Erika Aleksandrovna Andreeva (Эрика Александровна Андреева, born 24 June 2004) is a Russian tennis player.
In singles, she has been ranked as high as No. 96 by the WTA, on 26 February 2024.
Andreeva also has a career-high WTA doubles ranking of world No. 274, achieved on 11 December 2023.
Andreeva owns a doubles title on the WTA Challenger Tour.
She has also won three singles titles and one doubles title on the ITF Circuit.
Andreeva finished as a runner-up at the 2021 French Open in the girls' singles event.
She lost to Linda Nosková in the final.
2020
In November 2020, Andreeva won her first senior ITF Circuit title at the $15k event in Pazardzhik, Bulgaria.
A month later, she won another ITF title, this time at the $15k Cairo, Egypt.
In March 2021, she won her third $15k tournament.
In May 2022, she played her first significant final on the ITF Circuit, at the $100k+H La Bisbal d'Emporda, but lost after winning the first set.
Andreeva made her WTA Tour debut at the 2022 Ladies Open Lausanne after qualifying.
There she recorded her first WTA Tour-level win after dropping only three games against Anna Blinkova in the first round.
She made her major debut at the 2022 US Open, winning her three qualifying matches to earn a spot in the main draw.
Ranked No. 135 at the inaugural 2023 ATX Open in Austin, Texas, she reached the main draw as lucky loser and won the longest match of the season so far against Harriet Dart lasting three hours and 32 minutes in the first round.
Next she lost to Anna-Lena Friedsam in another match that lasted more than three hours.
She received a wildcard for the main draw, on her WTA 1000 debut at the 2023 Miami Open, and won her first match defeating fellow wildcard Ashlyn Krueger.
On her debut, she entered the 2023 French Open as a lucky loser after the late withdrawal of another Russian Anna Kalinskaya.
She reached the top 100 after reaching the second round of the 2024 Qatar TotalEnergies Open as a qualifier.
She also qualified for the WTA 1000 2024 BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells.
Andreeva is the older sister of fellow professional tennis player Mirra Andreeva.
They are both from Krasnoyarsk, but moved to Moscow for coaching.
Only main-draw results in WTA Tour, Grand Slam tournaments, Billie Jean King Cup and Olympic Games are included in win–loss records.