Ski Jumping at the 2026 Winter Olympics

Ski jumping at the 2026 Winter Olympics will once again be one of the most iconic disciplines of the premier global winter sports event, the Winter Games, combining tradition, technical precision, and elite athletic performance on the world’s biggest stage. The Olympic ski jumping tournament represents the highest level of international prestige in the sport.
Subject Ski jumping
Start Date February 6, 2026
End Date February 16, 2026
Status Coming Soon
Location “Giuseppe Dal Ben” Ski Jumping Arena, Predazzo, Italy
Prize Pool None
Participants 100 male and female ski jumpers
Type Outdoor
Tournament Champion
Format
Organizer IOC, Milano Cortina 2026 Organizing Committee, and International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS)

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Ski Jumping at the 2026 Winter Olympics will be part of the 25th edition of the Olympic Winter Games, commonly known as Milano Cortina 2026 for this year’s edition.

Given that the event is part of the Olympic Winter Games ski jumping program, it sits under the broader FIS (International Ski and Snowboard Federation) ski jumping competition framework, and will take place between February 6 (or February 5) and February 16, 2026, in Predazzo, Italy.

Note: Specific event dates within this window vary by qualification rounds and medal events.

The tournament is organized by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in cooperation with the FIS, which oversees technical rules, competition standards, and athlete eligibility, and, of course, Milano Cortina 2026 Organizing Committee.

Venue, Competitors’ Structure, and Prize Pool Overview for Ski Jumping at the 2026 Winter Olympics

Ski jumping at the 2026 Winter Olympics will take place at the “Giuseppe Dal Ben” Ski Jumping Arena (Stadio del salto “Giuseppe Dal Ben”) in a small village called Predazzo (the province of Trentino). This venue has been modernized for the Games and is hosting both the ski jumping and Nordic combined events.

The exact number of ski jumpers scheduled to participate hasn’t been officially published yet in a simple overall figure from the organizing committee. However, Olympic ski jumping allocations are defined by quotas set by the FIS, with men’s and women’s quotas totaling 100 athletes combined for the next Games.

Note: The precise confirmed total for Milano-Cortina 2026 isn’t yet published as a single number in official sources available at this time, but the quota list shows many athlete slots allocated across nations.

At the Olympics themselves, there’s no official cash prize money awarded directly by the Olympic Games for winning medals — athletes earn Olympic medals (gold, silver, bronze), but not prize money from the Olympic organizers. Prize money in ski jumping generally comes earlier or later in the FIS World Cup and other circuits, not as part of the Olympic tournament. Instead, some national Olympic committees or sponsors offer financial bonuses to athletes who win medals, but these vary by country and are not part of an official Olympic prize pool.

Participating Athletes in Ski Jumping at the 2026 Winter Olympics and Qualification Overview

At the 2026 Winter Olympics ski jumping competition, there are 50 men’s and 50 women’s athlete quota spots. These are the jumpers qualified through the FIS Olympic Quota Allocation List based primarily on World Cup and Summer Grand Prix performance between July 1, 2024, and January 18, 2026.

Example of some of the qualified ski jumpers thus far

Men:

  • Daniel Tschofenig (AUT)
  • Jan Hörl (AUT)
  • Domen Prevc (SLO)
  • Ryōyū Kobayashi (JPN)
  • Stefan Kraft (AUT)
  • Anže Lanišek (SLO)
  • Ren Nikaidō (JPN)
  • Gregor Deschwanden (SUI)
  • Philipp Raimund (GER)
  • Johann André Forfang (NOR)
  • Marius Lindvik (NOR)
  • Timi Zajc (SLO)
  • Kevin Bickner (USA)
  • Artti Aigro (EST)
  • Jason Frantz (USA)
    …and many others, up to 50 total men across various countries.

Women (example top athletes):

  • Nika Prevc (SLO)
  • Selina Freitag (GER)
  • Nozomi Maruyama (JPN)
  • Katharina Schmid (GER)
  • Lisa Eder (AUT)
  • Sara Takanashi (JPN)
  • Anna Odine Strøm (NOR)
  • Abigail Strate (CAN)
  • Eirin Maria Kvandal (NOR)
  • Alexandria Loutitt (CAN)
  • Lara Malsiner (ITA)
    …and others, up to 50 women from many nations.

Note: This is a representative subset of the official allocated quota list as of 19 January 2026. The full list will include all 100 athletes once final reallocation and confirmations are completed.

Every athlete must meet minimum performance standards and earn enough ranking points in major international events. Specifically:

  1. FIS points requirement. Athletes must have at least one World Cup or Summer Grand Prix point, or one Continental Cup point, within the qualifying period (July 1, 2024 – January 18, 2026).
  2. Olympic Quota Allocation List. Quotas for the Olympics are assigned based on the Olympic Quota Allocation List. This list ranks athletes based on results from World Cup and Grand Prix events, with Continental Cups used as needed. Starts with the highest-ranked eligible athletes downward until all quota slots (50 men, 50 women) are filled.
  3. National Olympic Committee (NOC) limits. Each nation may qualify up to 4 male and 4 female ski jumpers. If an NOC qualifies fewer nations, additional quotas may be reallocated to allow more nations to participate.
  4. Team event eligibility. To enter team events (men’s team and mixed team), a nation must have the required number of qualified athletes.

Structure and Competition Format of Ski Jumping at the 2026 Winter Olympics

Ski jumping at the 2026 Winter Olympics is divided into four main competitive stages, held within the official Olympic window.

1) Official training & trial rounds. These sessions allow athletes to test hill conditions, calibrate equipment, and adapt to wind and in-run speed. While not medal events, they are mandatory preparation stages.

2) Qualification rounds. These determine which athletes advance into the main competition. Each individual event (normal hill and large hill) has its own qualification phase.

3) Individual medal events. This stage includes:

  • Men’s normal hill
  • Women’s normal hill
  • Men’s large hill
  • Women’s large hill

These are the headline Olympic medal competitions.

4) Team & mixed team events. This final stage includes:

  • Men’s team event
  • Mixed team event (men + women combined teams)

These events mark the end of the ski jumping program at the Olympics.

Unlike bracket-based sports, ski jumping uses a points-based elimination format built around jump distance and style scores.

1) Individual event format (normal hill & large hill)

Qualification round

  • All registered athletes jump once.
  • The top 50 jumpers advance to the competition round.

Competition structure

Round 1 (main round)

  • 50 qualified athletes compete.
  • Each athlete makes one jump.
  • Scores are based on:
    • Distance points
    • Style points from judges
    • Wind compensation
    • Gate compensation

Only the top 30 athletes advance.

Final round (round 2)

  • The remaining 30 athletes jump again.
  • Their two jumps are combined for the final ranking.

Medals are awarded based on the total combined score from both rounds.

2) Team event format (men’s team)

  • Each nation fields four jumpers.
  • The event has two rounds.
  • Every athlete jumps once per round (8 total jumps per team).
  • After Round 1, only the top-8 teams advance to round 2.
  • Final rankings are based on total team score across both rounds.

3) Mixed team event format

  • Each team consists of two men and two women.
  • Same two-round system as the men’s team event.
  • Combined scores from all athletes determine the final standings.

Favorites in Ski Jumping at the 2026 Winter Olympics, Betting Options, and Where to Watch

While final form always depends on conditions and late-season performance, several elite ski jumpers are widely expected to be medal contenders.

Men’s favorites:

  • Stefan Kraft (Austria). A former Olympic champion and World Cup overall winner.
  • Domen Prevc (Slovenia). Known for his explosive power and flight technique, Prevc is particularly dangerous on large hills and has repeatedly dominated major FIS events.
  • Ryōyū Kobayashi (Japan). One of the most complete ski jumpers of the modern era.
  • Marius Lindvik (Norway). A former Olympic and World Championship medalist.

Women’s favorites:

  • Nika Prevc (Slovenia). A rising superstar with strong World Cup results and exceptional consistency on technical hills.
  • Sara Takanashi (Japan). One of the most decorated women’s ski jumpers in history.
  • Eirin Maria Kvandal (Norway). A powerful jumper with excellent flight stability, especially strong in high-pressure finals.
  • Katharina Schmid (Germany). Known for technical precision and balanced form across hill sizes.

Major international sportsbooks from an online bookies list typically offer Olympic winter sports markets, including ski jumping:

  • Licensed European bookmakers
  • International online sports betting platforms
  • National lottery betting operators (in some countries)
  • Regulated sportsbook apps and websites

Common ski jumping betting markets:

  • Winner/gold medalist. Bet on which athlete will win gold in a specific event.
  • Podium finish. Predict whether an athlete finishes in the top three.
  • Head-to-head matchups. Compare the two jumpers’ performances within the same event.
  • Nation’s medal count. Bet on the total medals won by a country in ski jumping.
  • Team event winner. Predict the winning nation in men’s or mixed team events.

Popular betting strategies include focusing on recent World Cup form, considering hill specialization (some jumpers perform better on large hills), watching wind conditions, which can strongly influence results, and monitoring qualification round performance as a form indicator.

Ski Jumping at the 2026 Winter Olympics will be broadcast globally through official Olympic rights holders.

International coverage:

IOC official streaming

  • Olympics.com
  • Official Olympic mobile and smart TV apps
    Live streams and replays will be available in supported regions.

Major broadcasters by region:

Europe

  • Eurosport / Discovery+
  • National public broadcasters (ARD/ZDF in Germany, ORF in Austria, RAI in Italy, NRK in Norway, TVP in Poland)

United States

  • NBC Sports
  • Peacock streaming platform

Canada CBC Sports

Asia-Pacific

  • NHK (Japan)
  • KBS/MBC (South Korea)
  • Seven Network (Australia)

Fans will be able to watch via:

  • Live TV broadcasts
  • Official Olympic streaming platforms
  • Mobile apps
  • On-demand replays and highlights

Pros and Cons of Favorites in Ski Jumping at the 2026 Winter Olympics

AthleteCountryStrengths (Pros)Weaknesses (Cons)
Stefan KraftAustriaExtremely consistent technique, elite take-off timing, strong championship experience, performs well under Olympic pressureOccasionally vulnerable in unstable wind conditions, less dominant on very large hills compared to peak seasons
Ryōyū KobayashiJapanExplosive power, excellent adaptability to changing hill profiles, strong mental resilience, proven Olympic performerForm can fluctuate across seasons, sometimes struggles with gate compensation adjustments
Domen PrevcSloveniaOutstanding flight phase, exceptional large hill performance, strong aerodynamics, aggressive jumping styleHigher-risk approach can lead to inconsistency, sensitive to crosswind conditions
Marius LindvikNorwaySolid landing stability, balanced style scores, reliable in two-round formats, strong team-event contributorLower peak distance potential compared to top rivals, occasionally slower in-run speed efficiency
Anže LanišekSloveniaTechnical precision, smooth in-run posture, consistent top-10 finisher on World Cup circuitOccasionally lacks explosive power for winning margins, weaker second-round recoveries
Nika PrevcSloveniaExceptional young talent, strong composure, technically advanced flight position, consistent qualification performancesLimited Olympic experience, pressure of first Games could affect performance
Sara TakanashiJapanLegendary experience, elite take-off timing, reliable qualification performer, strong normal hill resultsOlympic gold still missing, pressure situations have affected past medal attempts
Eirin Maria KvandalNorwayPowerful jumping style, excellent large hill stability, strong final-round performancesLess consistent across full seasons, occasional landing deductions
Katharina SchmidGermanyVery stable technique, strong judge scores, efficient two-jump consistencyLower maximum jump distance compared to elite power jumpers
What excites you most about Ski Jumping at Milano–Cortina 2026?
MILOS VASILJEVIC
He’s the mastermind behind our captivating content, leveraging his extensive journalism experience to craft compelling sports news and insightful betting predictions. His passion for the game and knack for storytelling ensure our readers are always engaged and informed, bringing a unique and expert perspective to every piece he writes.
Publication date : 24.01.2026
Last modified date: 24.01.2026

Frequently Asked Questions

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