Mikaela Shiffrin will kick off her 15th season in alpine skiing’s top-tier competition on Saturday 26 October with the World Cup season opener in the giant slalom at Soelden, Austria.
The Team USA star is expected to race in all 20 technical events (slalom, giant slalom) on the calendar, as well as in Super G events, but she decided to skip downhills after suffering the worst crash of her career in Cortina d'Ampezzo earlier this year.
After chasing victories in the slaloms at Levi, Finland, and Gurgl, Austria, Shiffrin will delight her home fans in Killington, Vermont on 30 November, with a start in the giant slalom there followed by a slalom.
Two weeks later, she will have the chance to race the famed Beaver Creek's Birds of Prey downhill course, which is making its debut on the women's calendar.
The slaloms in Semmering (29 Dec), Kranjska Gora (5 Jan), Flachau (14 Jan) and Courchevel (30 Jan) will give a good indication of where she is at in the race for the overall World Cup title ahead of the World Championships in Saalbach, Austria (4-15 Feb).
The tech stops in Sestriere and Are will follow, after which Shiffrin will end her season on home snow with the World Cup Finals taking place in Sun Valley, Idaho.
Mikaela Shiffrin: Chasing 100 World Cup victories
The 29-year-old from Colorado ended last season's campaign with 9 wins, securing her eighth slalom globe. Despite missing several races due to her crash in Cortina, she finished third in the overall standings.
The most successful alpine skier in World Cup history, Shiffrin holds a record of 97 wins and is expected to reach the 100-victory milestone this season. If we consider World Cup wins across all Olympic skiing disciplines, she currently trails only Swiss freeskier Conny Kissling (106) and Norwegian cross-country skier Marit Bjorgen (114), both of whom are retired.
The double Olympic champion also has the chance to match Annemarie Moser-Proell’s record of six overall World Cup titles and could surpass fellow American Lindsey Vonn for the most small globes in a single discipline (They are currently tied at 8 in slalom and downhill, respectively).
Besides the World Cup, at the next World Championships in Saalbach, Austria, the seven-time world champion could add to her tally of 14 medals and potentially overtake Christl Cranz’s record of 15.
The full women's calendar for the season is listed below.
2024/25 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup calendar - Women
Information subject to change. An updated calendar can be found on the FIS Website.
- 26 October 2024
Soelden (Austria): Giant Slalom
- 16 November 2024
Levi (Finland): Slalom
- 23 November 2024
Gurgl (Austria): Slalom
- 30 November – 1 December 2024
Killington (USA): Giant Slalom / Slalom
- 7 – 8 December 2024
Tremblant (Canada): Giant Slalom (2x)
- 14 – 15 December 2024
Beaver Creek (USA): Downhill , Super-G
- 21 – 22 December 2024
Saint Moritz (Switzerland): Super-G (2x)
- 28 – 29 December 2024
Semmering (Austria): Giant Slalom, Slalom
- 4 – 5 January 2025
Kranjska Gora (Slovenia): Giant Slalom / Slalom
- 11 - 12 January 2025
St. Anton (Austria): Downhill / Super-G
- 14 January 2025
Flachau (Austria): Slalom (Night)
- 18 - 19 January 2025
Cortina d’Ampezzo (Italy): Downhill / Super-G
- 21 January 2025
Kronplatz – Plan de Corones (Italy): Giant Slalom
- 25 – 26 January 2025
Garmisch-Partenkirchen (Germany): Downhill / Super-G
- 30 January 2025
Courchevel (France): Slalom (Night)
- 16 – 18 February 2025
Crans Montana (Switzerland): Downhill (2x) / Super-G
- 22 – 23 February 2025
Sestriere (Italy): Giant Slalom / Slalom
- 28 February – 2 March 2025
Kvitfjell (Norway): Downhill (2x) / Super-G
- 8 – 9 March 2025
Are (Sweden): Giant Slalom / Slalom
- 14-15 March 2025
La Thuile (Italy): Downhill / Super-G
- 22 -27 March 2024
Sun Valley (United States): Finals (All disciplines)
Total: 37
Slalom: 10
Giant Slalom: 10
Super-G: 9
Downhill: 8
FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2025 in Saalbach, Austria - Medal events Schedule
4 February: Team Parallel event
6 February: Women's Super-G
7 February: Men’s Super-G
8 February: Women's Downhill
9 February: Men's Downhill
11 - 12 February: Team combined event (Downhill/Slalom)
13 February: Women’s Giant Slalom
14 February: Men's Giant Slalom
15 February: Women’s Slalom
16 February: Men’s Slalom
TV, live stream coverage for Mikaela Shiffrin during 2024/25 Alpine Ski World Cup season
In Europe, all FIS Alpine Ski World Cup events are streamed live on Warner Bros. Discovery platforms across 45 markets.
For fans in the U.S., skiandsnowboard.live will broadcast all international races live, except for the Austrian events, which will air on Peacock. Domestic races will be live on Outside Watch and NBC/CNBC via Peacock.