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2030 Winter Olympics


Column 1
Provisional logo
French Alps, France
1 February 2030
17 February 2030
TBA(Opening ceremony)Promenade des Anglais(Closing ceremony)
Winter

Summer

2030 Winter Paralympics |

The 2030 Winter Olympics (French: Jeux olympiques d'hiver de 2030), officially known as the XXVI Olympic Winter Games (French: XXVIes Jeux Olympiques d'hiver) and branded as French Alps 2030 (French: Alpes Françaises 2030) or Alpes 2030, is an upcoming international multi-sport event scheduled to take place from 1 to 17 February 2030 in the French Alps region of France.

As part of the new Olympic bid process, the Future Host Commission of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) nominated the French Alps as its preferred candidate on 29 November 2023. The French Alps' bid was approved during the 142nd IOC Session in Paris on 24 July 2024.

Events will be held across the departments of Alpes-Maritimes and Hautes-Alpes in Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur (with the prefecture of Nice hosting all but one of the ice events), and the departments of Haute-Savoie and Savoie in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes.

The new IOC bidding process was approved at the 134th IOC Session on 24 June 2019 in Lausanne, Switzerland. The key proposals, driven by the relevant recommendations from Olympic Agenda 2020, are:

  • Establish a permanent, ongoing dialogue to explore and create interest among cities/regions/countries and National Olympic Committees for any Olympic event
  • Create two Future Host Commissions (Summer and Winter Games) to oversee interest in future Olympic events and report to the IOC executive board
  • Give the IOC Session more influence by having non-executive board members form part of the Future Host Commissions.

The IOC also modified the Olympic Charter to increase its flexibility in choosing hosts by making the date of elections more flexible and allowing multiple cities, regions, or countries to host instead of only single cities, regions or countries.

According to the Future Host Commission's rules of conduct, the new IOC bidding system is divided into two dialogue stages:

  • Continuous dialogue involving non-committal discussions between the IOC and interested parties (City/Region/Country/NOC interested in hosting) with regard to hosting future Olympic events.
  • Targeted dialogue with one or more interested parties—called preferred host(s)—as instructed by the IOC Executive Board. This follows a recommendation by the Future Host Commission as a result of continuous dialogue.

View of Mont Blanc from Les Arcs ski resort

The Albertville pylon, a remnant of the 1992 Olympic Winter Games, where the Olympic flag arrived after the 2026 Winter Olympics.

On 29 November 2023, per the recommendation of the Future Host Commission, the IOC Executive Board invited the French National Olympic and Sports Committee to targeted dialogue proposing that the 2030 Winter Olympics be held in the French Alps.

The French Alps were conditionally ratified as hosts during the 142nd IOC Session on 24 July 2024 in Paris, France; as per the new bid process, the vote was in the form of a referendum to the 95 IOC delegates.

The decision to award the Games was made under the condition that financial guarantees from the French government and local authorities be secured by October 2024; usually, these are secured as part of the bid process, but this was hindered by the then-ongoing French political crisis following the 2024 French legislative election. In October 2024, prime minister Michel Barnier sent a letter to IOC president Thomas Bach to confirm the French government's financial support.

CityNOC nameYesNo.mw-parser-output .tooltip-dotted{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}Abs
French AlpsFrance8447

At the end of the 2026 Winter Olympics closing ceremony in Verona, Italy, the French Alps were introduced as the next Winter Games hosts, with the raising of the flag of France and a performance of "La Marseillaise" in the arena.

Map of the 2030 Winter Games venues in the French Alps

The venues of the Games will be split between clusters in Nice, Briançon, Haute-Savoie, and Savoie. The closing ceremony is expected to be held at the Promenade des Anglais in Nice. Nearly all events will utilize existing facilities; the only new venue being built specifically for the Games is a new ice arena in Nice, which is slated to host figure skating and short-track speed skating. Laurent Wauquiez, president of the Regional Council of Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, has pushed for Val-d'Isère to host events during the Games. Five Olympic villages are slated to be constructed for the Games, with one each in Nice, Briançon, and Haute-Savoie, and two in Savoie.

A venue for the opening ceremony has not yet been decided, but organising committee head Edgar Grospiron suggested in an interview with Le Monde that the ceremony may be held in the Metropolis of Lyon; the organising committee's headquarters are based at Parc Olympique Lyonnais in Décines-Charpieu.

The only sport that does not yet have a confirmed venue is long-track speed skating; in April 2025, Grospiron told Le Figaro that it would be too expensive to build a new venue for speed skating, and explained that the organising committee was aiming to "reinvent the Games". The committee has explored various options, including renovating existing facilities in Albertville or Grenoble, or hosting the event outside of the country at either Oval Lingotto in Turin, Italy (which previously hosted long-track speed skating at the 2006 Winter Olympics, and is the closest venue outside of the host regions), or Thialf in Heerenveen, Netherlands.

The Promenade des Anglais in Nice, where the closing ceremony is scheduled to take place.

The Allianz Riviera stadium in Nice, where the ice hockey events are to take place after a temporary roof has been installed.

VenueEventsCapacityStatus
Stade de NiceIce hockey17,000 (arena 1)Existing, stadium will be divided into two indoor arenas
17,000 (arena 2)
Palais NikaïaCurling6,500Existing
TBAFigure skatingTBANew
Short-track speed skating
Promenade des AnglaisClosing ceremonyTBATemporary
VenueEventsCapacityStatus
Serre ChevalierFreestyle skiing (aerials, moguls, big air) and snowboarding (big air)3,500–5,000Existing, renovated
MontgenèvreFreestyle skiing (ski cross, halfpipe, slopestyle) and snowboarding (snowboard cross, halfpipe, slopestyle, parallel giant slalom)3,500–5,000

View of the Tremplin du Praz, previously used during the 1992 Winter Olympics

View of La Plagne bobsleigh track, previously used during the 1992 Winter Olympics and which will be reused.

VenueEventsCapacityStatus
La PlagneBobsleigh15,000–16,000Existing, renovated
Luge
Skeleton
CourchevelAlpine skiingTBAExisting
Ski jumping
Nordic combined
Val-d'IsèreAlpine skiingTBA
VenueEventsCapacityStatus
La ClusazCross-country skiing12,500Existing
Le Grand-BornandBiathlon12,000–15,000
VenueEventsCapacityStatus
TBASpeed skatingTBAExisting or temporary

At the 142nd IOC Session in July 2024, the IOC's delegates ratified the core Winter Olympic programme of biathlon, bobsleigh, curling, ice hockey, luge, skating, and skiing. The disciplines in each sport will be determined in June 2026.

Various sanctioning bodies have announced plans to pursue bids for sports to be added to the 2030 Winter Olympics:

  • On 1 November 2024, the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) announced they were preparing to bid for the inclusion of 3x3 ice hockey, which is a discipline that has been featured in the Winter Youth Olympics since 2020. If selected, the sport's venue could be a new €‎58 million ice hockey arena being built in Chamonix.

  • The UCI is pursuing the addition of cyclo-cross, while World Athletics is pursuing the revival of cross country running (which was previously contested as a Summer Olympic event) for the first time since 1924. In June 2025, the Departmental Council of Haute-Saône suggested that La Planche des Belles Filles (which has been used as part of the Tour de France route since 2012) would be used as the site for cyclo-cross if approved. Organising committee president Michel Barnier has supported the inclusion of cyclo-cross, while World Athletics president Sebastian Coe stated that cross-country running would provide new opportunities for African athletes to win a Winter Olympic medal for the first time. The Winter Olympic Federations (WOF) voiced opposition to the two sports, arguing that they did not constitute "snow and ice sports" as required by the Olympic Charter, and that their inclusion could "dilute" the heritage and identity of the Winter Olympics; both sports are typically held in the autumn and winter months and have been contested in winter conditions.

  • In February 2025, it was reported that the International Climbing and Mountaineering Federation (UIAA) was receiving calls from French athletes to pursue ice climbing for the 2030 Winter Olympics. Champagny-en-Vanoise, near Courchevel in the northern French Alps, has hosted the UIAA Ice Climbing World Cup numerous times, and the venue for it has been recently renovated to be able to host larger scale competitions.

In a February 2025 interview, organising committee head Edgar Grospiron mentioned cyclo-cross, cross-country running, speed skiing, telemark skiing and ice cross as potential new sports, as well as a potential return of ski mountaineering, which was included as a new sport at the 2026 Games.

Instead of being unveiled prior to the handover segment of the 2026 Winter Olympics closing ceremony, the Games' emblem will be unveiled in the spring of 2026.

In France, pay television and streaming rights are owned by Warner Bros. Discovery via Eurosport, with free-to-air coverage owned by France Télévisions under a sublicense agreement with the European Broadcasting Union (EBU). On 16 January 2023, the IOC announced that it had renewed its European broadcast rights agreement with Warner Bros. Discovery. The agreement, covering from 2026 to 2032, includes pay television and streaming rights to the Summer, Winter, and Youth Olympics on Eurosport and Discovery+ in 49 European territories. Free-to-air rights packages were concurrently awarded to the EBU and its members to cover at least 100 hours of each Winter Olympics, with EBU member France Télévisions agreeing to broadcast the Games in France.

TerritoryRights holderRef
AlbaniaRTSH
AustraliaNine
AustriaORF
BelgiumRTBF, VRT
BrazilGrupo Globo
BulgariaBNT
CanadaCBC/Radio-Canada
Central and Southeast AsiaInfront Sports & Media
ChinaCMG
CroatiaHRT
Czech RepublicČT
DenmarkDR, TV 2
EstoniaERR
Europe (except Russia and Belarus)EBU, Warner Bros. Discovery
FinlandYle
FranceFrance Télévisions
GeorgiaGPB
GermanyARD, ZDF
GreeceERT
HungaryMTVA
IcelandRÚV
IrelandRTÉ
IsraelSports Channel
ItalyRAI
JapanJapan Consortium
KosovoRTK
Latin AmericaAmérica Móvil
LatviaLTV
LithuaniaLRT
MexicoTelevisaUnivision
MontenegroRTCG
NetherlandsNOS
New ZealandSky
NorwayNRK
PolandTVP
San MarinoRAI
SlovakiaSTVR
SloveniaRTV
KoreaJTBC
SpainRTVE
SwedenSVT
Switzerland and LiechtensteinSRG SSR
UkraineSuspilne
United KingdomBBC
United StatesNBCUniversal

The impacts of climate change have become a central focus of the International Olympic Committee in planning the Winter Olympics. According to the IOC, the number of NOCs capable of hosting the Winter Olympics—which require access to snow competition venues with adequate temperature and snowfall—has declined to "practically just 10-12". As a result of these challenges, the decision on the 2030 Winter Olympics host city was delayed until 24 July 2024 to allow the IOC more time to carefully plan the future of the Winter Olympics.

The president of the Games' organising committee, former Olympian Edgar Grospiron, was appointed in 2025. The organising committee has been plagued with infighting, with the Games' director general, chief operating officer, communications director, and chief of the remuneration committee resigning between 2025 and 2026. In addition, the cost of the event has been a source of controversy, especially in amidst the sharp increase in the amount of French public debt. The Games' budget is an estimated $4.04 billion USD, which saw an increase from the original plan. The proposed Nice ice arena has faced criticism due to rising costs and budgetary concerns in the lead-up to the 2026 Nice municipal election; it is slated to cost nearly €138 million.

In March 2026, it was reported that president of the regional council of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, Renaud Muselier had threatened to withdraw Nice, have their events held in Lyon instead if newly elected mayor of Nice, Éric Ciotti does not adhere to the original plans. Renaud had considered Parc Olympique Lyonnais to host the opening ceremony, the neighbouring LDLC Arena hosting ice hockey, and Eurexpo hosting the rest of the ice sports. On 1 April, the recently reelected mayor of Lyon, Grégory Doucet, would announce that his city was ready to host ice sports. One day later, the president of the regional council of Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, Fabrice Pannekoucke, denounced Grégory's "cuckoo approach".

  • 2030 Winter Paralympics

  • Olympic Games held in France

    • 1900 Summer Olympics – Paris
    • 1924 Summer Olympics – Paris
    • 1924 Winter Olympics – Chamonix
    • 1968 Winter Olympics – Grenoble
    • 1992 Winter Olympics – Albertville
    • 2024 Summer Olympics – Paris
    • 2030 Winter Olympics – French Alps
  • List of IOC country codes

  • Official website alpes2030.org (English version)

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