Camila Osorio is the standard-bearer of Colombian tennis — the country's No. 1 woman, born in Cúcuta on the Venezuelan border. She turned professional in 2019 following a junior career that culminated in winning the 2019 US Open girls' singles title and the world No. 1 junior ranking. In that US Open junior final she beat Alexandra Yepifanova losing only one game, and at the 2018 Youth Olympics she took bronze in girls' singles and silver in mixed doubles.
At 5-foot-7 she has never been a power player. The game is built on court coverage, return depth and second-serve pressure — a clay counterpuncher in the classic mold, content to extend rallies until the error comes. Over her career at WTA level she holds a 50-24 record (67.6%) on clay against 46.4% on hard, and her return numbers do the heavy lifting, routinely winning over half her second-serve return points. The willingness to grind shows up in marathon scorelines few in her ranking range can survive.
The career arc is anchored in Bogotá. Her breakthrough came in 2021 when, ranked No. 180, she captured her maiden title at the Copa Colsanitas — becoming the lowest-ranked WTA champion since 2018. She repeated as champion in 2024 and 2025, making all three of her tour titles home-soil clay. She also reached finals at Tenerife and a Monterrey runner-up against Leylah Fernandez, and peaked at world No. 33 on 4 April 2022. Her signature scalp remains a first Top-5 win over Caroline Garcia en route to the Rome round of 16.
The current beat is her best Slam run yet. At the 2026 French Open, Osorio reached the third round for the first time, upsetting 14th seed Ekaterina Alexandrova before beating Yulia Putintseva in 3 hours 30 minutes — the longest tour-level win of her career. She fell there to Anna Kalinskaya, but at No. 68 the result restocked a ranking that had drifted.