In 2010, Moore qualified to compete on the ASP (now called the
World Surf League) Championship Tour. She won two major contests, finished third overall, and was named Rookie of the Year. The following season, Moore was a youngster to watch on the World Tour and she lived up to her reputation, winning three events and claiming her first World crown, unseating four-time defending champ
Stephanie Gilmore in the process. At 18, she became the youngest person – male or female – to win a surfing world title. Moore took top World Tour honors again in 2013 and 2015. Moore has been named an Adventurer of the Year by
National Geographic, a Woman of the Year by
Glamour magazine and Top Female Surfer in the
SURFER magazine poll (numerous times). She was inducted into the Surfers' Hall of Fame, and the State of Hawaii declared January 4 to be Carissa Moore Day.
2019 Championship Tour At the
2019 World Surf League Women's Championship Tour, Moore finished in first place and qualified for the
2020 Summer Olympics.
2020 She announced after the 2019 season that she would take a break from the world tour in 2020.
2020 Summer Olympics Moore
qualified to compete for the United States in
surfing on the U.S. women's team with
Caroline Marks at the
2020 Summer Olympics held in
Tokyo, Japan and postponed to 2021 due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. Moore competed under the flag of the United States for the first time in her career at the
2020 Summer Olympics as the
World Surf League and
International Surfing Association both recognize
Hawaii as an entity separate of the
United States. At the 2020 Olympic Games, she represented the United States for the first time and was the first surfer to participate in the
Olympic Games that is
ethnically Hawaiian since the final Olympic appearance of
Duke Kahanamoku in 1924. In the first round of competition, Moore scored an 11.74 and won her heat, which advanced her directly to the third round of competition. Moore won her heat of the third round of competition against
Peruvian
Sofía Mulánovich with a 10.34 and advanced to the quarterfinals. Moore won her head-to-head competition with a score of 14.26 in the quarterfinals against
Brazilian
Silvana Lima and advanced to the semifinals. In the semifinals match between Moore and Japan's
Amuro Tsuzuki, Moore won and advanced to the final heat where surfers compete for the gold and silver medals. In the final match against South African
Bianca Buitendag, Moore won the
Olympic gold medal with a score of 14.93. As the 2020 Summer Olympics were the first Olympic Games where surfing was included as a sport, Moore became the first woman in history to win an Olympic gold medal in surfing.
2021 Season In 2021, Carissa Moore won the WSL season at the WSL Finals in
Trestles (surfing). She also won the
Triple Crown of Surfing in January 2022.
2023 Season In 2023, Moore placed second in the 2023 World Surf League Championship Tour. This qualified her to compete in the
2024 Olympic Games in Paris.
2024 Season Moore competed at the
2024 Olympic Games, along with Caroline Marks and
Caitlin Simmers representing the United States. She was eliminated in the quarterfinals. == Personal life ==