UFC Lightweight Title: A Belt Defined by Chaos, Not Consistency
It’s hard to believe, but the last time the UFC lightweight championship changed hands inside the Octagon was nearly nine years ago—when Conor McGregor dismantled Eddie Alvarez at UFC 205 in November 2016. That performance, a masterclass of precision and power, crowned McGregor as the first simultaneous two-division champion in UFC history. Since then, the lightweight title has seen twists, turns, retirements, and interim bouts—but astonishingly, not a single undisputed title switch via in-cage defeat.
Since McGregor’s win, there have been 12 undisputed UFC lightweight title bouts. And while the belt has changed owners multiple times, each transition happened under unique circumstances: champions vacating the belt, being stripped, or retiring. Khabib Nurmagomedov’s dominant reign ended not in defeat but in a heartfelt retirement. Charles Oliveira was stripped for missing weight before UFC 274, despite winning the bout. Islam Makhachev claimed the title in dominant fashion—but not by dethroning a reigning champion in the Octagon.
Now, the division’s wild streak of out-of-cage title transitions continues. With Islam Makhachev now focusing on the welterweight division and the lightweight belt once again vacant, the spotlight turns to #UFC317, where Ilia Topuria—fresh off his featherweight title conquest—moves up to challenge former champ Charles Oliveira for the 155-pound crown.
Will Topuria shock the world again? Or will “Do Bronx” reclaim his throne and finally bring the belt back to a champion who lost it only to the scale?
One thing is certain: The UFC lightweight division remains the most chaotic, competitive, and compelling weight class in MMA—and the drama isn’t stopping any time soon.