Virna Jandiroba has built her career on elite grappling, composure under pressure and the kind of resilience that tends to come from a hard road rather than a smooth one. A former Invicta strawweight champion and a decorated Brazilian jiu-jitsu black belt, the Brazilian known as Carcará has turned personal loss, anxiety and years of steady technical work into a long run at the top end of Women’s Strawweight.

What to know in 60 seconds

Virna Jandiroba is a Brazilian fighter from Bahia, and her nickname Carcará comes from a bird associated with Brazil’s backlands and with resilience in adversity
She is a Brazilian jiu-jitsu world champion at black belt level, with Pan-American and South American titles also listed on her UFC bio
Before joining the UFC, she went 3-0 in Invicta, won the Strawweight title against Mizuki and defended it against Janaisa Morandin
Her professional MMA record is 22-4, with the majority of her wins coming by submission
She is scheduled to fight Tabatha Ricci on 4 April 2026 at UFC Fight Night: Moicano vs Duncan at Meta APEX, Las Vegas

Virna Jandiroba’s background

Jandiroba’s roots matter to understanding her. She was born and raised in Bahia’s countryside, and she has spoken proudly about coming from a family with strong ties to the rural northeast of Brazil. In a 2024 interview, she explained that her mother came from a farming family and said the leather hat she wears on fight week represents the backlands culture that shaped her.

Her early life also included heavy personal loss. Her older sister Laiane died of stomach cancer at 21, a moment that deeply affected Jandiroba. She later said, “I had panic attacks” after her sister’s death, and described a period of anxiety, fear of leaving home and hypochondriasis that eventually pushed her toward jiu-jitsu and long-term therapy.

That is an important part of the Virna Jandiroba story because her career is not simply about results. It is also about using structure, travel, competition and routine to rebuild confidence after grief.

Finding combat sports

Before jiu-jitsu became central, Jandiroba had already been exposed to martial arts through kung fu and judo as a child in Bahia. She did not immediately treat sport as a career, but that changed after her sister’s death, when training became a way to manage anxiety and regain a sense of normality. Her UFC bio says she began competing in BJJ in 2005, and she has explained that travelling to tournaments helped her feel safer and more functional again.

The talent was obvious quickly. Jandiroba developed into a high-level grappler, and her UFC profile credits her with world, Pan-American and South American titles at black belt level. She also collected notable local wins over future UFC names such as Claudia Gadelha and Amanda Nunes before MMA became the full-time direction.

Her nickname also connects back to where she comes from. Jandiroba has said the carcará is a bird from the backlands and that it represents survival in hard conditions. That image fits both her style and her background: practical, aggressive when needed and built to endure.

Turning pro and the road to the UFC

After earning her black belt, Jandiroba moved fully into MMA in 2013. She built an unbeaten record on the Brazilian regional scene, reached 11-0 before signing with Invicta and then made an instant impression in the United States by submitting Amy Montenegro in the first round of her promotional debut.

Her Invicta run was brief but significant. In March 2018, she beat Mizuki by split decision to win the Invicta strawweight title. Later that year, she defended the belt by submitting Janaisa Morandin with an arm-triangle choke, leaving far less doubt the second time around. When the UFC call came, Invicta announced that she had vacated the title in order to sign with the promotion.

That route matters because Jandiroba did not arrive in the UFC as an untested specialist. She arrived as an unbeaten champion with a proven submission game, five-round experience and a serious competition background outside MMA.

Key UFC milestones

Her UFC debut came on short notice in April 2019, when she replaced the injured Lívia Souza against former champion Carla Esparza. Jandiroba lost a unanimous decision, which handed her the first defeat of her professional MMA career. It was a difficult start, but it also marked the beginning of the highest-level part of her development.

The early UFC milestones came in layers rather than all at once. She got her first Octagon win by submitting Mallory Martin, then followed with a first-round armbar over Felice Herrig that earned Performance of the Night. She later beat Kanako Murata by doctor’s stoppage, and decision wins over Angela Hill and Marina Rodriguez showed she could bank meaningful results over established UFC opposition even when the finish was not there.

The most important phase of Jandiroba’s UFC career came across 2024 and 2025. She beat Loopy Godinez in Atlantic City, submitted Amanda Lemos by armbar in her first UFC main event and collected another bonus, then outpointed Yan Xiaonan in Miami. That stretch earned her a shot at the vacant UFC women’s strawweight title against Mackenzie Dern at UFC 321. Jandiroba lost that title fight by unanimous decision, but reaching that stage confirmed how far she had climbed.

Setbacks, injuries and difficult turns

Setbacks have always been part of her story, and not only in the cage. The deepest setback came long before the UFC, with the death of her sister and the anxiety problems that followed. In MMA terms, the biggest interruption came in 2023, when a knee injury forced her out of a booked fight with Tatiana Suarez and required surgery.

Even when she returned to winning form, the path stayed uneven. A later bout with Suarez, set for UFC 310 in December 2024, was scrapped when Suarez withdrew because of a health issue. Jandiroba also used the aftermath of her Esparza loss as a technical turning point, later explaining that she spent a long stretch training with Luiz Dórea to sharpen her boxing and stand-up work.

Life outside the cage

Away from fight results, Jandiroba has spoken candidly about trying to build a fuller life. During her recovery period in 2023, she said, “I want more balance” and added that she did not want to be only an athlete anymore. That change in perspective came during the same period in which her father was dealing with prostate cancer, while she was also managing her own surgery and recovery.

She also appears very deliberate about representing home. The Bahia identity is not branding for her. It is there in the hat, in the nickname and in the way she talks about family, especially the strong women around her. She has described the carcará as “a bird that survives adversity”, which is about as concise a summary of her public image as she could offer herself. Public profiles list Academia Fight House as her affiliation, and she has spoken about spending extended time with Luiz Dórea as part of her development.

Current status (as of March 2026)

Virna Jandiroba is scheduled to fight Tabatha Ricci on 4 April 2026 at UFC Fight Night: Moicano vs Duncan at Meta APEX in Las Vegas. She goes into that bout with a 22-4 record and after the highest-profile defeat of her career, the unanimous-decision loss to Mackenzie Dern in the vacant UFC Strawweight title fight in October 2025. Ricci is therefore more than a routine booking. It is Jandiroba’s first appearance since falling short of UFC gold, and an immediate chance to reassert herself in the division.

Virna Jandiroba MMA Record and Fighter Stats

Name
Virna Jandiroba

Nationality
Brazilian

Weight Class
Women’s Strawweight

Date of Birth
30 May 1988 (Age 37)

Height
5’3″

Pro Record
22-4. 1 win by KO, 14 wins by submission

UFC Record
8-4. 1 win by KO, 3 wins by submission

Recent Fight Record

DateEventOpponentResultMethod

25-Oct-25UFC 321Mackenzie DernLUnanimous Decision

12-Apr-25UFC 314Yan XiaonanWUnanimous Decision

20-Jul-24UFC Fight NightAmanda LemosW2nd Round Armbar

30-Mar-24UFC Fight NightLoopy GodinezWUnanimous Decision

6-May-23UFC 288Marina RodriguezWUnanimous Decision

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