
Julia Avila
9-4-0
About
Raging Panda Julia Avila is a well-rounded bantamweight with submission chops and devastating early finishes who recently retired after a title-shot loss to Miesha Tate.
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Julia Avila, the "Raging Panda," is a journeyman bantamweight whose career arc tells the story of a late-bloomer who fell in love with fighting after graduating from UC Santa Cruz with a geology degree. She began training MMA in 2011 as a personal dare-to-herself test while working on oil rigs and later as a geological technician. What sets Avila apart is her relentless work ethic: during her peak years, she trained from 4:30 a.m. to 6 a.m., worked an office job from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. (with an hour of training at lunch), then hit the gym again from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. That discipline paid off in the Octagon.
Compiling a 9-4 professional record, Avila made her mark with four first-round finishes, four knockout wins, and two submission victories. She holds notable wins over former UFC flyweight champion Nicco Montano and veteran Marion Reneau, and she captured the HD MMA bantamweight title before entering the UFC in 2019. Her fighting style is balanced and pressure-oriented: she lands nearly 80 percent of her significant strikes standing, mixes in clinch work, and possesses a dangerous submission game (her favorite finishes are the armbar and rear-naked choke). Her willingness to grind through full fights made her a complete competitor.
After a two-year injury layoff, Avila returned in December 2023 for a high-profile matchup against former UFC women's bantamweight champion Miesha Tate, only to be submitted via rear-naked choke in the third round. That setback was followed by a unanimous decision loss to Jacqueline Cavalcanti in February 2025, which prompted her to announce her retirement from MMA. Despite finishing outside title contention, Avila's legacy rests on her authenticity, her balanced skill set, and her representation of the unglamorous, work-first ethos that defines much of women's combat sports.
Why fans love Avila
Avila's work ethic and backstory are deeply resonant: she trained at 4:30 a.m. before work, maintained a geology career, and proved herself against elite competition without fanfare or trash talk. She's thoughtful in interviews, crediting her teammates and coaches as her heroes, and has voiced genuine care for the sport and its fans. Her well-rounded style and early finishes made her fights entertaining, and she competed with humility and professionalism.











