Three gold medals. A Harvard degree in neurobiology. A master’s in epidemiology. An engagement ring from Tiffany & Co. And as of June 2026, the fastest 200m time in the world this season.
Gabrielle Lisa Thomas, known everywhere as Gabby, is 29 years old and running faster than she did when she stood on the Paris Olympic podium two years ago. At the Lone Star Grand Prix in College Station, Texas, on June 6, 2026, she posted a 21.70-second 200m, a new 2026 world lead that surpassed her own Olympic-winning time of 21.83. She described the result as a mild surprise. “I’m a little surprised by the time, but I’ve been training hard,” she said.
That combination — the self-deprecating calm, the extraordinary result — is exactly what makes Thomas one of the most compelling athletes in American track and field right now.
Growing Up Between Georgia and Massachusetts
Thomas was born on December 7, 1996, in Atlanta, Georgia, and raised in Northampton, Massachusetts, specifically in the Florence neighborhood. Her father, Desmond Thomas, is originally from Jamaica. Her mother, Jennifer Randall, is American, and she raised Gabby largely as a single parent while waitressing and taking classes to eventually become a professor.
That detail about her mother comes up often when Thomas reflects on her own drive. She has described her mother’s example as a direct influence on her refusal to treat athletics and academics as competing priorities.
Thomas has a twin brother, Andrew, who works as a graphic designer in Idaho. She also has three younger siblings: Desi, Tyler, and Kim. Two of her brothers shaped her academic direction in a direct way. One has ADHD and was receiving neurofeedback therapy during Gabby’s childhood. Another has Asperger’s Syndrome. “Both of my brothers drew me to neurobiology,” she said in an interview, explaining how working in a lab at Boston Children’s Hospital studying Rett syndrome deepened that interest during college.
She attended Williston Northampton School in Easthampton, Massachusetts, for high school, where a math teacher and track coach named Martha McCullagh is credited with helping reshape her trajectory. Thomas won 22 national titles across six different events during her time at Harvard.
Harvard, UT Austin, and Taking Academics Seriously
Thomas enrolled at Harvard University, where she majored in neurobiology with a minor in global health and health policy, plus a citation in French. She graduated in 2019. That alone would be an unusual résumé for a professional sprinter. She didn’t stop there.
After Harvard, she moved to Austin, Texas, to train under coach Tonja Buford-Bailey and simultaneously completed a Master of Public Health in epidemiology at the University of Texas Health Science Center. She finished that degree in 2023.
The picture she has painted of her Austin years is genuinely striking: training at an elite level during the day, then volunteering at a healthcare clinic for uninsured patients in the evenings. The academic side of her identity isn’t a talking point for media appearances. It appears to be something she actually does.
From Bronze in Tokyo to Triple Gold in Paris
Thomas turned professional in 2018, signing with New Balance. Her Olympic debut came at the Tokyo 2020 Games in 2021, where she earned a bronze medal in the 200m and a silver medal in the 4x100m relay. Those were respectable results that confirmed her elite standing without quite putting her at the top of the conversation.
Paris 2024 changed that completely.
At the Stade de France, Thomas won the women’s 200m final in 21.83 seconds, becoming the first American woman to claim Olympic gold in that event since Allyson Felix did it at the London 2012 Games. She then anchored two relay teams to gold: the 4x100m relay alongside Sha’Carri Richardson and teammates, and the 4x400m relay, which set a national record in the process. Three golds. The most decorated U.S. track and field athlete at those Games.
For context on what the 200m result means historically: Thomas also holds a personal best of 21.60 seconds, set at the 2021 U.S. Olympic Trials, which ranks her as the fourth-fastest woman in history in the event. The times above Florence Griffith-Joyner’s world record of 21.34 and the handful of other marks ahead of Thomas belong to a very short list.
Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone and Tara Davis-Woodhall were also part of that dominant Team USA Paris squad, a group that has since become a defining image of American women’s track.
The 2025 Setback and a 2026 Comeback Nobody Expected So Fast
After Paris, Thomas entered what should have been a triumphant 2025 season. Instead, an Achilles injury sustained in May 2025 worsened steadily until she was forced to withdraw from the World Championships in Tokyo. Eight months of careful recovery followed.
Her return came at the Texas Relays in Austin in April 2026, where she competed in the 100m against a strong field. Then came a swift progression: she swept sprint doubles in Nairobi at the Kip Keino Classic and in Gaborone at the Botswana Golden Grand Prix. At that April meet in Botswana, she broke the 11-second barrier in the 100m for the first time in her career, posting 10.95 seconds.
The Lone Star Grand Prix 200m world lead of 21.70 in June 2026 capped a comeback that has moved significantly faster than expected.
Her 2026 approach also includes a deliberate shift toward longer distances. Thomas has been experimenting with the 400m, posting a personal best of 49.01 seconds in 2025 and stating publicly that she is interested in seeing how far that event can take her. “We have an off-year, so I think it’s a great opportunity to see what I’m capable of and just take on a new challenge,” she said.
Brand Partnerships and the Business of Being Gabby Thomas
Thomas is a New Balance athlete and has been since turning professional. Beyond that foundational deal, her post-Paris profile has attracted significant brand attention.
In February 2025, she signed a four-year partnership with Amazfit, the smart wearables brand owned by Zepp Health. It is her first smartwatch sponsorship. Under the deal, she wears Amazfit devices during training and competition, provides feedback to the product team, and uses the Zepp app’s nutrition tracking tools. The brand described her as a “fashion icon” in addition to an elite athlete, which reflects a dual positioning she has leaned into.
She appeared in the 2025 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue, shot at The Boca Raton in Florida, alongside Suni Lee, Nelly Korda, and Jordan Chiles. SI Swimsuit editor MJ Day described the cohort as “the next generation of all-stars poised to transform the world of sports.”
Thomas is also an owner in ATHLOS, the women-only track meet founded by Alexis Ohanian (Serena Williams’ husband). For 2026, Ohanian announced a team-based league format with Thomas, Sha’Carri Richardson, and Tara Davis-Woodhall as owner-athletes. Thomas has been vocal about her enthusiasm for the event, once posting that it was “hands down the best track meet I have EVER ran in.”
She also joined Grand Slam Track, Michael Johnson’s professional track league, as a founding athlete in late 2024. At the inaugural meet in Kingston, Jamaica, she won the 200m and finished second in the 400m.
Her fashion presence extends beyond campaigns. She attended the 2025 Met Gala in a red dress that generated significant attention, appeared at the ESPY Awards in a white feather-trimmed minidress, and has been photographed at New York Fashion Week runway shows.
Engaged to Spencer McManes
In March 2025, Thomas announced her engagement to Spencer McManes, a Yale University graduate and founder of Kaviva, a non-alcoholic kava seltzer brand. The two met while living in Austin after Thomas moved there to train and complete her master’s degree.
The proposal happened on the rooftop of an Airbnb the couple booked for a staycation before track season. McManes arranged flowers, a photographer, and Thomas’ best friend. The clues leading up to it were, by her own account, not especially subtle: he had taken her ring shopping at Tiffany & Co. on Valentine’s Day, made a reservation at their favorite Austin restaurant, J. Carver’s, and Venmoed her $50 to fix a broken nail on her left hand before the moment arrived.
“Normally he’s very bad with surprises,” Thomas told Vogue. “And this was the one surprise I think I’ve ever witnessed him keep.”
The couple had been together since fall 2022. McManes was in Paris wearing a “Team Gabby” shirt when she won her three gold medals, and the two have described the experience as one that deepened their relationship through pressure rather than despite it.
The Gabby Thomas That Other Bio Pages Miss
Most coverage of Thomas focuses on two things: the medals and the Harvard degree. What gets less attention is how deliberately she has built a public identity that doesn’t collapse those two things into a cute contrast.
She doesn’t perform the “brains and brawn” narrative. She has written in the past about the body image pressures of elite sprinting, noting she “teetered between not wanting to look too masculine and strong and also wanting to maintain a feminine look.” The SI Swimsuit shoot, in that context, reads less like a crossover moment and more like a statement she was ready to make.
Her volunteering at an Austin health clinic for uninsured patients through the height of her Paris preparation is something she mentions without framing it as exceptional. Her advocacy for diversity in STEM sits in the same category. These aren’t branding initiatives; they’re interests she had before she won anything.
On Reddit and social media, Thomas tends to generate the kind of thread that isn’t really about controversy. People ask about her hair, her fashion, what she eats, how she trains. She posts TikToks of weight sessions with captions referencing sweet potato pie. The parasocial affection she gets from fans skews warm rather than divisive, which is rarer than it sounds for an athlete at her level of attention.
How Much Does Gabby Thomas Make?
Exact earnings figures are not disclosed, but estimates place Thomas’ net worth at approximately $3 to $5 million, a range that reflects the combination of her New Balance contract, the Amazfit four-year deal, Grand Slam Track prize money (the inaugural Kingston meet paid $100,000 to event winners), ATHLOS ownership stake, brand appearances, and media work.
Prize money in elite track has historically been modest compared to team sports, but the new league structures Thomas has aligned with are designed to change that. Grand Slam Track and ATHLOS both represent a shift toward higher pay and athlete equity in the sport, and Thomas holds ownership positions in at least one of them.
Her 2025 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit appearance and Met Gala attendance signal a market positioning that extends well beyond the track. The Amazfit deal specifically, with its four-year commitment, suggests brand partners are betting on her sustained relevance through at least the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.
Gabby Thomas in 2026: World Leads and LA on the Horizon
As of mid-2026, Thomas holds the women’s 200m world lead at 21.70 seconds, a time she posted in College Station in June. She has also broken the 11-second barrier in the 100m for the first time. The Achilles recovery that consumed most of 2025 appears complete.
The 2028 Los Angeles Olympics sit two years out, which means the current season is effectively a proving ground. Thomas has framed it that way herself: an off-year, a chance to experiment with the 400m, a chance to see what the body can do after injury.
Given that she ran a world lead in June 2026 at 29 years old while also planning a wedding and holding brand partnerships across tech, fashion, and athletics, the answer so far appears to be: plenty.
Frequently Asked Questions
How old is Gabby Thomas?
Gabby Thomas was born on December 7, 1996, making her 29 years old as of 2026. She was born in Atlanta, Georgia, and raised in Northampton, Massachusetts.
Is Gabby Thomas married?
Gabby Thomas is not yet married. She got engaged to Spencer McManes in March 2025, following a rooftop proposal in Austin, Texas. The couple had been dating since fall 2022. A wedding date has not been publicly announced.
What did Gabby Thomas study at Harvard?
Thomas graduated from Harvard University in 2019 with a degree in neurobiology, with a minor in global health and health policy and a citation in French. She later earned a Master of Public Health in epidemiology from the University of Texas Health Science Center in 2023.
How many Olympic medals does Gabby Thomas have?
Thomas has won five Olympic medals total: a bronze (200m) and silver (4x100m relay) at the Tokyo 2020 Games, and three gold medals (200m, 4x100m relay, 4x400m relay) at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
What is Gabby Thomas’ net worth?
Gabby Thomas’ net worth is estimated at $3 to $5 million. Her income comes from her New Balance athlete contract, a four-year Amazfit partnership announced in February 2025, Grand Slam Track prize money, her ATHLOS ownership stake, and brand and media appearances.
What is Gabby Thomas’ 200m personal best?
Thomas’ personal best in the 200m is 21.60 seconds, set at the 2021 U.S. Olympic Trials. That time makes her the fourth-fastest woman in history in the event. In June 2026, she ran 21.70, the current women’s world lead for the season.