Cristina Bucsa Bucsa (; born 1 January 1998) is a Moldovan-born Spanish professional tennis player. She has a career-high WTA singles ranking of world No. 30 and No. 17 in doubles, achieved in March 2026. She is the current No. 1 Spanish WTA player.
Her most notable result is a bronze medal in doubles at the 2024 Summer Olympics, with Sara Sorribes Tormo. She also has won nine WTA Tour titles combined, one in singles and eight in doubles.
BucÃÂa was born in ChiÃÂinÃÂu, Moldova. Her father, Ion BucÃÂa, is a former Olympic biathlete who was Moldova's flag bearer at the 1998 and 2002 Winter Olympics. When she was three years old, her family moved to Cantabria in northern Spain; they originally moved to Las Fraguas before settling in Torrelavega. BucÃÂa attended the Instituto Marqués De Santillana in Torrelavega, where she was awarded the title of Illustrious Alumna in December 2022. She speaks Spanish, Romanian, English, and French.
BucÃÂa began playing tennis at the age of five. In 2014, she moved to Barcelona to train at the Centre d'Alt Rendiment de Sant Cugat del Vallès, but in 2016 she moved back to Torrelavega where she currently lives and trains. She is coached by her father, who is self-taught and also acts as her physiotherapist. Being unsponsored, she buys her own kits and rackets for the tour. She does not have any public social media profiles, only using Facebook to keep in touch with other tennis players.
She received her Spanish passport in 2014 and began representing Spain in 2015.
BucÃÂa won her first ITF Circuit titles in both singles and doubles in 2017. In May 2017, she won the 15k event in Santarém, defeating Valeria Savinykh in the final. In November 2017, she and doubles partner Yana Sizikova won the 2017 Open de Valencia, defeating Georgina GarcÃÂa Pérez and Andrea Gámiz in the final.
She entered the qualifiers of the 2019 Wimbledon Championships, but lost to Samantha Murray Sharan in the second round. One month later, she won the Open Araba en Femenino with a win over Shalimar Talbi in the final.
She entered the singles main draw of a major for the first time at the 2021 US Open, after defeating Kateryna Baindl, Elvina Kalieva, and Océane Dodin in the qualifying competition.
In 2022, she qualified for the Australian Open and the French Open, but lost in the first round of both. Later that year, Bucsa also qualified for her first WTA 1000 event at the Canadian Open. At the US Open, she recorded her first win at a Grand Slam by defeating Kaja Juvan, but lost to 19th seed Danielle Collins in the second round. She and Weronika Falkowska won the doubles title at the AndorrÃÂ Open, defeating Angelina Gabueva and Anastasia Zakharova in the final.
BucÃÂa reached the top 100 in the singles WTA rankings on 16 January 2023. She qualified for the Australian Open and reached the third round recording her first two wins at this major tournament over Eva Lys and Bianca Andreescu. She then lost to world No. 1, Iga à Âwiàtek, in the third round. This was her best result at a Grand Slam tournament thus far. At the Lyon Open, she won her first WTA doubles title with Bibiane Schoofs. At the Indian Wells Open, she reached the second round of a WTA 1000 tournament for the first time in her career, defeating Katie Swan as a qualifier.
BucÃÂa made her main-draw debut at Wimbledon and defeated Kamilla Rakhimova for her first win at this major tournament, before losing to fourth-seeded Jessica Pegula in the second round. She and Alena Fomina-Klotz won the doubles title at the Contrexéville Open, defeating Amina Anshba and Anastasia DeÃÂiuc in the final.
BucÃÂa entered the main draw of the Canadian Open as a lucky loser, but lost to Petra MartiÃÂ in the first round. On her debut at th Cincinnati Open, she upset 13th seed Belinda Bencic to reach the second round. At the Guadalajara Open, she double bageled former top-ten player Kristina Mladenovic. In mid-December, she won her first WTA 125 singles title at Limoges, defeating Elsa Jacquemot in the final. She also won the doubles title there, partnering Yana Sizikova and defeating Oksana Kalashnikova and Maia Lumsden in the final.
BucÃÂa began her season by reaching the doubles semifinal of the Brisbane International with Alexandra Panova. She qualified for the Adelaide International as a lucky loser and defeated Jasmine Paolini in the first round, before losing to top seed Elena Rybakina in the second. Following this, she reached a new career-high singles ranking of No. 56, on 15 January 2024. At the Australian Open, she reached the doubles quarterfinals with Panova. As a result, she reached the top 50 in doubles on 29 January 2024. In Abu Dhabi, she reached the quarterfinals as a lucky loser, but once again lost to top seed Rybakina. In Doha, she and partner Monica Niculescu reached the doubles quarterfinal. She then made her debut at the Dubai Championships as a lucky loser by replacing Ons Jabeur in the second round, but lost to eventual finalist Anna Kalinskaya.
Seeded fourth in singles in Bogotá, she defeated You Xiaodi and Jule Niemeier, before losing to her doubles partner Kamilla Rakhimova in the quarterfinals. She and Rakhimova later won the doubles title in Bogotá by defeating the third-seeded team of Anna Bondár and Irina Khromacheva in the final. In Madrid, BucÃÂa defeated Harriet Dart, before losing to 10th seed Daria Kasatkina in the second round. Seeded eighth in doubles, she and compatriot Sara Sorribes Tormo won the title defeating Barbora KrejÃÂÃÂková and Laura Siegemund in the final, becoming the first all-Spanish doubles team to win in Madrid. This was BucÃÂa's first WTA 1000 title, which brought her to a career-high doubles ranking of No. 27 on 6 May 2024. The following month, BucÃÂa won her first WTA 500 doubles title in Strasbourg, partnering Niculescu and defeating Asia Muhammad and Aldila Sutjiadi in the final. En route to the title, BucÃÂa and Niculescu upset the second-seeded team of Demi Schuurs and Luisa Stefani in the semifinal.
In May, she recorded her first French Open singles win against qualifier Yuliia Starodubtseva in the first round, before losing to Elisabetta Cocciaretto in the second. In doubles, she and Niculescu upset the 14th-seeded team of Sofia Kenin and Bethanie Mattek-Sands in the second round. Following her French Open doubles run, she achieved a career-high doubles ranking of No. 19 and surpassed Sorribes Tormo as the top Spanish female doubles player on 10 June 2024.
She made her Olympic debut in Paris, where she reached the second round in singles with a win over Petra MartiÃÂ. Seeded eighth in doubles with Sorribes Tormo, they won the bronze medal. At the China Open, she reached the fourth round of a WTA 1000 tournament for the first time in her career, defeating wildcard entrant Yao Xinxin, 11th seed Liudmila Samsonova and 24th seed Elise Mertens. Her run was ended by KarolÃÂna Muchová.
For her bronze medal win, Bucsa was commemorated on the Paseo Torre de la Vega in her hometown of Torrelavega, becoming the first female and first athlete to receive the honor.
In March, BucÃÂa and Miyu Kato reached the doubles final of the Miami Open, but lost to Mirra Andreeva and Diana Shnaider. En route, they upset the top seeds and world No. 1 and No. 2 players, Kateà Âina Siniaková and Taylor Townsend.
She defended her doubles title at the Copa Colsanitas with Sara Sorribes Tormo, defeating Laura Pigossi and Irina Bara in the final.
At Wimbledon, BucÃÂa defeated Anca Todoni and 22nd seed Donna VekiÃÂ to reach the third round at the grass-court major for the first time, at which point her run was ended by lucky loser Solana Sierra.
Teaming with Nicole Melichar-Martinez, she won the doubles title at the Monterrey Open, overcoming Guo Hanyu and Alexandra Panova in the final. Wins over qualifier Claire Liu, Alexandra Eala and 19th seed Elise Mertens saw BucÃÂa make it through to the fourth round of a major for the first time at the US Open, where she lost to world No. 1 and eventual champion, Aryna Sabalenka.
In October at the Hong Kong Open, BucÃÂa defeated qualifier Ma Yexin and eighth seed Emiliana Arango to reach the quarterfinals, where she was given a walkover when her opponent, top seed Belinda Bencic, withdrew from the tournament due to a thigh injury. In the semifinals, she overcame fifth seed Maya Joint to make it into her first tour singles final, which she lost to third seed Victoria Mboko, in three sets. Despite her defeat, BucÃÂa reached a new career-high singles ranking of world No. 54 on 3 November 2025.
BucÃÂa reached the top 50 in the singles rankings on 5 January 2026.
At the Mérida Open, BucÃÂa recorded wins over Donna VekiÃÂ, wildcard entrant Marina Stakusic, Zeynep Sönmez and top seed Jasmine Paolini, her first top-10 win, to reach the final. BucÃÂa defeated Magdalena FrÃÂch in three sets to claim her first WTA Tour singles title. Playing alongside Jiang Xinyu, she also won the doubles title at the same event, overcoming Isabelle Haverlag and Maia Lumsden in the final. As a result of this performance, BucÃÂa rose 32 places in the WTA singles rankings to a new career-high in the singles rankings of world No. 31 on 2 March 2026, and to the top 30 on 16 March 2026.
Only main-draw results in WTA Tour, Grand Slam tournaments, Billie Jean King Cup, United Cup, Hopman Cup and Olympic Games are included in winâÂÂloss records.
Current through the 2026 Mérida Open.
Current through the 2024 US Open.