Michael Morales and Shavkat Rakhmonov are tied for the longest active winning streaks in the UFC welterweight division with seven consecutive victories each. Michel Pereira sits in third place with five straight wins. Mike Malott, Gabriel Bonfim, and Punahele Soriano are each on four-fight winning streaks. This ranking represents the current state of momentum in one of the UFC's most competitive divisions.
Michael Morales and Shavkat Rakhmonov share the distinction of owning the longest active winning streaks in the UFC welterweight division, each carrying seven consecutive victories heading into the spring of 2026.

Rakhmonov, the 31-year-old Kazakhstani known as "Nomad," stands as the division's third-ranked contender with an unblemished professional record of 19-0. At six-foot-four with a 77-inch reach, he brings elite physical tools to go alongside a striking accuracy of 60 percent — an exceptional rate for an active finisher. Fighting out of DAR Team, Rakhmonov has built his reputation on controlled aggression and a willingness to finish fights by any means necessary.

Michel Pereira, the Brazilian known as "Demolidor," sits third among active streak holders with five straight wins. The verified data places the 32-year-old at number 15 in the middleweight rankings rather than welterweight, noting a divisional move that contextualizes his current standing. He lands 4.46 significant strikes per minute at 51 percent accuracy across a 32-15 professional record.

Gabriel Bonfim rounds out the notable streak holders alongside Mike Malott and Punahele Soriano, all three sitting on four-fight winning runs. The 28-year-old Brazilian ranked tenth at welterweight carries a 19-1 record and is one of the division's more well-rounded threats, averaging 3.6 takedowns per 15 minutes while also generating 1.4 submission attempts per 15 minutes. His striking output of 4.61 significant strikes per minute complements a genuinely complete game.

Why it matters
- Rakhmonov's undefeated record and top-three ranking make his streak the most consequential title-picture storyline at 170 pounds
- Bonfim's tenth-place ranking and four-fight run position him as a rising contender capable of cracking the upper tier
- The concentration of long winning streaks signals a generational wave of momentum building throughout one of the UFC's deepest divisions







