This article was originally shared with subscribers to Bristol Live
She’s already being touted as the next big boxing superstar, has plans to fight for a world title within a year, and hasn’t lost any kind of fight since she was eight years old – but as Tiah Mai Ayton prepares for her next and biggest fight to date, she’s got other things on her mind.
The Kingswood teenager burst onto the scene last year, signed to Eddie Hearn’s famous Matchroom Boxing stable and was immediately touted as a future star.
She was just 18, still lived at home with her parents, and just as she had when she was a world champion kickboxer at the age of ten, still relied on them.
But the start of 2026 has seen big changes for the pocket rocket from east Bristol – she’s gained her independence. Not only has she turned 19, and passed her driving test, but she’s moved out of the family home, settling in a place of her own in Weston-super-Mare, close to the Weston Warriors gym she trains at.
She’s loving the independence, but not the location. “I live in Weston now, because my gym’s here, but my family all live in Bristol, so I’m always over in Bristol,” she said. “I wanna move back to Bristol though – I don’t like it here.”
Like thousands of her fellow Bristolians, who have moved from Bristol to Weston in recent years – it’s a bit of a demographic phenomenon – Tiah Mai Ayton faces a dilemma. Do you live near your work or face a commute? Tiah’s is in reverse though.
While most ex-pat Bristolians now in Weston face the commute back to the city every day, she’s moved to be closer to the gym – “It’s literally minutes away from me,” she said – but would rather be back around friends and family in Bristol.
Luckily, she passed her test a month or so ago, after several failed attempts. “It’s so much more free now, and all that,” she laughed.
Last time she stepped into a boxing ring was back in February at the Nottingham Arena. She beat up-and-coming Brazilian fighter Catherine Tacone Ramos on points in a narrow victory.
It was only her fifth professional fight, her fifth victory, but the first time she hadn’t ended the fight with a knock out.
Since then, she’s moved to a place of her own and passed her driving test – so will be going into the ring in front of thousands at the Civic Hall in Wolverhampton on Saturday having very much stepped into what young people these days call ‘adulting’.
She’s supremely confident about facing veteran Stevi Levy, disagreeing with the suggestion that fighting a 33-year-old seasoned pro who has won 15 fights and lost four will be her toughest challenge yet.
“No I don’t. I fought a Brazilian in my last fight, and I reckon she’ll be tougher than this fight. And I think I’ve had tough amateur fights. But Stevi’s a name and everything – she’s good. But I don’t reckon it’s going to be my hardest fight,” she said.
With all the talk of Tiah Mai Ayton’s prospects – boosted regularly by Eddie Hearn’s showmanship – it’s important to remember the 19-year-old has only fought five fights. And, because she generally knocks her opponent out or stops them within three or four rounds, she’s only boxed 22 rounds professionally in her entire career so far.
By contrast, Stevi Levy, a Norfolk-based fighter who has predominantly boxed in the north of England, has been boxing professionally for seven years, had 19 fights and gone through 123 rounds in the ring.
“I’ve been watching her, I’ve watched her fights,” explained Tiah Mai. “And she’s good, I give her credit and stuff, but I just think I’ve fought better people than her,” she added.
The fight will be televised live on boxing channel DAZN, and Tiah Mai said she’s often conscious of the crowds and the TV audience, until she gets in the ring.
“When I think about it before, I get all nervous, and I’m thinking ‘oh my God, there’s so many people there, there’s cameras and everything’,” she said.
“But as soon as you walk out and everything, you’re just so locked in and all you’re thinking about is the fight – you don’t really think about everyone else there,” she added.
Tiah Mai first graced the pages of the Bristol Post back in 2014, after she won the TFC Cadet British title as an eight-year-old kickboxer.
She’s one of four youngsters pictured on page 39 from the Cobra Kickboxing Club in Kingswood, holding a belt that’s almost as big as she is.
She started getting into martial arts and kickboxing at the age of six, and although she lost a couple of bouts when she started competing, the youngsters who beat her were soon seen off in return bouts.
Over the next few years, the Bristol Post reported her successes. In 2015, she won the WRSA European title at a tournament in France at the age of nine, alongside her sister Maddie and cousin Jamarie.
And by the age of 10, in early 2017, she was crowned world kickboxing champion for her weight, and got the full photocall experience.
Since the age of eight, and that first kickboxing success, she’s gone through her entire junior, amateur and now professional career without losing a single fight. Not one.
She transitioned from martial arts to traditional boxing in her mid-teens and never looked back, and can’t really remember what losing feels like.
Since turning pro at 18 and signing for Eddie Hearn’s Matchroom, life has changed and everything is a lot more serious now, but Tiah said she’s loving every minute, although her new fame is a bit baffling.
“It’s amazing to be honest,” she said. “I’m so grateful for all the opportunities that I’ve had. But it is so much better than amateurs, being pro. Everything I thought of, it is all just gone how I thought it would go, the knockouts and all that, and reels and everything. So, it is great,” she added.
“When I go out and stuff, I get recognised and people ask for photos. And it’s weird, because it’s just…I just still look at me and I’m just Tiah. I just do this cause I love it. I don’t do it for money or anything. I just do it because I love boxing and I’m just good at it.
“And then I feel like my life has changed because like now I’ve got my own place, I’ve moved away from my parents and all that. And so, I’ve had good opportunities come with it all,” she added.
The boxing world is sitting up and taking notice. At the end of 2025, she made history after becoming the first woman fighter ever to be named as the UK Prospect of the Year by boxing bible Boxing News
When she turned pro, Tiah Mai Ayton told the world she had three ambitions – to fight at Madison Square Garden, the iconic New York venue, to be world champion, and to fight at Ashton Gate – her family are all big Bristol City fans.
Ironically, she’s already done the latter, albeit as a child in a junior event in the concourse. The dream would be to fight for the world title on the pitch, cheered on by thousands.
Tiah said she laments not having fought in Bristol at all in her pro career so far – despite the city’s famous boxing pedigree, there is a distinct lack of venues.
Often the biggest boxing nights in Bristol for up and coming fighters are at the temporarily converted underground service yard underneath The Galleries shopping centre. It’s not somewhere Tiah Mai Ayton is desperately keen to appear.
“I wouldn’t mind doing something like fighting overseas, I think that’d be a good experience, but nothing beats English crowds.” she said.
“I would love to fight in Bristol. I’ve got loads of people that support me. so it would be great, because it is hard for people to travel nowadays, with the money and that,” she added.
She’s already a name for the bill for the TV companies, and is what they call in the sport ‘a draw’ – because she has the rare punching power among women fighters to deliver a knock-out blow. But what is it actually like to have that power? Boxing is pretty much the only sport where the aim is to hurt the opponent and render them unable to continue.
“Sometimes it’s different. One time I dropped someone and then I heard my coach shouting ‘don’t rush’, so I thought ‘ok’, I just took my time, I didn’t go running at her. Sometimes it’s like that, and I take my time more because I want to get the rounds.
“But then other times, if I know I’ve hurt them, and it’s getting closer to the end of the round, and I know I could stop them and get them out of there, I just think ‘oh I might as well just do it’.
“It’s just… when you fight, you just know when you could stop someone. And sometimes people smile at you when you hurt them and that’s how you know. You know that that landed… like that landed good,” she added.
Her trajectory might seem rapid, but that’s often the case for women fighters. “Females move (up) a lot quicker than males,” she explained.
“Because in men’s boxing you have journeymen, then you have the middle, then you have the top. But with women, it’s just journeywomen, and it’s just top women, there’s no middle. So women get pushed a lot quicker and there’s not a lot of female fighters. So I’ll probably be fighting for a title, hopefully this year and maybe a world title at the start of next year,” she added.
First, she’s got to beat Stevi Levy, and then see what happens.


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