by CrossFit, awarded invitations to the top 11 men and 11 women, regardless of their location. 

Based on this year’s rules, we could have theoretically seen a field of 28 men and 28 women all hailing from the United States, or 26 men and 26 women all from Europe. 

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The Big Picture

For the first time since the early days of the sport, there were no rules in place to guarantee international representation at this summer’s Games, yet athletes from 20 different countries will take the floor in Albany in August.

What this means is that world-class CrossFit athletes are emerging from every corner of the world, which can only be seen as a positive sign for the future of the sport.

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Credit: Enrique Villaseńor, @enriquevmedia / Instagram

About Emily Beers

Emily Beers is a freelance health, fitness and nutrition writer. She has also been coaching fitness at MadLab School of Fitness in Vancouver, B.C. since 2009. A former college basketball player and rower, Emily became heavily involved in CrossFit after finishing her Masters degree in journalism at the University of Western Ontario. She competed at the 2014 CrossFit Games and also worked with CrossFit Inc.’s media team for 8 years. You can also find her work at Precision Nutrition, the Whole Life Challenge, OPEX, and a host of other fitness and nutrition companies and media outlets.

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