Long jump#World record progression

{{Short description|Track and field event}}

{{About||the World War II plot|Operation Long Jump|the programming function|longjmp}}

{{Distinguish|standing long jump}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2024}}

{{Infobox athletics event

|event= Long jump

|image= 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships - 26072013 - Maximiliano Rodriguez Magi of Spain during the Men's Long jump - T12.jpg

|caption= A disabled (T12) athlete performing the long jump at the 2013 IPC Athletics World Championships in Lyon

|WRmen= {{nowrap|{{flagicon|USA}} Mike Powell {{T&Fcalc|8.95}} (1991)}}

|ORmen= {{nowrap|{{flagicon|USA}} Bob Beamon {{T&Fcalc|8.90}} {{AthAbbr|A}} (1968)}}

|CRmen= {{nowrap|{{flagicon|USA}} Mike Powell {{T&Fcalc|8.95}} (1991)}}

|ICRmen= {{nowrap|{{flagicon|CUB}} Iván Pedroso {{T&Fcalc|8.62}} (1999)}}

|WRwomen= {{nowrap|{{flagicon|URS}} Galina Chistyakova {{T&Fcalc|7.52}} (1988)}}

|ORwomen= {{nowrap|{{flagicon|USA}} Jackie Joyner-Kersee {{T&Fcalc|7.40}} (1988)}}

|CRwomen= {{nowrap|{{flagicon|USA}} Jackie Joyner-Kersee {{T&Fcalc|7.36}} (1987)}}

|ICRwomen= {{nowrap|{{flagicon|USA}} Brittney Reese {{T&Fcalc|7.23}} (2012)}}

}}

File:Women's Long Jump Final - 28th Summer Universiade 2015.webm28th Summer Universiade 2015]]

The long jump is a track and field event in which athletes combine speed, strength and agility in an attempt to leap as far as possible from a takeoff point. Along with the triple jump, the two events that measure jumping for distance as a group are referred to as the "horizontal jumps". This event has a history in the ancient Olympic Games and has been a modern Olympic event for men since the first Olympics in 1896 and for women since 1948.

Rules

File:Wind indicator in long jump area at TNT - Fortuna Meeting in Kladno 16June2010 118.jpg

At the elite level, competitors run down a runway (usually coated with the same rubberized surface as running tracks, crumb rubber or vulcanized rubber, known generally as an all-weather track) and jump as far as they can from a wooden or synthetic board, 20 centimetres or 8 inches wide, that is built flush with the runway, into a pit filled with soft damp sand. If the competitor starts the leap with any part of the foot past the foul line, the jump is declared a foul and no distance is recorded. To detect this occurrence, a layer of plasticine is placed at a 90° angle immediately after the board. An official (similar to a referee) will also watch the jump and make the determination. In recent times, laser sensors and camera technology have replaced the plasticine at elite competitions (like Diamond League meetings). The competitor can initiate the jump from any point behind the foul line; however, the distance measured will always be perpendicular to the foul line to the nearest break in the sand caused by any part of the body or uniform. Therefore, it is in the best interest of the competitor to get as close to the foul line as possible. Competitors are allowed to place two marks along the side of the runway in order to assist them to jump accurately. At a lesser meet and facilities, the plasticine will likely not exist, the runway might be a different surface or jumpers may initiate their jump from a painted or taped mark on the runway. At a smaller meet, the number of attempts might also be limited to four or three.

Each competitor has a set number of attempts. That would normally be three trials, with three additional jumps being awarded to the best eight or nine (depending on the number of lanes on the track at that facility, so the event is equatable to track events) competitors. All valid attempts will be recorded but only the best mark counts towards the results. The competitor with the longest valid jump (from either the trial or final rounds) is declared the winner at the end of competition. In the event of an exact tie, then comparing the next best jumps of the tied competitors will be used to determine place. In a large, multi-day elite competition (like the Olympics or World Championships), a qualification is held in order to select at least 12 finalists. Ties and automatic qualifying distances are potential factors. In the final, a set of trial round jumps will be held, with the best eight performers advancing to the final rounds. (For specific rules and regulations in United States Track & Field see Rule 185){{cite web| url = http://www.usatf.com/about/rules/2006/| title = USATF – 2006 Competition Rules| access-date = 29 October 2006| publisher = USA Track & Field| url-status = dead| archive-date = 2 November 2006| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20061102014358/http://www.usatf.com/about/rules/2006/2006USATFRules_Article3.pdf}}:*See Rule 185 in

For record purposes, the maximum accepted wind assistance is {{convert|2|m/s|mph|spell=in}}.

=Take-off-zone reform=

World Athletics has considered fundamental rule changes to the long jump. In a test phase starting with the 2025 indoor season, athletes will now take off from a wider zone instead of the traditional take-off board. This new 40-centimetre take-off zone was introduced by World Athletics to reduce the number of invalid attempts (around 30%) that have been common in recent years. The international athletics governing body believes that the new take-off zone will not only improve fairness and excitement for the athletes but also provide a more thrilling experience for the audience.{{cite web|title=The long jump revamp begins with a Take-Off Zone trial in Dusseldorf this weekend|url=https://olympics.com/en/featured-news/long-jump-athletics-rules-history-world-records-olympics-techniques|last=Watta|first=Evelyn|date=5 February 2025|access-date=8 February 2025|website=olympics.com|publisher=IOC}}

Traditionally, the jump distance is measured from the foul line to the nearest break in the sand. Under the new trial, the measurement will instead be taken from the exact point where the jumper's front foot leaves the zone. Consequently, the effective jump distance is crucial for the outcome of the competition.

During the test phase, the jumps will also be recorded according to the traditional rules and will therefore be eligible for records and top lists.

History

{{See also|History of physical training and fitness}}

File:Halteres from ancient Greece.JPG used in athletic games in ancient Greece]]

{{Multiple image|perrow = 2|total_width = 300

| image1 = Long jump Ancient Greeece.jpg

| width1 =

| image2 = A competitor in the long jump, Black-figured Tyrrhenian amphora showing athletes and a combat scene, Greek, but made for the Etruscan market, 540 BC, found near Rome, Winning at the ancient Games, British Museum (7675649600).jpg

| width2 =

| footer = A long jump from standing. The jumper on the left performs a distinctive isometric press, primarily by applying downward pressure onto his bent rear leg. This acts as a means of preloading the muscles prior to engaging in the jump. The halteres would be swung up and down before taking off on an upswing. The jumper to the right of him is mid-flight and performs a distinctive bending and tucking of his legs in order to increase the distance of the jump. The vase on the right shows a jumper coming in to land.

}}The long jump is the only known jumping event of ancient Greece's original Olympics' pentathlon events. All events that occurred at the Olympic Games were initially supposed to act as a form of training for warfare. The long jump emerged probably because it mirrored the crossing of obstacles such as streams and ravines.{{cite book|last=Swaddling|first=Judith|title=The Ancient Olympic Games|year=1999|publisher=University of Texas Press|isbn=0292777515|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/ancientolympicga00swad}} After investigating the surviving depictions of the ancient event it is believed that unlike the modern event, athletes were only allowed a short running start. The athletes carried a weight in each hand, which were called halteres (between 1 and 4.5 kg). These weights were swung forward as the athlete jumped in order to increase momentum. It was commonly believed that the jumper would throw the weights behind him in midair to increase his forward momentum; however, halteres were held throughout the duration of the jump. Swinging them down and back at the end of the jump would change the athlete's center of gravity and allow the athlete to stretch his legs outward, increasing his distance. The jump itself was made from the bater ("that which is trod upon"). It was most likely a simple board placed on the stadium track which was removed after the event. The jumpers would land in what was called a skamma ("dug-up" area). The idea that this was a pit full of sand is wrong. Sand in the jumping pit is a modern invention.Miller, p. 66 The skamma was simply a temporary area dug up for that occasion and not something that remained over time.

The long jump was considered one of the most difficult of the events held at the Games since a great deal of skill was required. Music was often played during the jump and Philostratus says that pipes at times would accompany the jump so as to provide a rhythm for the complex movements of the halteres by the athlete. Philostratus is quoted as saying, "The rules regard jumping as the most difficult of the competitions, and they allow the jumper to be given advantages in rhythm by the use of the flute, and in weight by the use of the halter."Miller, p. 67 Most notable in the ancient sport was a man called Chionis, who in the 656 BC Olympics staged a jump of {{T&Fcalc|7.05}}.{{cite web | url = http://www.times-olympics.co.uk/communities/athletics/athleticsancient.html | archive-url = https://archive.today/20070311052052/http://www.times-olympics.co.uk/communities/athletics/athleticsancient.html | archive-date = 11 March 2007 | title = Ancient Origins | access-date = 29 October 2006 | website = The Times/The Sunday Times }}

There has been some argument by modern scholars over the long jump. Some have attempted to recreate it as a triple jump. The images provide the only evidence for the action so it is more well received that it was much like today's long jump. The main reason some want to call it a triple jump is the presence of a source that claims there once was a fifty-five ancient foot jump done by a man named Phayllos.Miller, p. 68

The long jump has been part of modern Olympic competition since the inception of the Games in 1896. In 1914, Dr. Harry Eaton Stewart recommended the "running broad jump" as a standardized track and field event for women.{{cite book | last = Tricard | first = Louise Mead | title = American Women's Track & Field: A History, 1895 Through 1980| date= 1 July 1996 | publisher = McFarland & Company | isbn = 0-7864-0219-9 | pages = 60–61}} However, it was not until 1948 that the women's long jump was added to the Olympic athletics programme.

Technique

File:Women heptathlon LJ French Athletics Championships 2013 t144221.jpg at the 2013 French Athletics Championships at Stade Charléty in Paris]]

There are five main components of the long jump: the approach run, the last two strides, takeoff, action in the air, and landing. Speed in the run-up, or approach, and a high leap off the board are the fundamentals of success. Because speed is such an important factor of the approach, it is not surprising that many long jumpers also compete successfully in sprints. Classic examples of this long jump / sprint doubling are performances by Carl Lewis and Heike Drechsler.

=Approach=

The objective of the approach is to gradually accelerate to a maximum controlled speed at takeoff. The most important factor for the distance travelled by an object is its velocity at takeoff – both the speed and angle. Elite jumpers usually leave the ground at an angle of 20° or less;{{cite web|title=Long jump: Know how it works, rules, history and world records|url=https://olympics.com/en/featured-news/long-jump-athletics-rules-history-world-records-olympics-techniques|last=Nag|first=Utathya|date=30 April 2021|access-date=14 June 2022|website=olympics.com|publisher=IOC|archive-date = 22 May 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220522071026/https://olympics.com/en/featured-news/long-jump-athletics-rules-history-world-records-olympics-techniques}} therefore, it is more beneficial for a jumper to focus on the speed component of the jump. The greater the speed at takeoff, the longer the trajectory of the center of mass will be. The importance of takeoff speed is a factor in the success of sprinters in this event.

The length of the approach is usually consistent distance for an athlete. Approaches can vary between 12 and 19 steps on the novice and intermediate levels, while at the elite level they are closer to between 20 and 22 steps. The exact distance and number of steps in an approach depends on the jumper's experience, sprinting technique, and conditioning level. Consistency in the approach is important as it is the competitor's objective to get as close to the front of the takeoff board as possible without crossing the line with any part of the foot.

=Last two steps=

The objective of the last two steps is to prepare the body for takeoff while conserving as much speed as possible.

The penultimate step is longer than the previous ones and than the final one before takeoff. The competitor begins to lower his or her center of gravity to prepare the body for the vertical impulse. The last step is shorter because the body is beginning to raise the center of gravity in preparation for takeoff.

The last two steps are extremely important because they determine the velocity at which the competitor will enter the jump.

=Takeoff=

File:Long jump takeoff board.jpg

The objective of the takeoff is to create a vertical impulse through the athlete's center of gravity while maintaining balance and control.

This phase is one of the most technical parts of the long jump. Jumpers must be conscious to place the foot flat on the ground, because jumping off either the heels or the toes negatively affects the jump. Taking off from the board heel-first has a braking effect, which decreases velocity and strains the joints. Jumping off the toes decreases stability, putting the leg at risk of buckling or collapsing from underneath the jumper. While concentrating on foot placement, the athlete must also work to maintain proper body position, keeping the torso upright and moving the hips forward and up to achieve the maximum distance from board contact to foot release.

There are four main styles of takeoff: the double-arm style, the kick style, the power sprint or bounding takeoff, and the sprint takeoff.

==Double-arm==

The double-arm style of takeoff works by moving both arms in a vertical direction as the competitor takes off. This produces a high hip height and a large vertical impulse.

==Kick==

The kick style takeoff is where the athlete actively cycles the leg before a full impulse has been directed into the board then landing into the pit. This requires great strength in the hamstrings. This causes the jumper to jump to large distances.

==Power sprint or bounding==

The power sprint takeoff, or bounding takeoff, is one of the more common elite styles. Very similar to the sprint style, the body resembles a sprinter in full stride. However, there is one major difference. The arm that pushes back on takeoff (the arm on the side of the takeoff leg) fully extends backward, rather than remaining at a bent position. This additional extension increases the impulse at takeoff.

==Sprint==

The sprint takeoff is the style most widely instructed by coaching staff. This is a classic single-arm action that resembles a jumper in full stride. It is an efficient takeoff style for maintaining velocity through takeoff.

The "correct" style of takeoff will vary from athlete to athlete.

=Action in the air and landing=

File:Carlos Chinin decathlon.jpg landing a jump close to the 8-metre mark]]

There are three major flight techniques for the long jump: the hang, the hitch-kick, and the sail. Each technique is to combat the forward rotation experienced from take-off but is basically down to preference from the athlete. Once the body is airborne, there is nothing that the athlete can do to change the direction they are traveling and consequently where they are going to land in the pit. However, certain techniques influence an athlete's landing, which can affect the distance measured. For example, if an athlete lands feet first but falls back because they are not correctly balanced, a lower distance will be measured.

==Hang==

Following the pivotal takeoff phase, the jumper executes a deliberate maneuver wherein the free leg descends until it aligns directly beneath the hips. This strategic positioning, characterized by an elongated and streamlined body silhouette, is meticulously crafted to minimize rotational forces. By maximizing the distance between both the arm and leg extremities and the hips—the theoretical center of mass—the rotational inertia is significantly increased. Leveraging the principle that longer levers rotate at a slower pace than shorter ones, this configuration facilitates a controlled and stable aerial trajectory.

As the free leg descends to meet the takeoff leg, forming an angle of 180° relative to the ground, a symmetrical alignment is achieved with both knees positioned directly beneath the hips. This alignment marks the apex of stability during the airborne phase, as minimal rotational tendencies are manifested. This aerodynamically advantageous posture, colloquially termed the "180° position", epitomizes the pinnacle of equilibrium, affording the jumper enhanced control and poise amidst the dynamic forces encountered in flight.{{cite web|title=The Four Phases of the Long Jump: Approach, Takeoff, Flight, & Landing|url=https://www.ncacoach.org/uploads/Goodwin-GI.pdf|publisher=Grand Island Senior High|last=Goodwin|first=Justin|access-date=29 April 2024}}

==Hitch-kick==

In the realm of athletic performance, particularly in the domain of jumping techniques, a prevalent strategy observed among practitioners involves the utilization of a single-step arm and leg cycle. This technique, ingrained within the repertoire of many athletes, serves a fundamental purpose: to mitigate and alleviate the forward rotation momentum experienced during the jump. Characterized by a deliberate and synchronized motion of the arms and legs, this cycling maneuver is strategically devised to offset the rotational forces generated at the moment of takeoff.

Central to the efficacy of this technique is its capacity to orchestrate secondary rotations of both the upper and lower extremities, thereby fostering a mechanical equilibrium that counterbalances the initial rotational impulses triggered upon liftoff. By implementing this methodological approach, athletes can harness the principles of biomechanics to optimize their jumping performance, enhancing stability, control, and overall efficiency in their aerial endeavors.{{Cite journal |last1=Jasminan |first1=V. |last2=Chandana |first2=A.W.S. |date=2021 |title=Two dimensional analysis of changes in athlete's center of mass during the long jump flight phase |journal=International Journal of Research in Engineering and Innovation |volume=05 |issue=3 |pages=154–158 |doi=10.36037/ijrei.2021.5304 |issn=2456-6934|doi-access=free }} This nuanced understanding underscores the intricate interplay between physics and human kinetics, illuminating the sophisticated strategies employed by athletes to excel in their athletic pursuits.

==Sail==

The "sail technique" represents a fundamental long jump approach widely employed by athletes in competitive settings. Following the culmination of the takeoff phase, practitioners swiftly elevate their legs into a configuration aimed at touching the toes.{{cite web|title=Long Jump Technique and Training|url=https://www.everythingtrackandfield.com/long-jump-technique-and-training|website=everythingtrackandfield.com|last=Giroux|first=Jim|access-date=29 April 2024}} This maneuver serves as an entry-level strategy particularly beneficial for novice jumpers, facilitating an early transition into the landing posture. However, despite its utility in expediting the landing process, this technique fails to mitigate the inherent forward rotational momentum of the body effectively. Consequently, while advantageous for its simplicity and expedited landing preparation, the sail technique lacks the requisite mechanisms to adequately counteract excessive forward rotation, posing a notable limitation to its effectiveness in optimizing jump performance.{{Cite journal |last1=Bouchouras |first1=Georgios |last2=Moscha |first2=Dimitra |last3=Papaiakovou |first3=Georgios |last4=Nikodelis |first4=Thomas |last5=Kollias |first5=Iraklis |date=January 2009 |title=Angular momentum and landing efficiency in the long jump |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1080/17461390802594243 |journal=European Journal of Sport Science |language=en |volume=9 |issue=1 |pages=53–59 |doi=10.1080/17461390802594243 |issn=1746-1391}}

==Somersault==

In the 1970s, some jumpers used a forward somersault, including Tuariki Delamere who used it at the 1974 NCAA Championships, and who matched the jump of the then Olympic champion Randy Williams. The somersault jump has potential to produce longer jumps than other techniques because in the flip, no power is lost countering forward momentum, and it reduces wind resistance in the air.{{cite magazine |title=The Flip That Led To A Flap |last=Reid |first=Ron |date=29 July 1974 |magazine=Sports Illustrated |url=https://www.si.com/vault/1974/07/29/616167/the-flip-that-led-to-a-flap |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140203190409/http://si.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1088829/index.htm |archive-date=3 February 2014}} The front flip jump was subsequently banned for fear that it was unsafe.

Records

{{See also|Men's long jump world record progression|Women's long jump world record progression}}

File:50 años de México 68 - 27.jpg at a press event at the Olímpico Universitario to commemorate the 50th anniversary of his record jump of 8.90 metres]]

The men's long jump world record has been held by just four individuals for the majority of time since the IAAF (now World Athletics) started to ratify records. The first mark recognized by the IAAF in 1912, the {{T&Fcalc|7.61}} performance by Peter O'Connor in August 1901, stood just short of 20 years (nine years as an IAAF record). After it was broken in 1921, the record changed hands five times until Jesse Owens set the mark of {{T&Fcalc|8.13}} at the 1935 Big Ten track meet in Ann Arbor, Michigan, a record that was not broken for over 25 years, until 1960 by Ralph Boston. Boston improved upon it and exchanged records with Igor Ter-Ovanesyan three times over the next seven years. At the 1968 Summer Olympics, Bob Beamon jumped {{T&Fcalc|8.90}} at an altitude of {{cvt|2292|m|ft}},{{cite journal|doi=10.1080/02640418608732104|pmid=3586109|year=1986|last=Ward-Smith|first=A. J.|title=Altitude and wind effects on long jump performance with particular reference to the world record established by Bob Beamon|journal=Journal of Sports Sciences|volume=4|issue=2|pages=89–99}} a record jump not exceeded for almost 23 years, and which remains the second longest wind legal jump of all time; it has now stood as the Olympic record for over {{age|1968|10|18}} years. On 30 August 1991, Mike Powell of the United States set the current men's world record at the World Championships in Tokyo. It was in a dramatic showdown against Carl Lewis who also surpassed Beamon's record that day, but his jump was wind-assisted (and thus not legal for record purposes). Powell's record of {{T&Fcalc|8.95}} has now stood for over {{age|1991|08|30}} years.

Some jumps over {{T&Fcalc|8.95}} have been officially recorded. Wind-assisted {{T&Fcalc|8.99}} were recorded by Powell at high altitude in Sestriere in 1992. A potential world record of {{T&Fcalc|8.96}} was recorded by Iván Pedroso also in Sestriere. Despite a "legal" wind reading, the jump was not validated because videotape revealed a person standing in front of the wind gauge, invalidating the reading (and costing Pedroso a Ferrari valued at $130,000—the prize for breaking the record at that meet).[https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=861&dat=19950804&id=9C9SAAAAIBAJ&sjid=CTYNAAAAIBAJ&pg=2460,4819264 Pedroso may lose record] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180916015009/https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=861&dat=19950804&id=9C9SAAAAIBAJ&sjid=CTYNAAAAIBAJ&pg=2460,4819264 |date=16 September 2018 }}. The Victoria Advocate (4 August 1995). As mentioned above, Lewis jumped {{T&Fcalc|8.91}} moments before Powell's record-breaking jump with the wind exceeding the maximum allowed. This jump remains the longest ever not to win an Olympic or World Championship gold medal, or any competition in general.

The women's world record has seen more consistent improvement, though the current record has stood longer than any other long jump world record by men or women. The longest to hold the record prior was by Fanny Blankers-Koen during World War II, who held it for over 10 years. There have been four occasions when the record was tied and three when it was improved upon twice in the same competition. The current women's world record is held by Galina Chistyakova of the former Soviet Union who leapt {{T&Fcalc|7.52}} in Leningrad on 11 June 1988, a mark that has now stood for over {{age|1988|06|11}} years.

Continental records

  • Updated 9 January 2024{{cite web |url=https://worldathletics.org/records/by-discipline/jumps/long-jump/all/men |title=Men's Long Jump {{!}} Records |website=worldathletics.org |publisher=World Athletics |access-date=9 January 2024 |archive-date=5 January 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240105001137/https://worldathletics.org/records/by-discipline/jumps/long-jump/all/men |url-status=live }}{{cite web |url=https://worldathletics.org/records/by-discipline/jumps/long-jump/all/women |title=Women's Long Jump {{!}} Records |website=worldathletics.org |publisher=World Athletics |access-date=9 January 2024 |archive-date=9 January 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109101215/https://worldathletics.org/records/by-discipline/jumps/long-jump/all/women |url-status=live }}

class="wikitable"
rowspan=2| Area

!colspan=4| Men

!colspan=4| Women

Mark
(m)

! Wind
(m/s)

! Athlete

! Nation

! Mark
(m)

! Wind
(m/s)

! Athlete

! Nation

Africa {{small|(records)}}8.65{{ref label|Note1|A|A}}align=center|+1.3Luvo Manyonga{{flagu|South Africa}}7.17align=center|+1.1Ese Brume{{flagu|Nigeria}}
Asia {{small|(records)}}8.48align=center|+0.6Mohammed Al-Khuwalidi{{flagu|Saudi Arabia}}7.01align=center|+1.4Weili Yao{{flagu|China}}
Europe {{small|(records)}}8.86{{ref label|Note1|A|A}}align=center|+1.9Robert Emmiyan{{flagu|Soviet Union}}7.52 {{WR}}align=center|+1.4Galina Chistyakova{{flagu|Soviet Union}}
rowspan=2|North, Central America
and Caribbean
{{small|(records)}}
rowspan=2|8.95 {{WR}}rowspan=2 align=center|+0.3rowspan=2|Mike Powellrowspan=2|{{flagu|United States}}7.49align=center|+1.3rowspan=2|Jackie Joyner-Kerseerowspan=2|{{flagu|United States}}
7.49{{ref label|Note1|A|A}}align=center|+1.7
Oceania {{small|(records)}}8.54align=center|+1.7Mitchell Watt{{flagu|Australia}}7.13align=center|+1.8Brooke Buschkuehl{{flagu|Australia}}
South America {{small|(records)}}8.73align=center|+1.2Irving Saladino{{flagu|Panama}}7.26{{ref label|Note1|A|A}}align=center|+1.8Maurren Maggi{{flagu|Brazil}}

= Notes =

{{Refbegin}}

  • {{note label|Note1|A|A}} Represents a mark set at a high altitude.

{{Refend}}

All-time top 25

=Men=

  • {{As of|2024|June}}{{cite web |url=https://worldathletics.org/records/all-time-toplists/jumps/long-jump/all/men/senior |title=Long Jump – men – senior – all |website=worldathletics.org |publisher=World Athletics |access-date=9 January 2024 |archive-date=9 January 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109101212/https://worldathletics.org/records/all-time-toplists/jumps/long-jump/all/men/senior |url-status=live }}

class="wikitable sortable"

! {{abbr|Ath.#|Athlete rank}} !! {{abbr|Perf.#|Performance rank}} !! Mark !! Wind
(m/s) !! Athlete !! Nation !! Date !! Place !! class="unsortable" | {{refh}}

bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|1

align="center"|1{{T&Fcalc|8.95}}align="center" |+0.3{{Sortname|Mike|Powell|Mike Powell (long jumper)}}{{flagu|United States}}align="right"|30 August 1991Tokyo
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|2

align="center"|2{{T&Fcalc|8.90}} {{AthAbbr|A}}align="center" |+2.0{{Sortname|Bob|Beamon}}{{flagu|United States}}align="right"|18 October 1968Mexico City
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|3

align="center"|3{{T&Fcalc|8.87}}align="center" |−0.2{{Sortname|Carl|Lewis}}{{flagu|United States}}align="right"|30 August 1991Tokyo
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|4

align="center"|4{{T&Fcalc|8.86}} {{AthAbbr|A}}align="center" |+1.9{{Sortname|Robert|Emmiyan}}{{flagu|Soviet Union}}align="right"|22 May 1987Tsaghkadzor
rowspan=5|align="center"|5{{T&Fcalc|8.84}}align="center" |+1.7{{Sort|Lewis, Carl|Lewis #2}}rowspan=5|align="right"|30 August 1991Tokyo
rowspan=2 align="center"|6{{T&Fcalc|8.79}}align="center" |+1.9{{Sort|Lewis, Carl|Lewis #3}}align="right"|19 June 1983Indianapolis
{{T&Fcalc|8.79}} {{athAbbr|i}}{{Sort|Lewis, Carl|Lewis #4}}align="right"|27 January 1984New York City
rowspan=2 align="center"|8rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|8.76}}align="center" |+1.0{{Sort|Lewis, Carl|Lewis #5}}align="right"|24 July 1982Indianapolis
align="center" | +0.8{{Sort|Lewis, Carl|Lewis #6}}align="right"|18 July 1988Indianapolis
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| rowspan=3 align="center"|5

rowspan=3 align="center"|10{{T&Fcalc|8.74}}align="center" |+1.4{{Sortname|Larry|Myricks}}{{flagu|United States}}align="right"|18 July 1988Indianapolis
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| {{T&Fcalc|8.74}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

align="center" |+2.0{{Sortname|Erick|Walder}}{{flagu|United States}}align="right"|2 April 1994El Paso
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| {{T&Fcalc|8.74}}

align="center" |−1.2{{Sortname|Dwight|Phillips}}{{flagu|United States}}align="right"|7 June 2009Eugene
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|8

align="center"|13{{T&Fcalc|8.73}}align="center" |+1.2{{Sortname|Irving|Saladino}}{{flagu|Panama}}align="right"|24 May 2008Hengelo
rowspan=3|align="center"|14{{T&Fcalc|8.72}}align="center" |−0.2{{Sort|Lewis, Carl|Lewis #7}}rowspan=3|align="right"|26 September 1988Seoul
rowspan=2 align="center"|15rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|8.71}}align="center" |−0.4{{Sort|Lewis, Carl|Lewis #8}}align="right"|13 May 1984Westwood
align="center" | +0.1{{Sort|Lewis, Carl|Lewis #9}}align="right"|19 June 1984Los Angeles
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| rowspan=2 align="center"|9

rowspan=2 align="center"|15{{T&Fcalc|8.71}}align="center" |+1.9{{Sortname|Iván|Pedroso}}{{flagu|Cuba}}align="right"|18 July 1995Salamanca
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| {{T&Fcalc|8.71}} {{athAbbr|i}}

{{Sortname|Sebastian|Bayer}}{{flagu|Germany}}align="right"|8 March 2009Turin
rowspan=3|rowspan=3 align="center"|19rowspan=3|{{T&Fcalc|8.70}}align="center" |+0.9{{Sort|Myricks, Larry|Myricks #2}}rowspan=3|align="right"|17 June 1989Houston
align="center" | +0.7{{Sort|Powell, Mike|Powell #2}}align="right"|27 July 1993Salamanca
align="center" | +1.6{{Sort|Pedroso, Iván|Pedroso #2}}align="right"|12 August 1995Gothenburg
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|11

align="center"|22{{T&Fcalc|8.69}}align="center" |+0.5{{Sortname|Tajay|Gayle}}{{flagu|Jamaica}}align="right"|28 September 2019Doha
rowspan=2|rowspan=2 align="center"|23rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|8.68}}align="center" |+1.0{{Sort|Lewis, Carl|Lewis #10}}rowspan=2|align="right"|5 August 1992Barcelona
align="center" | +1.6{{Sort|Pedroso, Iván|Pedroso #3}}align="right"|17 June 1995Lisbon
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|12

align="center"|23{{T&Fcalc|8.68}}align="center" |+1.7{{Sortname|Juan Miguel|Echevarría}}{{flagu|Cuba}}align="right"|30 June 2018Bad Langensalza{{cite news|title=Echevarria extends long jump world lead to 8.68m in Bad Langensalza|url=https://www.iaaf.org/news/report/bad-langensalza-echevarria-2018|publisher=IAAF|last=Mulkeen|first=Jon|date=30 June 2018|access-date=12 July 2018|archive-date=30 September 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190930161445/https://www.iaaf.org/news/report/bad-langensalza-echevarria-2018|url-status=live}}
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center"|13

rowspan=13|{{T&Fcalc|8.66}}align="center" |+1.6{{Sortname|Louis|Tsatoumas}}{{flagu|Greece}}align="right"|2 June 2007Kalamata
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| rowspan=2 align="center"|14

{{T&Fcalc|8.65}} {{AthAbbr|A}}align="center" |+1.3{{Sortname|Luvo|Manyonga}}{{flagu|South Africa}}align="right"|22 April 2017Potchefstroom
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| {{T&Fcalc|8.65}}

align="center"|−0.3{{Sortname|Miltiadis|Tentoglou}}{{flagu|Greece}}align="right"|8 June 2024Rome{{cite web|title=European Athletics Championships {{!}} Results {{!}} World Athletics|url=https://worldathletics.org/competition/calendar-results/results/7158244?eventId=10229617|website=worldathletics.org|publisher=World Athletics|access-date=13 June 2024}}
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center"|16

{{T&Fcalc|8.63}}align="center" |+0.5{{Sortname|Kareem|Streete-Thompson}}{{flagu|United States}}align="right"|4 July 1994Linz
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center"|17

{{T&Fcalc|8.62}}align="center" |+0.7{{Sortname|James|Beckford|James Beckford (athlete)}}{{flagu|Jamaica}}align="right"|5 April 1997Orlando
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center"|18

{{T&Fcalc|8.59}} {{athAbbr|i}}{{Sortname|Miguel|Pate}}{{flagu|United States}}align="right"|1 March 2002New York City
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center"|19

{{T&Fcalc|8.58}}align="center" |+1.8{{Sortname|Jarrion|Lawson}}{{flagu|United States}}align="right"|3 July 2016Eugene{{cite news|title=Six world leads on third day of US Olympic Trials|url=http://www.iaaf.org/news/report/us-olympic-trials-2016-felix-gatlin-henderson|publisher=IAAF|last=Jordan|first=Roy|date=4 July 2016|access-date=4 July 2016|archive-date=5 July 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160705172102/http://www.iaaf.org/news/report/us-olympic-trials-2016-felix-gatlin-henderson|url-status=live}}
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| rowspan=2 align="center"|20

{{T&Fcalc|8.56}} {{athAbbr|i}}{{Sortname|Yago|Lamela}}{{flagu|Spain}}align="right"|7 March 1999Maebashi
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| {{T&Fcalc|8.56}}

align="center" | +0.2{{Sortname|Aleksandr|Menkov}}{{flagu|Russia}}align="right"|16 August 2013Moscow
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| rowspan=3 align="center"|22

rowspan=3|{{T&Fcalc|8.54}}align="center" |+0.9{{Sortname|Lutz|Dombrowski}}{{flagu|East Germany}}align="right"|28 July 1980Moscow
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center" | +1.7

{{Sortname|Mitchell|Watt}}{{flagu|Australia}}align="right"|29 July 2011Stockholm
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center" | +1.2

{{Sortname|Wayne|Pinnock}}{{flagu|Jamaica}}align="right"|23 August 2023Budapest{{Cite web|title=Budapest 2023 {{!}} Men – Long Jump – Qualification – Results|url=https://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/7138987/AT-LJ-M-q----.RS4.pdf|publisher=World Athletics|date=23 August 2023|access-date=25 August 2023|archive-date=24 August 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230824085250/https://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/7138987/AT-LJ-M-q----.RS4.pdf|url-status=live}}
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center"|25

{{T&Fcalc|8.53}}align="center" |+1.2{{Sortname|Jaime|Jefferson}}{{flagu|Cuba}}align="right"|12 May 1990Havana

==Key==

Tables show data for two definitions of "Top 25" - the top 25 distances and the top 25 athletes:

{{legend2|#f6F5CE|Light Yellow: denotes top performance for athletes in the top 25 distances|border=solid 1px #AAAAAA}}

{{legend2|#FFFFFF|White: denotes lesser performances, still in the top 25 distances, by repeat athletes|border=solid 1px #AAAAAA}}

{{legend2|#CCFFCC|Green: denotes top performance (only) for other top 25 athletes who fall outside the top 25 distances|border=solid 1px #AAAAAA}}

==Para marks==

Performances by disabled athletes that would qualify for the all-time top 25:

class="wikitable sortable sticky-header"

!Class

!Mark

!Wind
(m/s)

!Athlete

!Date

!Place

!{{refh}}

align="center"|T64{{T&Fcalc|8.72}}align="center"|+1.6{{flagathlete|Markus Rehm|GER}}25 June 2023Rhede{{Cite web|url=https://www.leichtathletik.de/aktuelles/news/news-detail/78163-markus-rehm-verbessert-para-weltrekord-auf-872-meter|date=26 June 2023|title=Markus Rehm verbessert Para-Weltrekord auf 8,72 Meter|website=www.leichtathletik.de {{!}} Das Leichtathletik-Portal|last=Sapper|first=Svenja|language=de|access-date=20 December 2023|archive-date=20 December 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231220165317/https://www.leichtathletik.de/aktuelles/news/news-detail/78163-markus-rehm-verbessert-para-weltrekord-auf-872-meter|url-status=live}}

==Assisted marks==

Any performance with a following wind of more than 2.0 metres per second is not counted for record purposes. Below is a list of wind-assisted jumps (equal or superior to 8.53 m). Only best assisted mark that is superior to legal best is shown:

class="wikitable sortable sticky-header"

!Mark

!Wind
(m/s)

!Athlete

!Date

!Place

!class="unsortable" | {{refh}}

{{T&Fcalc|8.99}} {{AthAbbr|A}}align="center"|+4.4{{flagathlete|Mike Powell|USA}}align="right"|21 July 1992Sestriere
{{T&Fcalc|8.92}}align="center"|+3.3{{flagathlete|Juan Miguel Echevarría|CUB}}align="right"|10 March 2019Havana
{{T&Fcalc|8.91}}align="center"|+2.9{{flagathlete|Carl Lewis|USA}}align="right"|30 August 1991Tokyo
{{T&Fcalc|8.79}}align="center"|+3.0{{flagathlete|Iván Pedroso|CUB}}align="right"|21 May 1992Havana
{{T&Fcalc|8.78}}align="center"|+3.1{{flagathlete|Fabrice Lapierre|AUS}}align="right"|18 April 2010Perth
rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|8.68}}align="center"|+4.9{{flagathlete|James Beckford|JAM}}align="right"|19 May 1995Odessa
align="center"|+3.7{{flagathlete|Marquis Dendy|USA}}align="right"|25 June 2015Eugene
{{T&Fcalc|8.66}} {{AthAbbr|A}}align="center"|+4.0{{flagathlete|Joe Greene|USA}}align="right"|21 July 1992Sestriere
{{T&Fcalc|8.64}}align="center"|+3.5{{flagathlete|Kareem Streete-Thompson|CAY}}align="right"|18 June 1994Knoxville
{{T&Fcalc|8.63}}align="center"|+3.9{{flagathlete|Mike Conley|USA}}align="right"|20 June 1986Eugene
{{T&Fcalc|8.59}}align="center"|+2.9{{flagathlete|Jeff Henderson|USA}}align="right"|3 July 2016Eugene
{{T&Fcalc|8.57}}align="center"|+5.2{{flagathlete|Jason Grimes|USA}}align="right"|27 June 1982Durham
{{T&Fcalc|8.53}}align="center"|+4.9{{flagathlete|Kevin Dilworth|USA}}align="right"|27 April 2002Fort-de-France

=Women=

  • {{As of|2024|February}}{{cite web |url=https://worldathletics.org/records/all-time-toplists/jumps/long-jump/all/women/senior |title=Long Jump – women – senior – all |website=worldathletics.org |publisher=World Athletics |access-date=9 January 2024 |archive-date=9 January 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240109101213/https://worldathletics.org/records/all-time-toplists/jumps/long-jump/all/women/senior |url-status=live }}

class="wikitable sortable"

! {{abbr|Ath.#|Athlete rank}} !! {{abbr|Perf.#|Performance rank}} !! Mark !! Wind
(m/s) !! Athlete !! Nation !! Date !! Place !! class="unsortable" | {{refh}}

bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|1

align="center"|1{{T&Fcalc|7.52}}align="center" |+1.4{{Sortname|Galina|Chistyakova}}{{flagu|Soviet Union}}align="right"|11 June 1988Leningrad
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|2

align="center"|2{{T&Fcalc|7.49}}align="center" |+1.3{{Sortname|Jackie|Joyner-Kersee}}{{flagu|United States}}align="right"|22 May 1994New York City
align="center"|2{{T&Fcalc|7.49}} {{AthAbbr|A}}align="center" |+1.7{{Sort|Joyner-Kersee, Jackie|Joyner-Kersee #2}}align="right"|31 July 1994Sestriere
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|3

align="center"|4{{T&Fcalc|7.48}}align="center" |+1.2{{Sortname|Heike|Drechsler}}{{flagu|East Germany}}align="right"|9 July 1988Neubrandenburg
rowspan=7|align="center"|4{{T&Fcalc|7.48}}align="center" |+0.4{{Sort|Drechsler, Heike|Drechsler #2}}rowspan=7|align="right"|8 July 1992Lausanne
rowspan=5 align="center"|6rowspan=5|{{T&Fcalc|7.45}}align="center" |+0.9{{Sort|Drechsler, Heike|Drechsler #3}}align="right"|21 June 1986Tallinn
align="center" | +1.1{{Sort|Drechsler, Heike|Drechsler #4}}align="right"|3 July 1986Dresden
align="center" | +0.6{{Sort|Joyner-Kersee, Jackie|Joyner-Kersee #3}}align="right"|13 August 1987Indianapolis
align="center" | +1.0{{Sort|Chistyakova, Galina|Chistyakova #2}}align="right"|11 June 1988Leningrad
align="center" | +1.6{{Sort|Chistyakova, Galina|Chistyakova #3}}align="right"|12 August 1988Budapest
align="center"|11{{T&Fcalc|7.44}}align="center" |+2.0{{Sort|Drechsler, Heike|Drechsler #5}}align="right"|22 September 1985Berlin
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|4

align="center"|12{{T&Fcalc|7.43}}align="center" |+1.4{{Sortname|Anişoara|Cuşmir|Anişoara Cuşmir-Stanciu}}{{flagu|Romania|1965}}align="right"|4 June 1983Bucharest
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|5

align="center"|13{{T&Fcalc|7.42}}align="center" |+2.0{{Sortname|Tatyana|Kotova}}{{flagu|Russia}}align="right"|23 June 2002Annecy
rowspan=4|rowspan=3 align="center"|14rowspan=3|{{T&Fcalc|7.40}}align="center" |+1.8{{Sort|Drechsler, Heike|Drechsler #6}}rowspan=4|align="right"|26 July 1984Dresden
align="center" | +0.7{{Sort|Drechsler, Heike|Drechsler #7}}align="right"|21 August 1987Potsdam
align="center" | +0.9{{Sort|Joyner-Kersee, Jackie|Joyner-Kersee #4}}align="right"|29 September 1988Seoul
align="center"|17{{T&Fcalc|7.39}}align="center" |+0.3{{Sort|Drechsler, Heike|Drechsler #8}}align="right"|21 August 1985Zürich
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|6

align="center"|17{{T&Fcalc|7.39}}align="center" |+0.5{{Sortname|Yelena|Belevskaya}}{{flagu|Soviet Union}}align="right"|18 July 1987Bryansk
rowspan=3|align="center"|17{{T&Fcalc|7.39}}{{Sort|Joyner-Kersee, Jackie|Joyner-Kersee #5}}rowspan=3|align="right"|25 June 1988San Diego
rowspan=2 align="center"|20{{T&Fcalc|7.37}} {{athAbbr|i}}{{Sort|Drechsler, Heike|Drechsler #9}}align="right"|13 February 1988Vienna
{{T&Fcalc|7.37}} {{AthAbbr|A}}align="center" |+1.8{{Sort|Drechsler, Heike|Drechsler #10}}align="right"|31 July 1991Sestriere
bgcolor="#f6F5CE"

| align="center"|7

align="center"|20{{T&Fcalc|7.37}}{{Sortname|Inessa|Kravets}}{{flagu|Ukraine}}align="right"|13 June 1992Kyiv
rowspan=3|rowspan=3 align="center"|23rowspan=3|{{T&Fcalc|7.36}}align="center" |+0.4{{Sort|Joyner-Kersee, Jackie|Joyner-Kersee #6}}rowspan=3|align="right"|4 September 1987Rome
align="center" | +1.8{{Sort|Belevskaya, Yelena|Belevskaya #2}}align="right"|11 June 1988Leningrad
align="center" | +1.8{{Sort|Drechsler, Heike|Drechsler #11}}align="right"|28 May 1992Jena
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center"|8

rowspan=19|{{T&Fcalc|7.33}}align="center" |+0.4{{Sortname|Tatyana|Lebedeva}}{{flagu|Russia}}align="right"|31 July 2004Tula
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| rowspan=3 align="center"|9

rowspan=3|{{T&Fcalc|7.31}}align="center" |+1.5{{Sortname|Olena|Khlopotnova}}{{flagu|Soviet Union}}align="right"|12 September 1985Alma Ata
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center" | +1.9

{{Sortname|Marion|Jones}}{{flagu|United States}}align="right"|31 May 1998Eugene
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center" | +1.7

{{Sortname|Brittney|Reese}}{{flagu|United States}}align="right"|2 July 2016Eugene{{cite news|title=Reese's big leap highlights early action at US Olympic Trials|url=http://www.iaaf.org/news/report/us-olympic-trials-2016-reese|publisher=IAAF|last=Jordan|first=Roy|date=3 July 2016|access-date=3 July 2016|archive-date=8 October 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191008125035/https://www.iaaf.org/news/report/us-olympic-trials-2016-reese|url-status=live}}
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center"|12

{{T&Fcalc|7.30}}align="center" |−0.8{{Sortname|Malaika|Mihambo}}{{flagu|Germany}}align="right"|6 October 2019Doha{{cite web|title=Doha 2019 {{!}} Women – Long Jump – Final – Results|url=https://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/6033/AT-LJ-W-f----.RS6.pdf?v=-1461356668|publisher=IAAF|date=6 October 2019|access-date=7 October 2019|archive-date=7 December 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191207151426/https://media.aws.iaaf.org/competitiondocuments/pdf/6033/AT-LJ-W-f----.RS6.pdf?v=-1461356668|url-status=live}}
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center"|13

{{T&Fcalc|7.27}}align="center" |−0.4{{Sortname|Irina|Simagina|Irina Meleshina}}{{flagu|Russia}}align="right"|31 July 2004Tula
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center"|14

{{T&Fcalc|7.26}} {{AthAbbr|A}}align="center" |+1.8{{Sortname|Maurren|Maggi}}{{flagu|Brazil}}align="right"|25 June 1999Bogotá
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| rowspan=2 align="center"|15

{{T&Fcalc|7.24}}align="center" |+1.0{{Sortname|Larysa|Berezhna}}{{flagu|Soviet Union}}align="right"|25 May 1991Granada
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| {{T&Fcalc|7.24}} {{athAbbr|i}}

{{Sortname|Ivana|Španović}}{{flagu|Serbia}}align="right"|5 March 2017Belgrade
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| rowspan=2 align="center"|17

rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|7.21}}align="center" |+1.6{{Sortname|Helga|Radtke}}{{flagu|East Germany}}align="right"|26 July 1984Dresden
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center" | +1.9

{{Sortname|Lyudmila|Kolchanova}}{{flagu|Russia}}align="right"|27 May 2007Sochi
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| rowspan=4 align="center"|19

rowspan=4|{{T&Fcalc|7.20}}align="center" |−0.3{{Sortname|Vali|Ionescu}}{{flagu|Romania|1965}}align="right"|1 August 1982Bucharest
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center" | +2.0

{{Sortname|Irena|Oženko}}{{flagu|Soviet Union}}align="right"|12 September 1986Budapest
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center" | +0.8

{{Sortname|Yelena|Sinchukova}}{{flagu|Soviet Union}}align="right"|20 June 1991Budapest
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center" | +0.7

{{Sortname|Irina|Mushailova}}{{flagu|Russia}}align="right"|14 July 1994Saint Petersburg
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center"|23

{{T&Fcalc|7.18}} {{athAbbr|i}} {{AthAbbr|A}}{{Sortname|Tara|Davis-Woodhall}}{{flagu|United States}}align="right"|16 February 2024Albuquerque{{cite web|title=World 60m hurdles records for Holloway and Jones in Albuquerque|url=https://worldathletics.org/news/report/grant-holloway-tia-jones-world-60m-hurdles-records-albuquerque|website=worldathletics.org|publisher=World Athletics|last=Greif|first=Andrew|date=17 February 2024|access-date=17 February 2024|archive-date=24 February 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240224090912/https://worldathletics.org/news/report/grant-holloway-tia-jones-world-60m-hurdles-records-albuquerque|url-status=live}}
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| rowspan=3 align="center"|24

rowspan=3|{{T&Fcalc|7.17}}align="center" |+1.8{{Sortname|Irina|Valyukevich}}{{flagu|Soviet Union}}align="right"|18 July 1987Bryansk
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center" | +0.6

{{Sortname|Tianna|Bartoletta}}{{flagu|United States}}align="right"|17 August 2016Rio de Janeiro{{cite web|title=Rio 2016 {{!}} Women – Long Jump – Final – Results|url=https://smsprio2016-a.akamaihd.net/_odf-documents/A/T/ATW061101_Results_2016_08_17_7e3a866b_f263_4c6c_aac5_aade94a0bd85.pdf|work=Rio 2016 official website|date=17 August 2016|access-date=18 August 2016|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160920171334/https://smsprio2016-a.akamaihd.net/_odf-documents/A/T/ATW061101_Results_2016_08_17_7e3a866b_f263_4c6c_aac5_aade94a0bd85.pdf|archive-date=20 September 2016|df=dmy-all}}
bgcolor=#CCFFCC

| align="center" | +1.1

{{Sortname|Ese|Brume}}{{flagu|Nigeria}}align="right"|29 May 2021Chula Vista{{cite news|title=Brume and Malone break records in Chula Vista|url=https://www.worldathletics.org/competitions/world-athletics-continental-tour/news/chula-vista-field-festival-2021|website=worldathletics.org|publisher=World Athletics|last=Mulkeen|first=Jon|date=30 May 2021|access-date=20 June 2021|archive-date=22 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210622102105/https://www.worldathletics.org/competitions/world-athletics-continental-tour/news/chula-vista-field-festival-2021|url-status=live}}

==Key==

Tables show data for two definitions of "Top 25" - the top 25 distances and the top 25 athletes:

{{legend2|#f6F5CE|Light Yellow: denotes top performance for athletes in the top 25 distances|border=solid 1px #AAAAAA}}

{{legend2|#FFFFFF|White: denotes lesser performances, still in the top 25 distances, by repeat athletes|border=solid 1px #AAAAAA}}

{{legend2|#CCFFCC|Green: denotes top performance (only) for other top 25 athletes who fall outside the top 25 distances|border=solid 1px #AAAAAA}}

==Assisted marks==

Any performance with a following wind of more than 2.0 metres per second is not counted for record purposes. Below is a list of wind-assisted jumps (equal or superior to 7.17 m). Only best assisted mark that is superior to legal best is shown:

class="wikitable sortable sticky-header"

!Mark

!Wind
(m/s)

!Athlete

!Date

!Place

!class="unsortable" | {{refh}}

{{T&Fcalc|7.63}} {{AthAbbr|A}}align="center"|+2.1{{flagathlete|Heike Drechsler|GER}}align="right"|21 July 1992Sestriere
{{T&Fcalc|7.27}}align="center"|+2.7{{flagathlete|Yulimar Rojas|VEN}}align="right"|13 June 2021La Nucia
{{T&Fcalc|7.24}}align="center"|+2.8{{flagathlete|Tara Davis|USA}}align="right"|9 July 2022Chula Vista
{{T&Fcalc|7.23}} {{AthAbbr|A}}align="center"|+4.3{{flagathlete|Fiona May|ITA}}align="right"|29 July 1995Sestriere
{{T&Fcalc|7.22}}align="center"|+4.3{{flagathlete|Anastassia Mirochuk-Ivanova|BLR}}align="right"|6 July 2012Grodno
{{T&Fcalc|7.19}} {{AthAbbr|A}}align="center"|+3.7{{flagathlete|Susen Tiedtke|GER}}align="right"|28 July 1993Sestriere
{{T&Fcalc|7.17}}align="center"|+3.6{{flagathlete|Eva Murková|TCH}}align="right"|26 August 1984Nitra

Olympic medalists

=Men=

{{Olympic medalists in men's long jump}}

=Women=

{{Olympic medalists in women's long jump}}

World Championships medalists

=Men=

{{World Championships in Athletics medalists in men's long jump}}

=Women=

{{World Championships in Athletics medalists in women's long jump}}

World Indoor Championships medalists

=Men=

{{MedalistTable|type=Championships|width=250|labelwidth=200|columns=2}}
1985 Paris{{ref label|WIG|A}}
{{DetailsLink|1985 IAAF World Indoor Games – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Jan Leitner|TCH}}

7.96 m

|{{flagmedalist|Gyula Pálóczi|HUN}}

7.94 m

|{{flagmedalist|Giovanni Evangelisti|ITA}}

7.88 m
1987 Indianapolis
{{DetailsLink|1987 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Larry Myricks|USA}}

8.23 m

|{{flagmedalist|Paul Emordi|NGR}}

8.01 m

|{{flagmedalist|Giovanni Evangelisti|ITA}}

8.01 m
1989 Budapest
{{DetailsLink|1989 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Larry Myricks|USA}}

8.37 m

|{{flagmedalist|Dietmar Haaf|FRG}}

8.17 m

|{{flagmedalist|Mike Conley|USA}}

8.11 m
1991 Seville
{{DetailsLink|1991 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Dietmar Haaf|GER}}

8.15 m

|{{flagmedalist|Jaime Jefferson|CUB}}

8.04 m

|{{flagmedalist|Giovanni Evangelisti|ITA}}

7.93 m
1993 Toronto
{{DetailsLink|1993 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Iván Pedroso|CUB}}

8.23 m

|{{flagmedalist|Joe Greene|USA}}

8.13 m

|{{flagmedalist|Jaime Jefferson|CUB}}

7.98 m
1995 Barcelona
{{DetailsLink|1995 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Iván Pedroso|CUB}}

8.51 m

|{{flagmedalist|Mattias Sunneborn|SWE}}

8.20 m

|{{flagmedalist|Erick Walder|USA}}

8.14 m
1997 Paris
{{DetailsLink|1997 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Iván Pedroso|CUB}}

8.51 m

|{{flagmedalist|Kirill Sosunov|RUS}}

8.41 m

|{{flagmedalist|Joe Greene|USA}}

8.41 m
1999 Maebashi
{{DetailsLink|1999 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Iván Pedroso|CUB}}

8.62 m

|{{flagmedalist|Yago Lamela|ESP}}

8.56 m

|{{flagmedalist|Erick Walder|USA}}

8.30 m
2001 Lisbon
{{DetailsLink|2001 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Iván Pedroso|CUB}}

8.43 m

|{{flagmedalist|Kareem Streete-Thompson|CAY}}

8.16 m

|{{flagmedalist|Carlos Calado|POR}}

8.16 m
2003 Birmingham
{{DetailsLink|2003 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Dwight Phillips|USA}}

8.29 m

|{{flagmedalist|Yago Lamela|ESP}}

8.28 m

|{{flagmedalist|Miguel Pate|USA}}

8.21 m
2004 Budapest
{{DetailsLink|2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Savanté Stringfellow|USA}}

8.40 m

|{{flagmedalist|James Beckford|JAM}}

8.31 m

|{{flagmedalist|Vitaliy Shkurlatov|RUS}}

8.28 m
2006 Moscow
{{DetailsLink|2006 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Ignisious Gaisah|GHA}}

8.30 m

|{{flagmedalist|Irving Saladino|PAN}}

8.29 m

|{{flagmedalist|Andrew Howe|ITA}}

8.19 m
2008 Valencia
{{DetailsLink|2008 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Godfrey Khotso Mokoena|RSA}}

8.08 m

|{{flagmedalist|Chris Tomlinson|GBR}}

8.06 m

|{{flagmedalist|Mohammed Al-Khuwalidi|KSA}}

8.01 m
2010 Doha
{{DetailsLink|2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Fabrice Lapierre|AUS}}

8.17 m

|{{flagmedalist|Godfrey Khotso Mokoena|RSA}}

8.08 m

|{{flagmedalist|Mitchell Watt|AUS}}

8.05 m
2012 Istanbul
{{DetailsLink|2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Mauro Vinícius da Silva|BRA}}

8.23 m

|{{flagmedalist|Henry Frayne|AUS}}

8.23 m

|{{flagmedalist|Aleksandr Menkov|RUS}}

8.22 m
2014 Sopot
{{DetailsLink|2014 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Mauro Vinícius da Silva|BRA}}

8.28 m

|{{flagmedalist|Li Jinzhe|CHN}}

8.23 m

|{{flagmedalist|Michel Tornéus|SWE}}

8.21 m
2016 Portland
{{DetailsLink|2016 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Marquis Dendy|USA}}

8.26 m

|{{flagmedalist|Fabrice Lapierre|AUS}}

8.25 m

|{{flagmedalist|Huang Changzhou|CHN}}

8.21 m
2018 Birmingham
{{DetailsLink|2018 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Juan Miguel Echevarría|CUB}}

8.46 m

|{{flagmedalist|Luvo Manyonga|RSA}}

8.44 m

|{{flagmedalist|Marquis Dendy|USA}}

8.42 m
2022 Belgrade
{{DetailsLink|2022 World Athletics Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Miltiadis Tentoglou|GRE}}

8.55 m

|{{flagmedalist|Thobias Montler|SWE}}

8.38 m

|{{flagmedalist|Marquis Dendy|USA}}

8.27 m
2024 Glasgow
{{DetailsLink|2024 World Athletics Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Miltiadis Tentoglou|GRE}}

8.22 m

|{{flagmedalist|Mattia Furlani|ITA}}

8.22 m

|{{flagmedalist|Carey McLeod|JAM}}

8.21 m
2025 Nanjing
{{DetailsLink|2025 World Athletics Indoor Championships – Men's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Mattia Furlani|ITA}}

8.30 m

|{{flagmedalist|Wayne Pinnock|JAM}}

8.29 m

|{{flagmedalist|Liam Adcock|AUS}}

8.28 m

==Medal table==

{{Medals table

| caption =

| host =

| flag_template =

| event =

| team =

| gold_CUB = 6 | silver_CUB = 1 | bronze_CUB = 1

| gold_USA = 5 | silver_USA = 1 | bronze_USA = 7

| gold_BRA = 2 | silver_BRA = 0 | bronze_BRA = 0

| gold_GRE = 2 | silver_GRE = 0 | bronze_GRE = 0

| gold_AUS = 1 | silver_AUS = 2 | bronze_AUS = 2

| gold_RSA = 1 | silver_RSA = 2 | bronze_RSA = 0

| gold_GER = 1 | silver_GER = 1 | bronze_GER = 0

| gold_TCH = 1 | silver_TCH = 0 | bronze_TCH = 0

| gold_GHA = 1 | silver_GHA = 0 | bronze_GHA = 0

| gold_SWE = 0 | silver_SWE = 2 | bronze_SWE = 1

| gold_ESP = 0 | silver_ESP = 2 | bronze_ESP = 0

| gold_ITA = 1 | silver_ITA = 1 | bronze_ITA = 4

| gold_RUS = 0 | silver_RUS = 1 | bronze_RUS = 2

| gold_CHN = 0 | silver_CHN = 1 | bronze_CHN = 1

| gold_JAM = 0 | silver_JAM = 2 | bronze_JAM = 1

| gold_HUN = 0 | silver_HUN = 1 | bronze_HUN = 0

| gold_NGR = 0 | silver_NGR = 1 | bronze_NGR = 0

| gold_CAY = 0 | silver_CAY = 1 | bronze_CAY = 0

| gold_PAN = 0 | silver_PAN = 1 | bronze_PAN = 0

| gold_GBR = 0 | silver_GBR = 1 | bronze_GBR = 0

| gold_POR = 0 | silver_POR = 0 | bronze_POR = 1

| gold_KSA = 0 | silver_KSA = 0 | bronze_KSA = 1

}}

=Women=

{{MedalistTable|type=Championships|width=250|labelwidth=200|columns=2}}
1985 Paris{{ref label|WIG|A}}
{{DetailsLink|1985 IAAF World Indoor Games – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Helga Radtke|GDR}}

6.88 m

|{{flagmedalist|Tatyana Rodionova|URS}}

6.72 m

|{{flagmedalist|Nijolė Medvedeva|URS}}

6.44 m
1987 Indianapolis
{{DetailsLink|1987 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Heike Drechsler|GDR}}

7.10 m

|{{flagmedalist|Helga Radtke|GDR}}

6.94 m

|{{flagmedalist|Yelena Belevskaya|URS}}

6.76 m
1989 Budapest
{{DetailsLink|1989 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Galina Chistyakova|URS}}

6.98 m

|{{flagmedalist|Marieta Ilcu|ROU|1965}}

6.86 m

|{{flagmedalist|Larysa Berezhna|URS}}

6.82 m
1991 Seville
{{DetailsLink|1991 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Larysa Berezhna|URS}}

6.84 m

|{{flagmedalist|Heike Drechsler|GER}}

6.82 m

|{{flagmedalist|Marieta Ilcu|ROU}}

6.74 m
1993 Toronto
{{DetailsLink|1993 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Marieta Ilcu|ROU}}

6.84 m

|{{flagmedalist|Susen Tiedtke|GER}}

6.84 m

|{{flagmedalist|Inessa Kravets|UKR}}

6.77 m
1995 Barcelona
{{DetailsLink|1995 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Lyudmila Galkina|RUS}}

6.95 m

|{{flagmedalist|Irina Mushailova|RUS}}

6.90 m

|{{flagmedalist|Susen Tiedtke-Greene|GER}}

6.90 m
1997 Paris
{{DetailsLink|1997 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Fiona May|ITA}}

6.86 m

|{{flagmedalist|Chioma Ajunwa|NGR}}

6.80 m

|{{flagmedalist|Agata Karczmarek|POL}}

6.71 m
1999 Maebashi
{{DetailsLink|1999 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Tatyana Kotova|RUS}}

6.86 m

|{{flagmedalist|Shana Williams|USA}}

6.82 m

|{{flagmedalist|Iva Prandzheva|BUL}}

6.78 m
2001 Lisbon
{{DetailsLink|2001 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Dawn Burrell|USA}}

7.03 m

|{{flagmedalist|Tatyana Kotova|RUS}}

6.98 m

|{{flagmedalist|Niurka Montalvo|ESP}}

6.88 m
2003 Birmingham
{{DetailsLink|2003 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Tatyana Kotova|RUS}}

6.84 m

|{{flagmedalist|Inessa Kravets|UKR}}

6.72 m

|{{flagmedalist|Maurren Maggi|BRA}}

6.70 m
2004 Budapest
{{DetailsLink|2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Tatyana Lebedeva|RUS}}

6.98 m

|{{flagmedalist|Tatyana Kotova|RUS}}

6.93 m

|{{flagmedalist|Carolina Klüft|SWE}}

6.92 m
2006 Moscow
{{DetailsLink|2006 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Tianna Madison|USA}}

6.80 m

|{{flagmedalist|Naide Gomes|POR}}

6.76 m

|{{flagmedalist|Concepción Montaner|ESP}}

6.76 m
2008 Valencia
{{DetailsLink|2008 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Naide Gomes|POR}}

7.00 m

|{{flagmedalist|Maurren Maggi|BRA}}

6.89 m

|{{flagmedalist|Irina Simagina|RUS}}

6.88 m
2010 Doha
{{DetailsLink|2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Brittney Reese|USA}}

6.70 m

|{{flagmedalist|Naide Gomes|POR}}

6.67 m

|{{flagmedalist|Keila Costa|BRA}}

6.63 m
2012 Istanbul
{{DetailsLink|2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Brittney Reese|USA}}

7.23 m

|{{flagmedalist|Janay DeLoach|USA}}

6.98 m

|{{flagmedalist|Shara Proctor|GBR}}

6.89 m
2014 Sopot
{{DetailsLink|2014 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Éloyse Lesueur|FRA}}

6.85 m

|{{flagmedalist|Katarina Johnson-Thompson|GBR}}

6.81 m

|{{flagmedalist|Ivana Španović|SRB}}

6.77 m
2016 Portland
{{DetailsLink|2016 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Brittney Reese|USA}}

7.22 m

|{{flagmedalist|Ivana Španović|SRB}}

7.07 m

|{{flagmedalist|Lorraine Ugen|GBR}}

6.93 m
2018 Birmingham
{{DetailsLink|2018 IAAF World Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Ivana Španović|SRB}}

6.96 m

|{{flagmedalist|Brittney Reese|USA}}

6.89 m

|{{flagmedalist|Sosthene Moguenara|GER}}

6.85 m
2022 Belgrade
{{DetailsLink|2022 World Athletics Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Ivana Vuleta|SRB}}

7.06 m

|{{flagmedalist|Ese Brume|NGR}}

6.85 m

|{{flagmedalist|Lorraine Ugen|GBR}}

6.82 m
2024 Glasgow
{{DetailsLink|2024 World Athletics Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Tara Davis-Woodhall|USA}}

7.07 m

|{{flagmedalist|Monae' Nichols|USA}}

6.85 m

|{{flagmedalist|Fátima Diame|ESP}}

6.78 m
2025 Nanjing
{{DetailsLink|2025 World Athletics Indoor Championships – Women's long jump}}

|{{flagmedalist|Claire Bryant|USA}}

6.96 m

|{{flagmedalist|Annik Kälin|SUI}}

6.83 m

|{{flagmedalist|Fátima Diame|ESP}}

6.72 m

==Medal table==

{{Medals table

| caption =

| host =

| flag_template =

| event =

| team =

| gold_USA = 7 | silver_USA = 4 | bronze_USA = 0

| gold_RUS = 4 | silver_RUS = 3 | bronze_RUS = 1

| gold_URS = 2 | silver_URS = 1 | bronze_URS = 3

| gold_SRB = 2 | silver_SRB = 1 | bronze_SRB = 1

| gold_GDR = 2 | silver_GDR = 1 | bronze_GDR = 0

| gold_POR = 1 | silver_POR = 2 | bronze_POR = 0

| gold_ROU = 1 | silver_ROU = 1 | bronze_ROU = 1

| gold_ITA = 1 | silver_ITA = 0 | bronze_ITA = 0

| gold_FRA = 1 | silver_FRA = 0 | bronze_FRA = 0

| gold_GER = 0 | silver_GER = 2 | bronze_GER = 2

| gold_NGR = 0 | silver_NGR = 2 | bronze_NGR = 0

| gold_GBR = 0 | silver_GBR = 1 | bronze_GBR = 3

| gold_BRA = 0 | silver_BRA = 1 | bronze_BRA = 2

| gold_UKR = 0 | silver_UKR = 1 | bronze_UKR = 1

| gold_SUI = 0 | silver_SUI = 1 | bronze_SUI = 0

| gold_ESP = 0 | silver_ESP = 0 | bronze_ESP = 4

| gold_POL = 0 | silver_POL = 0 | bronze_POL = 1

| gold_BUL = 0 | silver_BUL = 0 | bronze_BUL = 1

| gold_SWE = 0 | silver_SWE = 0 | bronze_SWE = 1

}}

  • {{note label|WIG|A}} Known as the World Indoor Games

Season's bests

{{col-begin}}

{{col-2}}

=Men=

class="wikitable sortable sticky-header" style="font-size:85%;"
YearMarkAthletePlace
align=center|1960

|{{T&Fcalc|8.21}}

|{{flagathlete|Ralph Boston|USA}}

|Walnut

align=center|1961

|{{T&Fcalc|8.28}}

|{{flagathlete|Ralph Boston|USA}}

|Moscow

align=center|1962

|{{T&Fcalc|8.31}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|{{flagathlete|Igor Ter-Ovanesyan|URS}}

|Yerevan

align=center|1963

|8.33 m (27 ft 4 in){{Cite news|title=US long jumper Shinnick retroactively recognised as world record-breaker|url=https://www.worldathletics.org/heritage/news/phil-shinnick-long-jump-world-record-official|access-date=28 June 2021|website=worldathletics.org|publisher=World Athletics|archive-date=28 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210628203456/https://www.worldathletics.org/heritage/news/phil-shinnick-long-jump-world-record-official|url-status=live}}

|{{flagathlete|Phil Shinnick|USA}}

|Modesto

align=center|1964

|{{T&Fcalc|8.34}}

|{{flagathlete|Ralph Boston|USA}}

|Los Angeles

align=center|1965

|8.35 m (27 ft 5 in){{Cite news|title=BOSTON LEAPS 27-5; Breaks Own Record -- Connolly Hits 233-2 in Hammer Throw|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1965/05/30/archives/boston-leaps-275-breaks-own-record-connolly-hits-2332-in-hammer.html|date=30 May 1960|access-date=16 September 2021|newspaper=The New York Times|archive-date=16 September 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210916120523/https://www.nytimes.com/1965/05/30/archives/boston-leaps-275-breaks-own-record-connolly-hits-2332-in-hammer.html|url-status=live}}

|align=left|{{flagathlete|Ralph Boston|USA}}

Modesto
align=center rowspan=2|1966

|{{T&Fcalc|8.23}} {{AthAbbr|i}}

|rowspan=2|{{flagathlete|Igor Ter-Ovanesyan|URS}}

|Dortmund

{{T&Fcalc|8.23}}

|Leselidze

align=center|1967

|{{T&Fcalc|8.35}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|{{flagathlete|Igor Ter-Ovanesyan|URS}}

|Mexico City

align=center|1968

|{{T&Fcalc|8.90}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|{{flagathlete|Bob Beamon|USA}}

|Mexico City

align=center rowspan=2|1969

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|8.21}}

|{{flagathlete|Igor Ter-Ovanesyan|URS}}

Odessa
{{flagathlete|Waldemar Stępień|POL}}

|Chorzów

align=center|1970

|{{T&Fcalc|8.35}}

|{{flagathlete|Josef Schwarz|FRG}}

|Stuttgart

align=center|1971

|{{T&Fcalc|8.25}}{{Cite web|title=Track and Field Statistics|website=trackfield.brinkster.net|url=http://trackfield.brinkster.net/Top10Yearly.asp?Year=1969-1972&EventCode=MF3&P=F|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230129104618/http://trackfield.brinkster.net/Top10Yearly.asp?Year=1969-1972&EventCode=MF3&P=F|archive-date=29 January 2023|access-date=28 January 2023}}

|{{flagathlete|Ron Coleman|USA}}

|Irvine

align=center|1972

|{{T&Fcalc|8.34}}

|{{flagathlete|Randy Williams|USA}}

|Munich

align=center|1973

|8.24 m (27 ft {{frac|1|2}} in)

|{{flagathlete|James McAlister|USA}}

|Westwood

align=center|1974

|{{T&Fcalc|8.30}}

|{{flagathlete|Arnie Robinson|USA}}

Modesto
align=center|1975

|{{T&Fcalc|8.45}}

|{{flagathlete|Nenad Stekić|YUG}}

|Montreal

align=center|1976

|{{T&Fcalc|8.35}}

|{{flagathlete|Arnie Robinson|USA}}

|Montreal

align=center|1977

|{{T&Fcalc|8.27}}

|{{flagathlete|Nenad Stekić|YUG}}

|Nova Gorica

align=center|1978

|{{T&Fcalc|8.32}}

|{{flagathlete|Nenad Stekić|YUG}}

|Rovereto

align=center|1979

|{{T&Fcalc|8.52}}

|{{flagathlete|Larry Myricks|USA}}

|Montreal

align=center|1980

|{{T&Fcalc|8.54}}

|{{flagathlete|Lutz Dombrowski|GDR}}

|Moscow

align=center|1981

|{{T&Fcalc|8.62}}

|{{flagathlete|Carl Lewis|USA}}

|Sacramento

align=center|1982

|{{T&Fcalc|8.76}}

|{{flagathlete|Carl Lewis|USA}}

|Indianapolis

align=center|1983

|{{T&Fcalc|8.79}}

|{{flagathlete|Carl Lewis|USA}}

|Indianapolis

align=center|1984

|{{T&Fcalc|8.79}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|{{flagathlete|Carl Lewis|USA}}

|New York City

align=center|1985

|{{T&Fcalc|8.62}}

|{{flagathlete|Carl Lewis|USA}}

|Brussels

align=center|1986

|{{T&Fcalc|8.61}}

|{{flagathlete|Robert Emmiyan|URS}}

|Moscow

align=center|1987

|{{T&Fcalc|8.86}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|{{flagathlete|Robert Emmiyan|URS}}

|Tsaghkadzor

align=center|1988

|{{T&Fcalc|8.76}}

|{{flagathlete|Carl Lewis|USA}}

|Indianapolis

align=center|1989

|{{T&Fcalc|8.70}}

|{{flagathlete|Larry Myricks|USA}}

|Houston

align=center|1990

|{{T&Fcalc|8.66}}

|{{flagathlete|Mike Powell|USA}}

|Villeneuve d'Ascq

align=center|1991

|{{T&Fcalc|8.95}}

|{{flagathlete|Mike Powell|USA}}

|Tokyo

align=center|1992

|{{T&Fcalc|8.68}}

|{{flagathlete|Carl Lewis|USA}}

|Barcelona

align=center|1993

|{{T&Fcalc|8.70}}

|{{flagathlete|Mike Powell|USA}}

|Salamanca

align=center|1994

|{{T&Fcalc|8.74}}

|{{flagathlete|Erick Walder|USA}}

|El Paso

align=center|1995

|{{T&Fcalc|8.71}}

|{{flagathlete|Iván Pedroso|CUB}}

|Salamanca

align=center|1996

|{{T&Fcalc|8.58}}

|{{flagathlete|Erick Walder|USA}}

|Springfield

align=center|1997

|{{T&Fcalc|8.63}}

|{{flagathlete|Iván Pedroso|CUB}}

|Padua

align=center|1998

|{{T&Fcalc|8.60}}

|{{flagathlete|James Beckford|JAM}}

|Bad Langensalza

align=center|1999

|{{T&Fcalc|8.62}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|{{flagathlete|Iván Pedroso|CUB}}

|Maebashi

align=center|2000

|{{T&Fcalc|8.65}}

|{{flagathlete|Iván Pedroso|CUB}}

|Jena

align=center|2001

|{{T&Fcalc|8.43}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|{{flagathlete|Iván Pedroso|CUB}}

|Lisbon

align=center|2002

|{{T&Fcalc|8.59}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|{{flagathlete|Miguel Pate|USA}}

|New York City

align=center|2003

|{{T&Fcalc|8.53}}

|{{flagathlete|Yago Lamela|ESP}}

|Castellón de la Plana

align=center|2004

|{{T&Fcalc|8.60}}

|{{flagathlete|Dwight Phillips|USA}}

|Linz

align=center|2005

|{{T&Fcalc|8.60}}

|{{flagathlete|Dwight Phillips|USA}}

|Helsinki

align=center|2006

|{{T&Fcalc|8.56}}

|{{flagathlete|Irving Saladino|PAN}}

|Rio de Janeiro

align=center|2007

|{{T&Fcalc|8.66}}

|{{flagathlete|Louis Tsatoumas|GRE}}

|Kalamáta

align=center|2008

|{{T&Fcalc|8.73}}

|{{flagathlete|Irving Saladino|PAN}}

|Hengelo

align=center|2009

|{{T&Fcalc|8.74}}

|{{flagathlete|Dwight Phillips|USA}}

|Eugene

align=center|2010

|{{T&Fcalc|8.47}}

|{{flagathlete|Christian Reif|GER}}

|Barcelona

align=center|2011

|{{T&Fcalc|8.54}}

|{{flagathlete|Mitchell Watt|AUS}}

|Stockholm

align=center rowspan=2|2012

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|8.35}}

|{{flagathlete|Greg Rutherford|GBR}}

|Chula Vista

{{flagathlete|Sergey Morgunov|RUS}}

|Cheboksary

align=center|2013

|{{T&Fcalc|8.56}}

|{{flagathlete|Aleksandr Menkov|RUS}}

|Moscow

align=center|2014

|{{T&Fcalc|8.51}}

|{{flagathlete|Greg Rutherford|GBR}}

|Chula Vista

align=center|2015

|{{T&Fcalc|8.52}}

|{{flagathlete|Jeff Henderson|USA}}

|Toronto

align=center|2016

|{{T&Fcalc|8.58}}

|{{flagathlete|Jarrion Lawson|USA}}

|Eugene

align=center|2017

|{{T&Fcalc|8.65}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|{{flagathlete|Luvo Manyonga|RSA}}

|Potchefstroom

align=center|2018

|{{T&Fcalc|8.68}}

|{{flagathlete|Juan Miguel Echevarría|CUB}}

|Bad Langensalza

align=center|2019

|{{T&Fcalc|8.69}}

|{{flagathlete|Tajay Gayle|JAM}}

|Doha

align=center|2020

|{{T&Fcalc|8.41}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|{{flagathlete|Juan Miguel Echevarría|CUB}}

|Madrid

align=center|2021

|{{T&Fcalc|8.60}}

|{{flagathlete|Miltiadis Tentoglou|GRE}}

|Kallithea

align=center|2022

|{{T&Fcalc|8.55}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|{{flagathlete|Miltiadis Tentoglou|GRE}}

|Belgrade

align=center|2023

|{{T&Fcalc|8.54}}

|{{flagathlete|Wayne Pinnock|JAM}}

|Budapest

align=center|2024

|{{T&Fcalc|8.65}}

|{{flagathlete|Miltiadis Tentoglou|GRE}}

|Rome

align=center rowspan=2|2025

|{{T&Fcalc|8.37}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|{{flagathlete|Mattia Furlani|ITA}}

|Toruń

{{col-2}}

=Women=

class="wikitable sortable sticky-header" style="font-size:85%;"
YearMarkAthletePlace
align=center|1960

|{{T&Fcalc|6.40}}

|{{flagathlete|Hildrun Claus|GDR}}

|Erfurt

align=center|1961

|{{T&Fcalc|6.48}}

|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Shchelkanova|URS}}

|Moscow

align=center|1962

|{{T&Fcalc|6.62}}

|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Shchelkanova|URS}}

|Brussels

align=center|1963

|{{T&Fcalc|6.60}}

|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Shchelkanova|URS}}

|Kurayoshi

align=center|1964

|{{T&Fcalc|6.76}}

|{{flagathlete|Mary Rand|GBR}}

|Tokyo

align=center|1965

|{{T&Fcalc|6.71}}

|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Shchelkanova|URS}}

|Kyiv

align=center rowspan=2|1966

|{{T&Fcalc|6.73}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|rowspan=2|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Shchelkanova|URS}}

|Dortmund

{{T&Fcalc|6.73}}

|Dnipropetrovsk

align=center|1967

|{{T&Fcalc|6.63}}

|{{flagathlete|Ingrid Becker|FRG}}

|Kyiv

align=center|1968

|{{T&Fcalc|6.82}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|{{flagathlete|Viorica Viscopoleanu|ROU|1965}}

|Mexico City

align=center rowspan=2|1969

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|6.64}}

|{{flagathlete|Heide Rosendahl|FRG}}

|Leverkusen

{{flagathlete|Sieglinde Ammann|SUI}}

|Vienna

align=center|1970

|{{T&Fcalc|6.84}}

|{{flagathlete|Heide Rosendahl|FRG}}

|Turin

align=center|1971

|{{T&Fcalc|6.81}}

|{{flagathlete|Margrit Herbst|GDR}}

|Leipzig

align=center|1972

|{{T&Fcalc|6.78}}

|{{flagathlete|Heide Rosendahl|FRG}}

|Munich

align=center|1973

|{{T&Fcalc|6.76}}

|{{flagathlete|Angela Schmalfeld|GDR}}

|Dresden

align=center rowspan=2|1974

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|6.77}}

|{{flagathlete|Angela Schmalfeld|GDR}}

|East Berlin

{{flagathlete|Marianne Voelzke|GDR}}

|East Berlin

align=center|1975

|{{T&Fcalc|6.76}}

|{{flagathlete|Lidiya Alfeyeva|URS}}

|Nice

align=center|1976

|{{T&Fcalc|6.99}}

|{{flagathlete|Siegrun Siegl|GDR}}

|Dresden

align=center|1977

|{{T&Fcalc|6.82}}

|{{flagathlete|Vilma Bardauskienė|URS}}

|Krasnodar

align=center|1978

|{{T&Fcalc|7.09}}

|{{flagathlete|Vilma Bardauskienė|URS}}

|Prague

align=center|1979

|{{T&Fcalc|6.90}}

|{{flagathlete|Brigitte Wujak|GDR}}

|Potsdam

align=center|1980

|{{T&Fcalc|7.06}}

|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Kolpakova|URS}}

|Moscow

align=center|1981

|{{T&Fcalc|6.96}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|{{flagathlete|Jodi Anderson|USA}}

|Colorado Springs

align=center|1982

|{{T&Fcalc|7.20}}

|{{flagathlete|Valy Ionescu|ROU|1965}}

|Bucharest

align=center|1983

|{{T&Fcalc|7.43}}

|{{flagathlete|Anișoara Cușmir|ROU|1965}}

|Bucharest

align=center|1984

|{{T&Fcalc|7.40}}

|{{flagathlete|Heike Daute|GDR}}

|Dresden

align=center|1985

|{{T&Fcalc|7.44}}

|{{flagathlete|Heike Drechsler|GDR}}

|East Berlin

align=center|1986

|{{T&Fcalc|7.45}}

|{{flagathlete|Heike Drechsler|GDR}}

|Tallinn

align=center|1987

|{{T&Fcalc|7.45}}

|{{flagathlete|Jackie Joyner-Kersee|USA}}

|Indianapolis

align=center|1988

|{{T&Fcalc|7.52}}

|{{flagathlete|Galina Chistyakova|URS}}

|Leningrad

align=center|1989

|{{T&Fcalc|7.30}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|{{flagathlete|Galina Chistyakova|URS}}

|Lipetsk

align=center|1990

|{{T&Fcalc|7.35}}

|{{flagathlete|Galina Chistyakova|URS}}

|Bratislava

align=center|1991

|{{T&Fcalc|7.37}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|{{flagathlete|Heike Drechsler|GER}}

|Sestriere

align=center|1992

|{{T&Fcalc|7.48}}

|{{flagathlete|Heike Drechsler|GER}}

|Lausanne

align=center|1993

|{{T&Fcalc|7.21}}

|{{flagathlete|Heike Drechsler|GER}}

|Zürich

align=center rowspan=2|1994

|{{T&Fcalc|7.49}}

|rowspan=2|{{flagathlete|Jackie Joyner-Kersee|USA}}

|New York City

{{T&Fcalc|7.49}} {{athAbbr|A}}

|Sestriere

align=center rowspan=2|1995

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|7.09}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|rowspan=2|{{flagathlete|Heike Drechsler|GER}}

|Liévin

Sindelfingen
align=center|1996

|{{T&Fcalc|7.12}}

|{{flagathlete|Chioma Ajunwa|NGR}}

|Atlanta

align=center|1997

|{{T&Fcalc|7.05}}

|{{flagathlete|Lyudmila Galkina|RUS}}

|Athens

align=center|1998

|{{T&Fcalc|7.31}}

|{{flagathlete|Marion Jones|USA}}

|Eugene

align=center|1999

|{{T&Fcalc|7.26}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|{{flagathlete|Maurren Maggi|BRA}}

|Bogotá

align=center|2000

|{{T&Fcalc|7.09}}

|{{flagathlete|Fiona May|ITA}}

|Rio de Janeiro

align=center|2001

|{{T&Fcalc|7.12}}

|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Kotova|RUS}}

|Turin

align=center|2002

|{{T&Fcalc|7.42}}

|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Kotova|RUS}}

|Annecy

align=center|2003

|{{T&Fcalc|7.06}}

|{{flagathlete|Maurren Maggi|BRA}}

|Milan

align=center|2004

|{{T&Fcalc|7.33}}

|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Lebedeva|RUS}}

|Tula

align=center|2005

|{{T&Fcalc|7.04}}

|{{flagathlete|Irina Simagina|RUS}}

|Sochi

align=center|2006

|{{T&Fcalc|7.12}}

|{{flagathlete|Tatyana Kotova|RUS}}

|Novosibirsk

align=center|2007

|{{T&Fcalc|7.21}}

|{{flagathlete|Lyudmila Kolchanova|RUS}}

|Sochi

align=center|2008

|{{T&Fcalc|7.12}}

|{{flagathlete|Naide Gomes|POR}}

|Monaco

align=center|2009

|{{T&Fcalc|7.10}}

|{{flagathlete|Brittney Reese|USA}}

|Berlin

align=center|2010

|{{T&Fcalc|7.13}}

|{{flagathlete|Olga Kucherenko|RUS}}

|Sochi

align=center|2011

|{{T&Fcalc|7.19}}

|{{flagathlete|Brittney Reese|USA}}

|Eugene

align=center|2012

|{{T&Fcalc|7.23}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|{{flagathlete|Brittney Reese|USA}}

|Istanbul

align=center|2013

|{{T&Fcalc|7.25}}

|{{flagathlete|Brittney Reese|USA}}

|Doha

align=center|2014

|{{T&Fcalc|7.02}}

|{{flagathlete|Tianna Bartoletta|USA}}

|Oslo

align=center|2015

|{{T&Fcalc|7.14}}

|{{flagathlete|Tianna Bartoletta|USA}}

|Beijing

align=center|2016

|{{T&Fcalc|7.31}}

|{{flagathlete|Brittney Reese|USA}}

|Eugene

align=center|2017

|{{T&Fcalc|7.24}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|{{flagathlete|Ivana Španović|SRB}}

|Belgrade

align=center|2018

|{{T&Fcalc|7.05}}

|{{flagathlete|Lorraine Ugen|GBR}}

|Birmingham

align=center|2019

|{{T&Fcalc|7.30}}

|{{flagathlete|Malaika Mihambo|GER}}

|Doha

align=center|2020

|{{T&Fcalc|7.07}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|{{flagathlete|Malaika Mihambo|GER}}

|Berlin

align=center|2021

|{{T&Fcalc|7.17}}

|{{flagathlete|Ese Brume|NGR}}

|Chula Vista

align=center|2022

|{{T&Fcalc|7.13}}

|{{flagathlete|Brooke Buschkuehl|AUS}}

|Chula Vista

align=center|2023

|{{T&Fcalc|7.14}}

|{{flagathlete|Ivana Vuleta|SRB}}

|Budapest

align=center|2024

|{{T&Fcalc|7.22}}

|{{flagathlete|Malaika Mihambo|GER}}

|Rome

align=center|2025

|{{T&Fcalc|7.07}} {{athAbbr|i}}

|{{flagathlete|Malaika Mihambo|GER}}

|Karlsruhe

{{col-end}}

National records

  • Updated 27 March 2025

=Men (outdoor)=

Equal or superior to 8.00 m:

{{Sticky header}}

class="wikitable sortable sticky-header" style="font-size:95%;"
{{abbr|#|Rank}}

!Nation

!Mark

!Athlete

!Date

!Place

1

|{{Flagu|United States}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.95}} || Mike Powell

|align="right"|30 August 1991

|Tokyo

2

|{{Flagu|Armenia}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.86}} {{AthAbbr|A}} || Robert Emmiyan

|align="right"|22 May 1987

|Tsaghkadzor

3

|{{Flagu|Panama}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.73}} || Irving Saladino

|align="right"|24 May 2008

|Hengelo

4

|{{Flagu|Cuba}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.71}} || Iván Pedroso

|align="right"|18 July 1995

|Salamanca

5

|{{Flagu|Jamaica}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.69}}

|Tajay Gayle

|align="right"|28 September 2019

|Doha

6

|{{Flagu|Greece}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.66}}

|Louis Tsatoumas

|align="right"|2 June 2007

|Kalamata

7

|{{Flagu|South Africa}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.65}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Luvo Manyonga

|align="right"|22 April 2017

|Potchefstroom

rowspan=2|8

|{{Flagu|Spain}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.56}}

|Yago Lamela

|align="right"|24 June 1999

|Turin

{{Flagu|Russia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.56}}

|Aleksandr Menkov

|align="right"|16 August 2013

|Moscow

rowspan=2|10

|{{Flagu|Germany}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.54}} || Lutz Dombrowski

|align="right"|28 July 1980

|Moscow

{{Flagu|Australia}}{{T&Fcalc|8.54}}Mitchell Watt

|align="right"|29 July 2011

|Stockholm

12

|{{Flagu|Great Britain}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.51}} || Greg Rutherford

|align="right"|24 April 2014

|Chula Vista

13

|{{Flagu|Saudi Arabia}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.48}} || Mohamed Al-Khuwalidi

|align="right"|2 July 2006

|Sotteville-lès-Rouen

rowspan=3|14

|{{Flagu|Italy}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.47}} || Andrew Howe

|align="right"|30 August 2007

|Osaka

rowspan=2|{{Flagu|China}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.47}}

|Li Jinzhe

|align="right"|29 June 2014

|Bad Langensalza

{{T&Fcalc|8.47}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Wang Jianan

|align="right"|16 June 2018

|Guiyang

rowspan=2|16

|{{Flagu|Senegal}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.46}}

|Cheikh Touré

|align="right"|15 June 1997

|Bad Langensalza

{{Flagu|Mexico}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.46}}

|Luis Rivera

|align="right"|12 July 2013

|Kazan

rowspan=2|18

|{{Flagu|Serbia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.45}}

|Nenad Stekić

|align="right"|25 July 1975

|Montreal

{{Flagu|Switzerland}}{{T&Fcalc|8.45}}Simon Ehammer

|align="right"|28 May 2022

|Götzis

20

|{{Flagu|Sweden}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.44}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Michel Tornéus

|align="right"|10 July 2016

|Monachil

21

|{{Flagu|Ghana}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.43}}

|Ignisious Gaisah

|align="right"|14 July 2006

|Rome

rowspan="2"|22

|{{Flagu|France}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.42}}

|Salim Sdiri

|align="right"|12 June 2009

|Pierre-Bénite

{{Flagu|India}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.42}}

|Jeswin Aldrin

|align="right"|2 March 2023

|Ballari

24

|{{Flagu|Bahamas}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.41}} || Craig Hepburn

|align="right"|17 June 1993

|Nassau

rowspan=6|25

|{{Flagu|Brazil}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.40}} || Douglas de Souza

|align="right"|15 February 1995

|São Paulo

{{Flagu|Slovenia}}{{T&Fcalc|8.40}}Gregor Cankar

|align="right"|18 May 1997

|Celje

{{Flagu|Morocco}}{{T&Fcalc|8.40}}Yahya Berrabah

|align="right"|2 October 2009

|Beirut

{{Flagu|Zimbabwe}}{{T&Fcalc|8.40}}Ngonidzashe Makusha

|align="right"|9 June 2011

|Des Moines

{{Flagu|Japan}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.40}}

|Shotaro Shiroyama

|align="right"|17 August 2019

|Fukui

{{Flagu|Chinese Taipei}}{{T&Fcalc|8.40}}Lin Yu-tang

|align="right"|15 July 2023

|Bangkok

31

|{{Flagu|Romania}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.37}} || Bogdan Tudor

|align="right"|9 July 1995

|Bad Cannstatt

32

|{{Flagu|Portugal}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.36}} || Carlos Calado

|align="right"|20 June 1997

|Lisbon

rowspan=3|33

|rowspan=2|{{Flagu|Ukraine}}

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|8.35}}

|Sergey Layevskiy

|align="right"|16 July 1988

|Dnipropetrovsk

Roman Shchurenko

|align="right"|25 July 2000

|Kyiv

{{Flagu|Croatia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.35}}

|Filip Pravdica

|align="right"|11 May 2024

|Kranj

rowspan=2|35

|{{Flagu|Venezuela}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.34}} {{AthAbbr|A}} || Víctor Castillo

|align="right"|30 May 2004

|Cochabamba

{{Flagu|Bermuda}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.34}}

|Tyrone Smith

|align="right"|5 May 2017

|Houston

rowspan=2|37

|{{Flagu|Bulgaria}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.33}} || Ivaylo Mladenov

|align="right"|3 June 1995

|Seville

{{Flagu|Belarus}}{{T&Fcalc|8.33}} {{AthAbbr|A}}Aliaksandar Hlavatski

|align="right"|7 August 1996

|Sestriere

rowspan=3|39

|{{Flagu|Egypt}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.31}} || Hatem Mersal

|align="right"|30 June 1999

|Oslo

{{Flagu|Cayman Islands}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.31}}

|Kareem Streete-Thompson

|align="right"|1 July 2000

|Bad Langensalza

{{Flagu|Czech Republic}}{{T&Fcalc|8.31}}Radek Juška

|align="right"|27 August 2017

|Taipei City

rowspan=2|42

|{{Flagu|Hungary}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.30}} || László Szalma

|align="right"|7 July 1985

|Budapest

{{Flagu|Austria}}{{T&Fcalc|8.30}}Andreas Steiner

|align="right"|4 June 1988

|Innsbruck

44

|{{Flagu|Netherlands}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.29}}|| Ignisious Gaisah

|align="right"|16 August 2013

|Moscow

rowspan=4|45

|{{Flagu|Poland}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.28}} {{AthAbbr|A}} || Grzegorz Marciniszyn

|align="right"|14 July 2001

|Mals

{{Flagu|Mauritius}}{{T&Fcalc|8.28}}Jonathan Chimier

|align="right"|24 August 2004

|Athens

{{Flagu|Canada}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.28}}

|Damian Warner

|align="right"|29 May 2021

|Götzis

{{Flagu|Uruguay}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.28}}

|Emiliano Lasa

|align="right"|1 May 2022

|São Paulo

rowspan=4|49

|{{Flagu|Nigeria}} ||{{T&Fcalc|8.27}} || Yusuf Alli

|align="right"|8 August 1989

|Lagos

{{Flagu|Botswana}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.27}}

|Gable Garenamotse

|align="right"|20 August 2006

|Rhede

{{Flagu|Finland}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.27}}

|Kristian Pulli

|align="right"|11 June 2020

|Espoo

{{Flagu|Namibia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.27}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Chenault Lionel Coetzee

|align="right"|15 April 2023

|Windhoek

53

|{{Flagu|Algeria}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.26}}

|Issam Nima

|align="right"|28 July 2007

|Zaragoza

rowspan=4|54

|{{Flagu|Moldova}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.25}}

|Sergey Podgainiy

|align="right"|18 August 1990

|Chișinău

{{Flagu|Belgium}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.25}}

|Erik Nys

|align="right"|6 July 1996

|Hechtel

{{Flagu|Denmark}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.25}}

|Morten Jensen

|align="right"|3 July 2005

|Gothenburg

{{Flagu|Trinidad and Tobago}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.25}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Andwuelle Wright

|align="right"|5 July 2019

|Querétaro

58

|{{Flagu|Georgia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.24}}

|Bachana Khorava

|align="right"|29 May 2021

|Tbilisi

rowspan=2|59

|{{Flagu|South Korea}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.22}}

|Kim Deok-hyeon

|align="right"|10 June 2016

|Ried im Innkreis

{{Flagu|Uzbekistan}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.22}}

|Anvar Anvarov

|align="right"|10 June 2023

|Geneva

rowspan=2|61

|{{Flagu|Norway}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.21}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Ingar Bratseth-Kiplesund

|align="right"|29 April 2023

|Gaborone

{{Flagu|Iceland}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.21}}

|Daníel Ingi Egilsson

|align="right"|19 May 2024

|Malmö

63

|{{Flagu|Colombia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.20}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Arnovis Dalmero

|align="right"|5 August 2023

|Bogotá

64

|{{Flagu|Puerto Rico}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.19}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Elmer Williams

|align="right"|11 August 1989

|Bogotá

65

|{{Flagu|Tajikistan}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.18}}

|Vasiliy Sokov

|align="right"|5 July 1988

|Tallinn

66

|{{Flagu|Iran}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.17}}

|Mohammad Arzandeh

|align="right"|7 July 2012

|Tehran

rowspan=4|67

|{{Flagu|Kyrgyzstan}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.16}}

|Shamil Abbyasov

|align="right"|2 August 1981

|Leningrad

{{Flagu|Kazakhstan}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.16}}

|Sergey Vasilenko

|align="right"|18 June 1988

|Alma Ata

{{Flagu|Ecuador}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.16}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Hugo Chila

|align="right"|23 November 2009

|Sucre

{{Flagu|Albania}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.16}} {{AthAbbr|NWI}}

|Izmir Smajlaj

|align="right"|8 May 2021

|Tirana

rowspan=2|71

|{{Flagu|Lithuania}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.15}}

|Povilas Mykolaitis

|align="right"|4 June 2011

|Kaunas

{{Flagu|Sri Lanka}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.15}}

|W. P. Amila Jayasiri

|align="right"|16 August 2016

|Diyagama

73

|{{Flagu|Qatar}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.13}}

|Abdulrahman Al-Nubi

|align="right"|21 September 2003

|Manila

rowspan=3|74

|{{Flagu|Kenya}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.12}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Jacob Katonon

|align="right"|23 September 1995

|Johannesburg

{{Flagu|Hong Kong}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.12}}

|Chan Ming Tai

|align="right"|7 May 2016

|Hong Kong

{{Flagu|Guyana}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.12}}

|Emanuel Archibald

|align="right"|11 May 2019

|Kingston

77

|{{Flagu|U.S. Virgin Islands}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.11}}

|Leon Hunt

|align="right"|18 June 2011

|Tallahassee

rowspan=3|78

|{{Flagu|Estonia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.10}}

|Erki Nool

|align="right"|27 May 1995

|Götzis

rowspan=2|{{Flagu|Peru}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.10}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Jorge McFarlane

|align="right"|23 November 2009

|Sucre

{{T&Fcalc|8.10}}

|José Luis Mandros

|align="right"|7 May 2022

|Ibiza

rowspan=3|81

|{{Flagu|Grenada}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.09}}

|Eugene Licorish

|align="right"|5 May 1989

|Port of Spain

{{Flagu|Indonesia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.09}}

|Sapwaturrahman

|align="right"|26 August 2018

|Jakarta

{{Flagu|Ethiopia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.09}} {{AthAbbr|A}} {{AthAbbr|NWI}}

|Omod Okugn

|align="right"|10 March 2022

|Asella

rowspan=6|84

|{{Flagu|Turkey}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.08}}

|Mesut Yavaş

|align="right"|24 June 2000

|Istanbul

{{Flagu|Saint Vincent and the Grenadines}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.08}}

|Clayton Latham

|align="right"|29 July 2008

|Hamburg

{{Flagu|Chile}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.08}}

|Daniel Pineda

|align="right"|21 April 2012

|Santiago

{{Flagu|Latvia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.08}}

|Elvijs Misāns

|align="right"|12 July 2016

|Saldus

{{Flagu|Dominica}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.08}}

|Tristan James

|align="right"|29 May 2022

|Chula Vista

{{Flagu|Philippines}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.08}}

|Janry Ubas

|align="right"|8 May 2023

|Phnom Penh

90

|{{Flagu|Ireland}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.07}}

|Ciaran McDonagh

|align="right"|21 August 2005

|La Chaux-de-Fonds

91

|{{Flagu|Turks and Caicos Islands}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.06}}

|Ifeanyichukwu Otuonye

|align="right"|9 June 2018

|Chula Vista

rowspan=3|92

|{{Flagu|New Zealand}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.05}}

|Bob Thomas

|align="right"|20 January 1968

|Whangārei

{{Flagu|Slovakia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.05}}

|Róbert Széli

|align="right"|6 July 1988

|Budapest

{{Flagu|Thailand}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.05}}

|Supanara Sukhasvasti

|align="right"|10 July 2011

|Kobe

rowspan=3|95

|{{Flagu|Azerbaijan}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.03}}

|Vladimir Tsepelyov

|align="right"|17 September 1978

|Tbilisi

{{Flagu|Libya}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.03}}

|Mohamed Bishty

|align="right"|25 May 1985

|Chania

{{Flagu|Cameroon}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.03}} {{AthAbbr|A}} {{AthAbbr|NWI}}

|Marcel Mayack

|align="right"|2 March 2019

|Bafoussam

rowspan=3|98

|{{Flagu|Antigua and Barbuda}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.02}}

|Lester Benjamin

|align="right"|12 May 1984

|Baton Rouge

{{Flagu|Kuwait}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.02}}

|Saleh Al-Haddad

|align="right"|5 May 2009

|Kuwait City

{{Flagu|Malaysia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.02}}

|Andre Anura

|align="right"|7 December 2019

|New Clark City

101

|{{Flagu|Tunisia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.01}}

|Anis Gallali

|align="right"|22 August 1998

|Dakar

rowspan=4|102

|{{Flagu|Burkina Faso}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.00}}

|Franck Zio

|align="right"|21 June 1998

|Viry-Chatillon

{{Flagu|Togo}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.00}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Téko Folligan

|align="right"|15 September 1999

|Johannesburg

{{Flagu|Liberia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.00}}

|Cadeau Kelley

|align="right"|18 April 2009

|Ypsilanti

{{Flagu|French Polynesia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.00}}

|Raihau Maiau

|align="right"|14 July 2024

|Talence

=Women (outdoor)=

Equal or superior to 6.75 m:

{{Sticky header}}

class="wikitable sortable sticky-header" style="font-size:95%;"
{{abbr|#|Rank}}

!Nation

!Mark

!Athlete

!Date

!Place

1

|{{Flagu|Russia}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.52}} || Galina Chistyakova

|align="right"|11 June 1988

|Leningrad

rowspan=2|2

|rowspan=2|{{Flagu|United States}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.49}} || rowspan=2|Jackie Joyner-Kersee

|align="right"|22 May 1994

|New York City

{{T&Fcalc|7.49}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|align="right"|31 July 1994

|Sestriere

rowspan=2|3

|rowspan=2|{{Flagu|Germany}} || rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|7.48}} || rowspan=2|Heike Drechsler

|align="right"|9 July 1988

|Neubrandenburg

align="right"|8 July 1992

|Lausanne

4

|{{Flagu|Romania}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.43}} || Anișoara Cușmir

|align="right"|4 June 1983

|Bucharest

5

|{{Flagu|Belarus}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.39}} || Yelena Belevskaya

|align="right"|18 July 1987

|Bryansk

6

|{{Flagu|Kazakhstan}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.31}} || Olena Khlopotnova

|align="right"|12 September 1985

|Alma Ata

7

|{{Flagu|Brazil}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.26}} {{AthAbbr|A}} || Maurren Maggi

|align="right"|26 July 1999

|Bogotá

8

|{{Flagu|Ukraine}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.24}} || Larysa Berezhna

|align="right"|25 May 1991

|Granada

9

|{{Flagu|Lithuania}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.20}} || Irena Oženko

|align="right"|12 September 1986

|Budapest

10

|{{Flagu|Nigeria}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.17}} || Ese Brume

|align="right"|29 May 2021

|Chula Vista

11

|{{Flagu|Jamaica}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.16}} {{AthAbbr|A}} || Elva Goulbourne

|align="right"|22 May 2004

|Mexico City

12

|{{Flagu|Serbia}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.14}} || Ivana Vuleta

|align="right"|20 August 2023

|Budapest

13

|{{Flagu|Australia}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.13}} || Brooke Buschkuehl

|align="right"|9 July 2022

|Chula Vista

14

|{{Flagu|Portugal}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.12}} || Naide Gomes

|align="right"|29 July 2008

|Monaco

15

|{{Flagu|Italy}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.11}} || Fiona May

|align="right"|22 August 1998

|Budapest

16

|{{Flagu|Austria}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.09}} || Ludmila Ninova

|align="right"|5 June 1994

|Seville

17

|{{Flagu|British Virgin Islands}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.08}} || Chantel Malone

|align="right"|27 March 2021

|Miramar

18

|{{Flagu|Great Britain}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.07}} || Shara Proctor

|align="right"|28 August 2015

|Beijing

rowspan=2|19

|{{Flagu|Kyrgyzstan}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.06}} || Tatyana Kolpakova

|align="right"|31 July 1980

|Moscow

{{Flagu|Spain}}{{T&Fcalc|7.06}}Niurka Montalvo

|align="right"|23 August 1999

|Seville

21

|{{Flagu|France}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.05}} || Eunice Barber

|align="right"|14 September 2003

|Monaco

rowspan=2|22

|{{Flagu|Greece}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.03}} || Niki Xanthou

|align="right"|18 August 1997

|Bellinzona

{{Flagu|São Tomé and Príncipe}}{{T&Fcalc|7.03}}Agate De Sousa

|align="right"|27 May 2023

|Weinheim

rowspan=2|24

|
{{Flagu|Slovakia}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.01}} || Eva Murková

|align="right"|26 May 1984

|Leningrad

{{Flagu|China}}{{T&Fcalc|7.01}}Yao Weili

|align="right"|4 June 1993

|Jinan

26

|{{Flagu|Bulgaria}} || {{T&Fcalc|7.00}} || Silvia Khristova-Moneva

|align="right"|3 August 1986

|Sofia

rowspan=3|27

|{{Flagu|Cuba}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.99}} || Lissette Cuza

|align="right"|3 June 2000

|Jena

{{Flagu|Sweden}}{{T&Fcalc|6.99}}Erica Johansson

|align="right"|5 July 2000

|Lausanne

{{Flagu|Canada}}{{T&Fcalc|6.99}}Christabel Nettey

|align="right"|29 May 2015

|Eugene

rowspan=2|30

|{{Flagu|Poland}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.97}} || Agata Karczmarek

|align="right"|6 August 1988

|Lublin

{{Flagu|Japan}}{{T&Fcalc|6.97}}Sumire Hata

|align="right"|14 July 2023

|Bangkok

rowspan=3|32

|{{Flagu|Puerto Rico}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.96}} {{AthAbbr|A}} || Madeline de Jesús

|align="right"|24 July 1988

|Mexico City

{{Flagu|Denmark}}{{T&Fcalc|6.96}}Renata Nielsen

|align="right"|5 June 1994

|Seville

{{Flagu|Trinidad and Tobago}}{{T&Fcalc|6.96}}Tyra Gittens

|align="right"|14 May 2021

|College Station

rowspan=2|35

|{{Flagu|Ghana}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.94}} || Deborah Acquah

|align="right"|7 August 2022

|Birmingham

{{Flagu|Burkina Faso}}{{T&Fcalc|6.94}}Marthe Koala

|align="right"|2 August 2023

|Kinshasa

rowspan=3|37

|rowspan=2|{{Flagu|South Africa}} || rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|6.93}} || rowspan=2|Karin Melis Mey

|align="right"|7 July 2007

|Bad Langensalza

align="right"|7 June 2008Bad Langensalza
{{Flagu|Colombia}}{{T&Fcalc|6.93}}Caterine Ibargüen

|align="right"|9 September 2018

|Ostrava

39

|{{Flagu|Latvia}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.92}} || Ineta Radēviča

|align="right"|28 July 2010

|Barcelona

40

|{{Flagu|Czech Republic}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.89}} || Jarmila Strejčková

|align="right"|18 September 1982

|Prague

41

|{{Flagu|Venezuela}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.88}} || Yulimar Rojas

|align="right"|13 June 2021

|La Nucia

rowspan=2|42

|{{Flagu|Turkey}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.87}} || Karin Melis Mey

|align="right"|31 July 2009

|Leverkusen

{{Flagu|Estonia}}{{T&Fcalc|6.87}}Ksenija Balta

|align="right"|8 August 2010

|Tallinn

rowspan=2|44

|{{Flagu|Hungary}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.86}} || Tünde Vaszi

|align="right"|7 August 2001

|Edmonton

{{Flagu|Belgium}}{{T&Fcalc|6.86}}Nafissatou Thiam

|align="right"|18 August 2019

|Birmingham

rowspan=2|46

|{{Flagu|Finland}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.85}} || Ringa Ropo-Junnila

|align="right"|11 August 1990

|Lahti

{{Flagu|Uzbekistan}}{{T&Fcalc|6.85}}Darya Reznichenko

|align="right"|28 June 2021

|Tashkent

rowspan=2|48

|rowspan=2|{{Flagu|Switzerland}} || rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|6.84}} || Irène Pusterla

|align="right"|20 August 2011

|Chiasso

Annik Kälin

|align="right"|8 June 2024

|Rome

rowspan=2|49

|{{Flagu|India}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.83}} || Anju Bobby George

|align="right"|27 August 2004

|Athens

{{Flagu|Bahamas}}{{T&Fcalc|6.83}}Bianca Stuart

|align="right"|26 June 2015

|Nassau

51

|{{Flagu|Guyana}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.81}} || Jennifer Inniss

|align="right"|18 June 1983

|Indianapolis

rowspan=2|52

|{{Flagu|Cyprus}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.80}} || Maroula Lambrou

|align="right"|25 March 1985

|Limassol

{{Flagu|Barbados}}{{T&Fcalc|6.80}}Akela Jones

|align="right"|29 May 2021

|Chula Vista

rowspan=2|54

|{{Flagu|Slovenia}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.78}} || Nina Kolarič

|align="right"|29 June 2008

|Ptuj

{{Flagu|Netherlands}}{{T&Fcalc|6.78}}Dafne Schippers

|align="right"|26 July 2014

|Amsterdam

56

|{{Flagu|Syria}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.77}} || Ghada Shouaa

|align="right"|26 May 1996

|Götzis

57

|{{Flagu|South Korea}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.76}} || Jung Soon-ok

|align="right"|4 June 2009

|Daegu

58

|{{Flagu|Sierra Leone}} || {{T&Fcalc|6.75}} || Eunice Barber

|align="right"|5 June 1998

|Lyon

=Men (indoor)=

Equal or superior to 8.00 m:

{{Sticky header}}

class="wikitable sortable sticky-header" style="font-size:95%;"
{{abbr|#|Rank}}

!Nation

!Mark

!Athlete

!Date

!Place

1

|{{Flagu|United States}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.79}}

|Carl Lewis

|align="right"|27 January 1984

|New York City

2

|{{Flagu|Germany}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.71}}

|Sebastian Bayer

|align="right"|8 March 2009

|Turin

3

|{{Flagu|Cuba}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.62}}

|Iván Pedroso

|align="right"|7 March 1999

|Maebashi

4

|{{Flagu|Spain}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.56}}

|Yago Lamela

|align="right"|7 March 1999

|Maebashi

5

|{{Flagu|Greece}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.55}}

|Miltiadis Tentoglou

|align="right"|18 March 2022

|Belgrade

6

|{{Flagu|Armenia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.49}}

|Robert Emmiyan

|align="right"|21 February 1987

|Liévin

7

|{{Flagu|South Africa}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.44}}

|Luvo Manyonga

|align="right"|2 March 2018

|Birmingham

8

|{{Flagu|Russia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.43}}

|Stanislav Tarasenko

|align="right"|26 January 1994

|Moscow

9

|{{Flagu|Panama}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.42}}

|Irving Saladino

|align="right"|13 February 2008

|Athens

rowspan=3|10

|rowspan=3|{{Flagu|Jamaica}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.40}}

|James Beckford

|align="right"|9 February 1996

|Madrid

|{{T&Fcalc|8.40}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Carey McLeod

|align="right"|10 March 2023

|Albuquerque

{{T&Fcalc|8.40}}

|Wayne Pinnock

|align="right"|8 March 2024

|Boston

11

|{{Flagu|Sweden}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.38}}

|Thobias Montler

|align="right"|18 March 2022

|Belgrade

12

|{{Flagu|Italy}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.37}}

|Mattia Furlani

|align="right"|16 February 2025

|Toruń

13

|{{Flagu|Ghana}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.36}}

|Ignisious Gaisah

|align="right"|2 February 2006

|Stockholm

14

|{{Flagu|Ukraine}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.33}}

|Roman Shchurenko

|align="right"|16 February 2002

|Brovary

rowspan=2|15

|{{Flagu|Bulgaria}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.30}}

|Ivaylo Mladenov

|align="right"|28 February 1994

|Piraeus

{{Flagu|Romania}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.30}}

|Bogdan Țăruș

|align="right"|29 January 2000

|Bucharest

rowspan=3|17

|{{Flagu|Slovenia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.28}}

|Gregor Cankar

|align="right"|7 March 1999

|Maebashi

rowspan=2|{{Flagu|Brazil}}

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|8.28}}

|rowspan=2|Mauro Vinícius da Silva

|align="right"|9 March 2012

|Istanbul

align="right"|8 March 2014

|Sopot

rowspan=2|19

|{{Flagu|France}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.27}}

|Salim Sdiri

|align="right"|28 January 2006

|Mondeville

{{Flagu|China}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.27}}

|Su Xiongfeng

|align="right"|11 March 2010

|Nanjing

rowspan=3|21

|{{Flagu|Nigeria}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.26}}

|Charlton Ehizuelen

|align="right"|7 March 1975

|Bloomington

{{Flagu|Great Britain}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.26}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Greg Rutherford

|align="right"|5 February 2016

|Albuquerque

{{Flagu|Switzerland}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.26}}

|Simon Ehammer

|align="right"|29 January 2022

|Aubière

rowspan=2|24

|{{Flagu|Georgia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.25}}

|Bachana Khorava

|align="right"|7 February 2016

|Tbilisi

{{Flagu|Australia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.25}}

|Fabrice Lapierre

|align="right"|20 March 2016

|Portland

rowspan=3|26

|{{Flagu|Hungary}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.24}}

|László Szalma

|align="right"|22 February 1986

|Madrid

{{Flagu|Saudi Arabia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.24}}

|Mohammed Al-Khuwalidi

|align="right"|16 February 2008

|Doha

{{Flagu|Finland}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.24}}

|Kristian Pulli

|align="right"|5 March 2021

|Toruń

29

|{{Flagu|Netherlands}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.23}}

|Emiel Mellaard

|align="right"|5 February 1989

|The Hague

30

|{{Flagu|Portugal}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.22}}

|Carlos Calado

|align="right"|26 January 2002

|Espinho

rowspan=2|31

|{{Flagu|Zimbabwe}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.21}}

|Ngonidzashe Makusha

|align="right"|27 February 2009

|Blacksburg

{{Flagu|Japan}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.21}}

|Shunsuke Izumiya

|align="right"|23 March 2025

|Nanjing

33

|{{Flagu|Norway}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.19}}

|Sander Skotheim

|align="right"|1 February 2025

|Tallinn

rowspan=5|34

|{{Flagu|Czech Republic}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.18}}

|Milan Gombala

|align="right"|16 February 1992

|Prague

{{Flagu|Denmark}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.18}}

|Morten Jensen

|align="right"|8 February 2006

|Gothenburg

rowspan=2|{{Flagu|Poland}}

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|8.18}}

|Marcin Starzak

|align="right"|8 March 2009

|Turin

Adrian Strzałkowski

|align="right"|7 March 2014

|Sopot

{{Flagu|Bahamas}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.18}}

|LaQuan Nairn

|align="right"|18 February 2022

|Fayetteville

rowspan=2|38

|{{Flagu|Senegal}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.17}}

|Cheikh Touré

|align="right"|15 February 1998

|Bordeaux

{{Flagu|Peru}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.17}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|José Luis Mandros

|align="right"|20 February 2022

|Cochabamba

rowspan=3|40

|{{Flagu|Cayman Islands}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.16}}

|Kareem Streete-Thompson

|align="right"|11 March 2001

|Lisbon

{{Flagu|Colombia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.16}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Arnovis Dalmero

|align="right"|25 January 2024

|Cochabamba

{{Flagu|Trinidad and Tobago}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.16}}

|Kelsey Daniel

|align="right"|14 March 2025

|Virginia Beach

43

|{{Flagu|Lithuania}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.13}}

|Povilas Mykolaitis

|align="right"|11 February 2005

|Kaunas

44

|{{Flagu|Puerto Rico}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.12}}

|Mike Francis

|align="right"|6 March 1992

|Manhattan

45

|{{Flagu|Latvia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.11}}

|Artūrs Āboliņš

|align="right"|10 March 2006

|Fayetteville

rowspan=2|46

|{{Flagu|Belarus}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.10}}

|Aleksandr Glavatskiy

|align="right"|15 January 1994

|Gomel

{{Flagu|Uruguay}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.10}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Emiliano Lasa

|align="right"|20 February 2022

|Cochabamba

rowspan=3|48

|{{Flagu|Kyrgyzstan}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.09}}

|Shamil Abbyasov

|align="right"|8 February 1985

|Moscow

{{Flagu|Turkey}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.09}}

|Mesut Yavaş

|align="right"|3 March 2000

|Ames

{{Flagu|Moldova}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.09}}

|Alexandru Cuharenco

|align="right"|3 February 2012

|Chișinău

rowspan=3|51

|{{Flagu|Belgium}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.08}}

|Erik Nys

|align="right"|12 February 1995

|Ghent

{{Flagu|Croatia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.08}}

|Siniša Ergotić

|align="right"|8 February 2003

|Budapest

{{Flagu|Albania}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.08}}

|Izmir Smajlaj

|align="right"|4 March 2017

|Belgrade

54

|{{Flagu|Burkina Faso}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.06}}

|Franck Zio

|align="right"|3 February 1996

|Liévin

rowspan=4|55

|{{Flagu|Estonia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.05}}

|Tõnu Lepik

|align="right"|15 March 1970

|Vienna

{{Flagu|Guyana}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.05}}

|Mark Mason

|align="right"|25 January 1991

|Johnson City

{{Flagu|Mauritius}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.05}}

|Jonathan Chimier

|align="right"|22 February 2004

|Aubière

{{Flagu|Canada}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.05}}

|Damian Warner

|align="right"|18 March 2022

|Belgrade

59

|{{Flagu|Serbia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.03}}

|Strahinja Jovančević

|align="right"|3 March 2019

|Glasgow

rowspan=7|60

|{{Flagu|Tajikistan}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.02}}

|Vasiliy Sokov

|align="right"|4 February 1989

|Gomel

rowspan=4|{{Flagu|Morocco}}

|rowspan=4|{{T&Fcalc|8.02}}

|rowspan=3|Younés Moudrik

|align="right"|2 February 2001

|Erfurt

align="right"|14 March 2001

|Madrid

align="right"|1 February 2002

|Erfurt

Yahya Berrabah

|align="right"|13 February 2010

|Valencia

{{Flagu|French Polynesia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.02}}

|Raihau Maiau

|align="right"|4 February 2016

|Nantes

{{Flagu|Chinese Taipei}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.02}}

|Lin Yu-tang

|align="right"|12 February 2023

|Astana

rowspan=2|64

|{{Flagu|Botswana}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.01}}

|Gable Garenamotse

|align="right"|3 February 2002

|Cardiff

{{Flagu|Mexico}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.01}}

|Luis Rivera

|align="right"|7 March 2014

|Sopot

rowspan=3|66

|{{Flagu|Azerbaijan}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.00}}

|Vladimir Tsepelyov

|align="right"|6 February 1983

|Vilnius

{{Flagu|Venezuela}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.00}} {{AthAbbr|A}}

|Victor Castillo

|align="right"|5 February 2005

|Flagstaff

{{Flagu|Ireland}}

|{{T&Fcalc|8.00}}

|Ciaran McDonagh

|align="right"|14 January 2006

|Blacksburg

=Women (indoor)=

Equal or superior to 6.75 m:

{{Sticky header}}

class="wikitable sortable sticky-header" style="font-size:95%;"
{{abbr|#|Rank}}

!Nation

!Mark

!Athlete

!Date

!Place

1

|{{Flagu|Germany}}

|{{T&Fcalc|7.37}}

|Heike Drechsler

|align="right"|13 February 1988

|Vienna

2

|{{Flagu|Russia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|7.30}}

|Galina Chistyakova

|align="right"|28 January 1989

|Lipetsk

3

|{{Flagu|Serbia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|7.24}}

|Ivana Španović

|align="right"|5 March 2017

|Belgrade

4

|{{Flagu|United States}}

|{{T&Fcalc|7.23}}

|Brittney Reese

|align="right"|11 March 2012

|Istanbul

5

|{{Flagu|Ukraine}}

|{{T&Fcalc|7.20}}

|Larysa Berezhna

|align="right"|4 February 1989

|Gomel

6

|{{Flagu|Kazakhstan}}

|{{T&Fcalc|7.17}}

|Olena Khlopotnova

|align="right"|16 February 1985

|Kishinev

rowspan=2|7

|{{Flagu|Lithuania}}

|{{T&Fcalc|7.01}}

|Nijolė Medvedeva

|align="right"|25 January 1987

|Vilnius

{{Flagu|Belarus}}

|{{T&Fcalc|7.01}}

|Yelena Belevskaya

|align="right"|14 February 1987

|Moscow

rowspan=2|9

|{{Flagu|Portugal}}

|{{T&Fcalc|7.00}}

|Naide Gomes

|align="right"|9 March 2008

|Valencia

{{Flagu|Great Britain}}

|{{T&Fcalc|7.00}}

|Jazmin Sawyers

|align="right"|5 March 2023

|Istanbul

rowspan=3|11

|{{Flagu|Slovakia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.99}}

|Eva Murková

|align="right"|2 March 1985

|Piraeus

{{Flagu|Romania}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.99}}

|Mirela Dulgheru

|align="right"|23 January 1993

|Bacău

{{Flagu|Canada}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.99}}

|Christabel Nettey

|align="right"|19 February 2015

|Stockholm

14

|{{Flagu|Bahamas}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.98}}

|Anthaya Charlton

|align="right"|31 January 2025

|Fayetteville

rowspan=2|15

|{{Flagu|Nigeria}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.97}}

|Chioma Ajunwa

|align="right"|5 February 1997

|Erfurt

{{Flagu|Italy}}{{T&Fcalc|6.97}}

|Larissa Iapichino

|align="right"|5 March 2023

|Istanbul

rowspan=2|17

|rowspan=2|{{Flagu|Sweden}}

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|6.92}}

|Carolina Klüft

|align="right"|7 March 2004

|Budapest

Khaddi Sagnia

|align="right"|25 February 2018

|Glasgow

rowspan=3|18

|{{Flagu|Greece}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.91}}

|Niki Xanthou

|align="right"|16 February 1997

|Liévin

{{Flagu|Bulgaria}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.91}}

|Magdalena Khristova

|align="right"|19 February 1998

|Stockholm

{{Flagu|Jamaica}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.91}}

|Elva Goulbourne

|align="right"|23 February 2002

|Fayetteville

rowspan=2|21

|{{Flagu|France}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.90}}

|Éloyse Lesueur

|align="right"|2 March 2013

|Gothenburg

{{Flagu|Switzerland}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.90}}

|Annik Kälin

|align="right"|8 March 2025

|Apeldoorn

23

|{{Flagu|Brazil}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.89}}

|Maurren Maggi

|align="right"|9 March 2008

|Valencia

24

|{{Flagu|Spain}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.88}}

|Niurka Montalvo

|align="right"|10 March 2001

|Lisbon

25

|{{Flagu|Estonia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.87}}

|Ksenija Balta

|align="right"|7 March 2009

|Turin

26

|{{Flagu|Sierra Leone}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.86}}

|Eunice Barber

|align="right"|15 February 1998

|Bordeaux

27

|{{Flagu|South Africa}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.85}}

|Karin Melis Mey

|align="right"|21 February 2008

|Stockholm

rowspan=3|28

|{{Flagu|China}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.82}}

|Yang Juan

|align="right"|13 March 1992

|Beijing

{{Flagu|Hungary}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.82}}

|Tünde Vaszi

|align="right"|29 January 1999

|Chemnitz

{{Flagu|Latvia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.82}}

|Aiga Grabuste

|align="right"|8 February 2015

|Tbilisi

rowspan=3|31

|{{Flagu|Australia}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.81}}

|Nicole Boegman

|align="right"|12 March 1995

|Barcelona

{{Flagu|Austria}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.81}}

|Ludmila Ninova

|align="right"|14 February 1996

|Moscow

{{Flagu|Venezuela}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.81}}

|Yulimar Rojas

|align="right"|17 February 2022

|Liévin

rowspan=2|34

|rowspan=2|{{Flagu|Barbados}}

|rowspan=2|{{T&Fcalc|6.80}}

|rowspan=2|Akela Jones

|align="right"|11 March 2016

|Birmingham

align="right"|11 February 2022

|Clemson

rowspan=2|35

|{{Flagu|Cuba}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.79}}

|Yargelis Savigne

|align="right"|3 February 2007

|Stuttgart

{{Flagu|Belgium}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.79}}

|Nafissatou Thiam

|align="right"|1 March 2020

|Liévin

37

|{{Flagu|Finland}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.78}}

|Ringa Ropo-Junnila

|align="right"|19 February 1991

|Stockholm

38

|{{Flagu|Denmark}}

|{{T&Fcalc|6.77}}

|Renata Nielsen

|align="right"|12 March 1995

|Barcelona

See also

  • {{portal-inline|Sport of athletics}}

References

{{Reflist|30em}}

Cited sources

  • {{cite book|ref=Miller|last=Miller|first=Stephen G.|author-link=Stephen G. Miller|title= Ancient Greek Athletics|url=https://archive.org/details/ancientgreekathl00mill|url-access=registration|place= New Haven|publisher= Yale University Press|year= 2004|isbn=0300115296}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book

| last = Guthrie

| first = Mark

| title = Coach Track & Field Successfully

| publisher = Human Kinetics

| year = 2003

| location = Champaign, Illinois

| pages = [https://archive.org/details/coachingtrackfie0000guth/page/149 149–155]

| isbn = 0-7360-4274-1

| url = https://archive.org/details/coachingtrackfie0000guth/page/149

}}

  • {{cite book

| last = Rogers

| first = Joseph L.

| title = USA Track & Field Coaching Manual

| publisher = Human Kinetics

| year = 2000

| location = Champaign, Illinois

| pages = [https://archive.org/details/usatrackfieldcoa0000unse/page/141 141–157]

| isbn = 0-88011-604-8

| url = https://archive.org/details/usatrackfieldcoa0000unse/page/141

}}

  • {{cite video

| last1 = Gregoire

| first1 = Ernie

| last2 = Myricks

| first2 = Larry

| title = World Class Track & Field Series: Long Jump

| medium = VHS

| publisher = Championship Books & Video Productions

| location = Ames, Iowa

| date= 1991 }}