If WWE is a weekly soap opera with suplexes, then Google is the ultimate scoreboard for who’s truly breaking through the noise. Based on a manual read of worldwide Google Trends data from 2025, these were the most searched WWE women’s superstars on the planet, ranked from No. 10 to No. 1. Some names spiked because of championships and chaotic cash-ins. Others surged thanks to surprise returns, rumor-fueled moments, and the kind of headline-making TV segments that send fans scrambling for clips, context, and receipts.
Consider this your pop-culture snapshot of WWE’s women’s division in 2025: who drove the conversation, who became appointment viewing, and who had fans typing their names like it was a reflex.
10. Naomi and Bayley

Naomi: Naomi’s 2025 was built for highlight reels and frantic group chats. She won the Women’s Money in the Bank Ladder Match, earning the golden ticket that instantly turns every champ’s reign into a jump scare. And she used it like a pro, cashing in at Evolution to win the Women’s World Championship and cap WWE’s all-women event with the kind of closing shot that trends for days. Between the big-match aura and the comeback energy, Naomi’s name stayed in rotation for fans tracking every twist.
Bayley: Bayley remained a dependable search magnet because she’s always in the mix, even when the booking gets messy. At Evolution, she was part of the opening triple-threat where Becky Lynch pinned her, a very Bayley-esque “I’ll take the hit so the show can fly” moment. That blend of veteran credibility, storyline whiplash, and constant presence keeps fans checking in, especially when she feels one big angle away from snapping back into the title picture.
9. Asuka

Asuka’s 2025 searches weren’t just about star power. They were about vibes. The Kabuki Warriors energy returned, and it came with a streak of menace, including the kind of signature chaos only Asuka can deliver. WWE positioned her in major matchups alongside Kairi Sane, with angles that leaned into Asuka’s dangerous unpredictability, including a moment where she misted Rhea Ripley in storyline escalation ahead of Crown Jewel. When Asuka gets rolling, fans do not casually watch. They hunt clips, history, and context, and that’s how you stay near the top of the worldwide search pile.
8. Stephanie Vaquer

Stephanie Vaquer’s 2025 rise had “breakout” written all over it, and WWE leaned in. She stacked wins, became a constant point of conversation, and worked big-name programs that made her feel instantly major. One of the loudest signals was WWE positioning her as Women’s World Champion in headline defenses, including a televised triple threat title match featuring Nikki Bella and Raquel Rodriguez on Raw. That combination of championship status and spotlight rivals is basically gasoline for Google Trends. Fans were searching to learn who she is, why she’s winning, and what her ceiling looks like when the machine is fully behind her.
7. Tiffany Stratton and Becky Lynch

Tiffany Stratton: Tiffany’s 2025 read like a “main character upgrade” montage. It was totally Tiffy-Time this year. She cashed in Money in the Bank to win the WWE Women’s Championship, then defended it through a stacked year that included a WrestleMania 41 title match against Charlotte Flair and major opponents across the calendar. Even her losses became conversation starters, because they framed her as a protected star, not a fad. When a young champion’s résumé grows that fast, searches follow.
Becky Lynch: Becky Lynch never stops being searchable, but 2025 gave fans extra reasons. She anchored the Women’s Intercontinental Title scene, including headline title programs and marquee matchups that kept her in the weekly conversation loop. Add in big-event visibility, a feud with AJ Lee, constant discourse about character direction, and the way “Becky segments” still feel like required viewing, and it’s no surprise she helped light up Google all year.
6. Alexa Bliss

Alexa Bliss surged in 2025 because her return felt like an event, not a routine roster re-entry. She came back at Royal Rumble 2025 after time away, instantly sparking the “new era or old tricks?” debate that fans love to litigate online. And once Bliss is back in the mix, the searches aren’t just about match results. They’re about character clues, future feuds, and her partnership with Charlotte Flair. People still really love Alexa Bliss.
5. Charlotte Flair

Charlotte Flair’s 2025 had big, capital-letter moments. She returned and won the Women’s Royal Rumble 2025, which is basically WWE’s loudest way of saying, “Yes, she’s still that deal.” From there, the year became a mix of high expectations, creative conversation… but then out of nowhere she teams up with Alexa Bliss, and it was we got a brand new Charlotte Flair, making Charlotte remains one of WWE’s most reliable engines for that kind of discourse.
4. AJ Lee

AJ Lee landing at No. 4 tells you everything about the power of a comeback. Reports and coverage around her 2025 return lit up the wrestling internet, with multiple outlets framing it as a true shockwave moment that instantly reshaped the women’s division conversation. Whether fans were searching for footage, contract chatter, or “is this real?” confirmation, AJ’s name became a repeat query. And when a wrestler’s legacy is already this beloved, even a single major angle can create a year-long echo of curiosity, speculation, and obsession.
3. Nikki Bella

Nikki Bella’s 2025 searches were fueled by the perfect storm of nostalgia, visibility, and tabloid-friendly buzz. She made a notable WWE return at Royal Rumble 2025, putting a spotlight back on her as a current, not just historical, player. Late in the year, she was also pulled into headline chatter thanks to high-profile appearances and viral discussion that kept her name circulating well beyond the ring. When Nikki’s on TV, fans don’t just watch. They revisit. They compare eras. They search.
2. Liv Morgan

Liv Morgan’s 2025 was the kind of roller coaster that turns a wrestler into a constant trending topic. She spent the year as a central figure in major storylines, and by year’s end she made a dramatic in-ring return at a WWE live event after a long injury absence, immediately firing off a ruthless, headline-making promo that had fans talking about what version of Liv Morgan is coming next. Add in ongoing top-of-division positioning and the way her arcs tend to inspire loud online reactions, and it makes sense she finished as the year’s second most searched name worldwide.
1. Rhea Ripley

Rhea Ripley at No. 1 just feels inevitable, right? MAMI, once again, is always on top. She wrestles like a headline and carries herself like a final boss. WWE even packaged her year as a “2025 highlights” story in its own right, underscoring how central she was to the biggest women’s division narratives, rivalries, and premium live event moments. Ripley’s 2025 wasn’t just about matches. It was about presence: the kind that makes fans search mid-show to see what they missed, mid-argument to prove a point, and mid-week because they’re still thinking about the last staredown. In a year packed with returns and title chaos, Ripley remained the division’s gravitational center.
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