

The Supply Network
Global Skateboard Rankings
Global Skate Rankings
Welcome to the Skateboard Global Rankings — your one-stop leaderboard for the top skaters in the world. Whether you’re into Street, Park, or Vert, we’ve got the latest scoop on who’s running the game, who’s on the rise, and who’s stacking the biggest earnings.
At The Supply Network, we don’t just rep the skate scene — we live it. That’s why we’re bringing you a live snapshot of skateboarding’s top athletes, straight from the streets to your screen.
2025 Street Rankings
Street skating has always been about more than just points. It's about the flick, the flow, and the fearlessness. In competitions though — style meets structure, and the best rise to the top through clean execution, creative lines, and serious consistency.
Street contests bring skateboarding to the biggest stages — but they also fuel progression in a way that pushes the entire scene forward. Every new NBD (never-been-done) in competition eventually trickles down to your local spot.
If you’re a young skater watching the pros throw down under pressure, let this be your sign: you could be on this list next.
How it Works?
These rankings are pulled from official international competitions like Street League Skateboarding (SLS), X Games, Olympic Qualifiers, and more. Skaters earn points based on:
- Event placement (the higher you place, the more points you score)
- Event prestige (bigger comps = bigger points)
- Consistency across the season
- Prize money earned (we track who’s really stacking)
The rankings are updated regularly to reflect the latest comps, so you’ll always know who’s at the top of their game.
MENS 2025 STREET RANKINGS
Rank | Skater | 🏁 | Age | Points | Earnings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
🥇 1 | Yuto Horigome | ![]() |
26 | 11,860 | $212,750 |
🥈 2 | Nyjah Huston | ![]() |
30 | 11,045 | $291,250 |
🥉 3 | Sora Shirai | ![]() |
23 | 9,010 | $229,250 |
4 | Giovanni Vianna | ![]() |
24 | 8,970 | $126,500 |
5 | Toa Sasaki | ![]() |
18 | 8,650 | $78,500 |
6 | Kelvin Hoefler | ![]() |
32 | 8,000 | $129,000 |
7 | Kairi Netsuke | ![]() |
21 | 7,660 | $151,750 |
8 | Ginwoo Onodera | ![]() |
15 | 7,530 | $65,000 |
9 | Jhancarlos Gonzalez | ![]() |
28 | 5,990 | $50,550 |
10 | Gustavo Ribeiro | ![]() |
24 | 5,920 | $93,500 |
Rankings updated monthly
How Street Competitions Are Judged
Skateboarding isn’t about routines — it’s about expression. But when it comes to competitions, judges gotta have some way to score it fairly. Here’s how Street skating is judged at the pro level (like SLS, World Skate, and Olympic qualifiers):
Judging Criteria
1. Difficulty: The harder the trick, the more points it racks. Big spins, flips in/out, awkward approaches, and unique setups all raise the difficulty.
2. Execution: Clean landings matter. If it’s sketchy, toe drag, or under-rotated — points get shaved off. But if it's locked in and bolts? You’re golden.
3. Style: This is the sauce. The way a skater moves, flows, and puts their own flavor into tricks. Style is subjective, but judges know when it hits.
4. Consistency: Missed tricks hurt. In most formats, every slam or bailout drops your score. Landing tricks consistently puts you in top contention.
5. Use of Course: Hitting a variety of obstacles — rails, ledges, gaps, stairs — shows versatility. Repeating the same line over and over? Less impressive.
WOMENS 2025 STREET RANKINGS
Rank | Skater | 🏁 | Age | Points | Earnings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
🥇 1 | Rayssa Leal | ![]() |
17 | 16,080 | $447,000 |
🥈 2 | Liz Akama | ![]() |
16 | 15,010 | $234,000 |
🥉 3 | Chloe Covell | ![]() |
15 | 13,335 | $292,500 |
4 | Yumeka Oda | ![]() |
18 | 11,730 | $182,500 |
5 | Coco Yoshizawa | ![]() |
15 | 9,995 | $119,500 |
6 | Momiji Nishiya | ![]() |
17 | 9,095 | $186,750 |
7 | Funa Nakayama | ![]() |
19 | 8,260 | $75,000 |
8 | Miyu Ito | ![]() |
17 | 7,260 | $104,000 |
9 | Aoi Uemura | ![]() |
16 | 5,510 | $53,250 |
10 | Paige Heyn | ![]() |
17 | 5,285 | $56,500 |
Rankings updated monthly
Competition Format
Different events have their own formats, but most follow a similar structure:
Runs
Skaters have two timed runs (usually 45 seconds) to skate the full course however they want. Best run score counts.
Best Tricks
Skaters then get 4 or 5 attempts to land a single banger on one obstacle. Only landed tricks count. Best 2–4 trick scores get added to the run score. Total Score = Best Run + Best Trick Scores(Typically out of 35 or 40 points max, depending on format).
Scoring Scale
Each trick or run is scored on a 0.0 to 10.0 scale by a panel of judges. Judges look for a balance of all 5 criteria above. A 9+ trick is rare and usually means it was tech, clean, and gnarly — basically a video part trick landed in a comp.
No Robots Here
Even though it’s judged, this isn’t gymnastics. Style, creativity, and guts still weigh heavy — and the best skaters stand out because they don’t look like they’re playing it safe.
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Skater Profiles
