How old is Lindsey Vonn? Inside USA skiing legend’s comeback since last Olympics in 2018


How old is Lindsey Vonn? Inside USA skiing legend’s comeback since last Olympics in 2018 originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Whe Lindsey Vonn retired after the 2019 World Championships in Sweden, her resume was already stacked.

Advertisement

She had already made comebacks from major injuries, won a then-record of 82 World Cup races, claimed three Olympic medals, including one gold, become one of six women to have won World Cup races in all five disciplines of alpine skiing, and claimed plenty more prestigious honors as one of the most decorated skiers ever.

But Vonn, in late 2024, decided she was not yet done. Despite her injury history and age, she made a return to competitive skiing. And by the 2026 Milan Winter Olympics, it was confirmed that Vonn would be participating — even after a ruptured ACL just weeks prior to the event.

Vonn’s journey has been rocky, from major knee injuries to prestigious awards and Olympic honors. Here’s a breakdown of her unreal comeback since the 2018 Winter Olympics.

MORE:Lindsey Vonn’s full injury history

Advertisement

How old is Lindsey Vonn?

Lindsey Vonn is 41 years old. She will turn 42 on Oct. 18, 2026.

Vonn has already claimed a few age-related honors in her profession of skiing; in the 2019 World Championships, by earning a bronze medal in women’s downhill at age 34, she became the oldest woman to win a medal at a world championship.

In December 2025, around a year into her significant comeback, she became the oldest downhill skiing World Cup winner at the age of 41.

MORE: Locations, venues and more to know about 2026 Winter Olympics

How many times has Lindsey Vonn torn her ACL?

Vonn has dealt with multiple major knee injuries, including two fully torn ACLs and one partially torn ACL.

Advertisement

While she had a low-level ACL sprain to her right knee in 2007, Vonn’s first significant setback came in 2013. At the 2013 World Championships in Austria, she crashed and was airlifted to a hospital, then diagnosed with a torn ACL and MCL in her right knee, plus a tibial plateau fracture.

Then, in November 2014, she re-injured her right knee, straining it and partially tearing her right ACL after another crash. Still, Vonn returned to competition just weeks later. In the following January, she announced that she would not compete in the 2014 Winter Olympics because she had re-injured her right knee.

After her retirement, Vonn had a knee replacement surgery to help stop the pain that led her to leave skiiing. That led to her 2024 comeback.

However, once again in January 2026, she faced a setback when she confirmed she had ruptured her ACL in the World Cup downhill in Crans-Montana, being airlifted off the course in the final downhill before the Winter Olympics.

Advertisement

MOREBiggest snubs from Team USA winter Olympic hockey team

Lindsey Vonn’s last Olympics

Vonn’s last Winter Olympics appearance, prior to 2026, was in 2018. It marked her fourth Olympic appearance, having also competed in 2002, 2006 and 2010.

While at the 2018 Winter Olympics in South Korea, Vonn tied for 6th in women’s super-G and won the bronze medal in women’s downhill, her third all-time Olympic medal.

It was in the aftermath of the 2018 Olympics, a few months later, that Vonn signaled she would soon retire from competition, regardless of whether or not she broke Ingemar Stenmark’s all-time record for World Cup race wins — something she had suggested she was striving for. Vonn noted her physical condition and wanting to preserve it with her many injuries, which also included a fracture of the humerus bone of her right arm in 2016.

Advertisement

Ultimately, it wasn’t until after the 2019 World Championships in Sweden that Vonn stepped away from competitive skiing, as a knee injury that didn’t require surgery delayed her retirement until then. She won a bronze medal in women’s downhill at her then-last World Championships, becoming the first female racer to receive medals at six different world championships.

In 2026, Vonn is set to participate in her first Winter Olympics in eight years.

MOREMeet the USA Olympic figure skating team for the Winter Olympics

Lindsey Vonn’s comeback timeline

Here’s a breakdown of Lindsey Vonn’s full comeback, ever since her initial retirement following the 2019 World Championships.

Advertisement

Feb. 10, 2019: Vonn receives bronze medal in final World Championships before retirement

In what was supposed to be the final competition of her career, Vonn earned a bronze medal in women’s downhill at the 2019 World Championships in Sweden. Per The Straits Times, she clocked at 1 minute and 2.23 seconds in her run, then saying she was “worried that I’d charge too hard and not make it down for my last race.”

Prior to that season, Vonn had admitted that her “body is broken beyond repair” and she faced likely knee reconstruction surgery, per the Straits Times.

Vonn had an HBO documentary about her final season, “Lindsey Vonn: The Final Season.” In the years following her retirement, she hosted a season of the canine reality competition series, “The Pack.”

Advertisement

January 2023: Vonn becomes first woman to ski the Streif

In early 2023, a retired Vonn became the first woman to ever ski down the Streif downhill in Kitzbühel, Austria, famously “treacherous” and “immortalized by the 2014 film ‘Streif: One Hell of a Ride,'” per Outside.

Although it was in a non-competitive manner, Vonn also did the run at night.

“Only when you ski the Streif are you a real downhiller,” Vonn said, per Outside. “The Streif is the pinnacle of all downhills, the most difficult course in the world. Nobody believed I could do it. After all my injuries, to now get the once-in-a-lifetime chance to kick out of the starting gate here and fulfill my dream is incredible.

Advertisement

I’ve always had respect for the men that raced down the Streif, but I have even more respect now because it’s one thing to go down it and another thing to ski to win; and now I can fully understand what that means. It has given me a greater perspective on how truly amazing these men are.”

Vonn later shared on Instagram that she took the challenge on for her late mother, Linda.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back To Top