2019 In April D'Amato was officially named to the team to compete at the
2019 European Championships alongside
Giorgia Villa,
Elisa Iorio and
Alice D'Amato. During qualifications, she placed eleventh in the all-around but did not qualify to the final due to
Alice D'Amato and
Giorgia Villa scoring higher. She qualified for the vault final in fourth place. During finals she once again finished in fourth, behind
Maria Paseka of Russia,
Coline Devillard of France, and
Ellie Downie of Great Britain. In August, D'Amato competed at the
Heerenveen Friendly, where she helped Italy win gold in the team competition ahead of the Netherlands and Norway, and individually she finished fifth in the all-around behind
Giorgia Villa,
Eythora Thorsdottir,
Naomi Visser, and
Alice D'Amato. Additionally, she recorded the third-highest vault and balance beam scores. On 4 September, D'Amato was named to the team to compete at the
2019 World Championships in
Stuttgart,
Germany alongside her sister, Villa,
Elisa Iorio, and
Desirée Carofiglio. During
qualifications at the World Championships, D'Amato helped Italy qualify to the team final in eighth place; as a result, Italy also qualified to the
2020 Olympic Games in
Tokyo. She scored high enough to become the second reserve for the all-around final but did not due to teammates Villa and Iorio scoring higher than her. In the
team final, D'Amato helped Italy win the bronze medal – Italy's first team medal since the
1950 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships. They ended up finishing behind the United States and Russia but ahead of China, which originally qualified to the final in second place.
2020 In late January, it was announced that D'Amato would compete at the
Stuttgart World Cup taking place in March. The Stuttgart World Cup was later canceled due to the
COVID-19 pandemic in Germany. In November D'Amato competed at the Italian National Championships where she tied for first with
Giorgia Villa. During event finals, she won gold on vault, bronze on the uneven bars (behind Villa and
Martina Maggio) and on balance beam (behind Maggio and Villa), and silver on floor exercise once again behind Villa.
2021 D'Amato was named to the team to represent
Italy at the 2020 Summer Olympics alongside
Alice D'Amato,
Giorgia Villa (later replaced by
Vanessa Ferrari), and
Martina Maggio. The team qualified for the team finals and placed fourth with a total score of 163.638. In October D'Amato was selected to compete at the
2021 World Championships. While there, she qualified to the all-around and vault finals, becoming the first Italian female gymnast to qualify to the latter. During the vault final, she performed a Yurchenko double and a half on full twist. She won the silver medal behind reigning Olympic vault champion
Rebeca Andrade. This was Italy's first World medal on vault in women's artistic gymnastics.
2022 D'Amato competed at the
DTB Pokal Team Challenge. Her scores on vault, uneven bars, and balance beam contributed towards Italy's second-place finish. Individually, D'Amato won silver on vault. D'Amato next competed at the
City of Jesolo Trophy. She helped Italy finish second as a team and individually placed second in the all-around behind
Konnor McClain. During event finals, she finished second on vault behind
Coline Devillard, fifth on balance beam, and sixth on uneven bars. at the
2022 European Championships In June D'Amato competed at the
Mediterranean Games alongside
Angela Andreoli,
Alice D'Amato,
Martina Maggio, and
Giorgia Villa. Together they won gold in the team competition, over five points ahead of second-place France. Individually, D'Amato won silver in the all-around and on balance beam behind compatriot Maggio and won gold on vault and floor exercise. D'Amato next competed at the
European Championships. On the first day of competition, she won gold in the all-around ahead of
Alice Kinsella of Great Britain and compatriot Maggio. She is the second Italian woman to win the all-around title after
Vanessa Ferrari did so in
2007. Additionally D'Amato helped Italy qualify to the team final in first place and individually she qualified to the vault and balance beam finals. During the team final, D'Amato contributed scores on all four apparatuses towards Italy's first-place finish. During event finals D'Amato won silver on vault behind
Zsófia Kovács. D'Amato injured her ankle when landing her second vault and therefore withdrew from the balance beam final. An
MRI later revealed that D'Amato would need to undergo surgery to repair ankle ligaments and she would be unable to compete at the upcoming
World Championships.
2023 D'Amato returned to competition at the
European Championships where she helped Italy finish second as a team. Additionally, she finished second on vault behind
Coline Devillard. D'Amato next competed at the
Cairo World Cup. She qualified for the vault and balance beam finals. During the vault final, D'Amato won silver behind
Joscelyn Roberson but injured her knee when landing her second vault. As a result, she withdrew from the balance beam final. An MRI later revealed that D'Amato
tore her ACL and
meniscus and would require surgery to repair them.
2024 D'Amato returned to competition at the
City of Jesolo Trophy where she helped Italy finish first as a team, and individually she won bronze in the all-around and on balance beam. She next competed at the
European Championships alongside
Alice D'Amato,
Angela Andreoli,
Elisa Iorio, and
Manila Esposito. During the qualification round, while competing on floor exercise, D'Amato once again
injured her ACL. Although she was unable to compete in the team final, Italy still won gold ahead of Great Britain.
2025 D'Amato returned to competition at the
2025 City of Jesolo Trophy where she only competed on the uneven bars. At the Italian National Championships she placed fourth in the all-around behind
Giulia Perotti,
Alice D'Amato, and
Emma Fioravanti. She competed at the
2025 World Championships where she placed fifth in the all-around, marking her best all-around finish at a World Championships. == Competitive history ==