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2028 Summer Olympics

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A view inside SoFi Stadium, a large sports venue in Inglewood, California.

The 2028 Summer Olympics, officially called the Games of the XXXIV Olympiad, will be a big international multi-sport event happening from July 14 to 30, 2028, in the United States. The main city where the Olympics will take place is Los Angeles, but some events will also be in other places around the Greater Los Angeles area and in Oklahoma City.

Los Angeles first wanted to host the 2024 Summer Olympics, but later agreed to host the 2028 Games when the International Olympic Committee decided to award the 2024 Games to Paris and the 2028 Games to Los Angeles at the same time. This will be the fifth time the United States has hosted the Summer Olympics and the third time for Los Angeles, making it only the third city ever to host the Summer Olympics three times. The other two cities are London and Paris.

New sports will join the Olympics in 2028. Skateboarding, sport climbing, and surfing, which were optional in past Games, are now official parts of the Olympics. New optional sports include flag football and squash. Other sports coming back after many years are baseball/softball, cricket, and lacrosse.

Bidding process

Main article: Bids for the 2024 and 2028 Summer Olympics

In 2015, five cities were chosen to try to host the 2024 Summer Olympics: Budapest, Hamburg, Los Angeles, Paris, and Rome. Later, Budapest, Hamburg, and Rome decided not to continue. This left only Los Angeles and Paris. In 2017, the International Olympic Committee decided to pick both the 2024 and 2028 hosts together. Paris was chosen for 2024 to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the 1924 Summer Olympics in that city. Los Angeles was then chosen to host the 2028 Olympics. The city’s leaders and the International Olympic Committee all agreed to this decision. Many people in Los Angeles supported the idea of hosting the Olympics.

Development and preparations

Further information: Twenty-eight by '28

K Line train in Inglewood, a major events cluster

Los Angeles leaders want the 2028 Olympics to help with traffic by using fewer cars. They plan to build projects to make travel easier, though some are delayed. They also want people to stay home during the event.

Several train lines are being built or changed to help people move around during the Olympics. One line will connect to the Olympic Village, and another will link different parts of the city.

Buses will also help move people. Los Angeles will need many extra buses and is asking other cities to lend some for the event.

Budget

The 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles will use mostly private money, like the 1984 Games. The city will help if there are money problems, but most funds come from sponsors and ticket sales. Tickets will cost between $13 and $457.

D Line train at Wilshire/Western station

Security

Security for the Olympics will be handled by U.S. government agencies. This is because the Olympics is a big national security event, like past games.

Venues

Main article: Venues of the 2028 Summer Olympics and Paralympics

Many events will happen in and around Los Angeles, using existing stadiums and arenas. The Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and SoFi Stadium will host opening and closing ceremonies, plus some sports. Other venues include Crypto.com Arena for gymnastics and Intuit Dome for basketball.

LA Metro local bus service

Some sports will happen outside Los Angeles, like football matches in cities such as New York and San Diego.

Olympic torch

The Olympic torch will travel through all 50 U.S. states before the Games, helping to bring people together.

Tickets

People can start registering for tickets in January 2026, with sales beginning in March. There will be about 14 million tickets available, including 1 million for just $28.

The Games

Ceremonies

The opening ceremonies will be held on July 14, 2028, and will be co-hosted by the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and SoFi Stadium. The Coliseum will host the closing ceremonies. Filmmaker and media executive Peter Rice was named "head of ceremonies and content" for LA 2028, overseeing the ceremonies for both the Olympics and Paralympics. Wasserman did not state a planned budget, but said he would provide Rice with any resources he needs. Wasserman explained that “when you think about what we expect of ourselves and what the world is going to expect of us, clearly we’re the creative capital of the world and Hollywood is a big piece of that, but we better knock people’s socks off.”

Ben Winston will serve as executive producer and creative director, alongside veteran ceremony producer Scott Givens; production will be overseen by FulFive, a joint venture between Winston and Given’s respective companies Fulwell 73 and FiveCurrents.

The idea of using both stadiums was discussed by the Los Angeles bid committee as early as 2017; it proposed that a prologue to the opening ceremony could be held at the Coliseum with the rest of the protocol being simulcast from SoFi Stadium on screens, and the closing ceremony likewise beginning at SoFi Stadium and ending at the Coliseum.

Sports

The 2028 Summer Olympics is expected to include 353 medal events in 36 sports, an increase of 22 events and four sports over Paris 2024; this includes 31 mandatory "core" sports, and five optional sports that were proposed by LAOCOG to help improve local interest. The core program consists of the 28 core sports contested since 2016, along with skateboarding, sport climbing, and surfing—three sports that have been officially promoted to the core program after being contested as optional sports in 2020 and 2024. The five optional sports will include the Olympic debuts of flag football (a non-contact variant of gridiron football) and squash, the return of baseball/softball for the first time since 2020, the return of cricket for the first time since 1900, and lacrosse for the first time since 1908.

Cricket will consist of men’s and women’s tournaments using the Twenty20 (T20) format, with six teams each. Flag football will consist of men’s and women’s tournaments. On May 20, 2025, the National Football League announced that it had reached an agreement with its team owners to potentially allow their players to compete in the men’s flag football tournament, pending agreements with the league’s players’ union. In November 2025, the Canadian Football League (whose regular season falls during the Olympics) announced a similar allowance.

Skateboarding (pictured), surfing, and sport climbing will be inducted into the core Olympic program, after being selected as discretionary sports at the previous two editions of the games.

Lacrosse will utilize the lacrosse sixes format. There have been calls from American and Canadian officials to allow a special dispensation for the Haudenosaunee Nationals (formerly Iroquois Nationals) to compete in the Olympics, due to the historical significance of lacrosse to the Haudenosaunee people. World Lacrosse recognizes Haudenosaunee as a member and it has competed in world championships, but it does not have a National Olympic Committee; its players could still theoretically play for the Canada or the United States teams.

Beach sprint rowing will replace the lightweight double sculls category, and consist of individual events for men and women as well as a mixed double sculls event. Modern pentathlon is expected to employ a new format which replaces show jumping with obstacle course racing.

On April 9, 2025, the IOC announced new events in multiple sports, including a 4 × 100m mixed relay in athletics, the addition of 50m backstroke, butterfly, and breaststroke events in swimming, and mixed team gymnastics, compound archery (the discipline’s Olympic debut), golf, and table tennis events. In sport climbing, the combined boulder-and-lead event will be replaced by separate competitions for each discipline, expanding it to six medal events. It was also announced that 3x3 basketball would be expanded to 12 teams, one additional women’s weight class would be added to boxing for parity with the men’s events, women’s water polo would be expanded to 12 teams for parity with the men’s tournament, while the women’s football (soccer) tournament would expand from 12 to 16 due to the increasing popularity of the sport. The men’s football tournament will be reduced from 16 to 12 teams, while the marathon race walk mixed relay introduced in 2024 was dropped. With these changes, the 2028 Summer Olympics will be the first to have more female than male athletes. On September 19, 2025, the IOC announced that weightlifting would be expanded to six bodyweight classes per-gender (with no change in athlete quota) to be better-aligned with the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF)’s new bodyweight classes.

New sports

Since 2020, the program of the Summer Olympics has consisted of mandatory core sports that persist between Games, and up to six optional sports proposed by the organizing committee in order to improve local interest. On December 9, 2021, the IOC executive board proposed that skateboarding, sport climbing, and surfing, which all successfully debuted as optional sports at the 2020 Summer Olympics, and returned in the same capacity in 2024, be promoted to the core program of the 2028 Summer Olympics to replace boxing, modern pentathlon, and weightlifting, which were provisionally dropped from the program pending the resolution of governance issues.

Notwithstanding the approval of cricket by the IOC, USA Cricket is not currently certified as a national governing body by the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee (USOPC), which would be required in order for the sport to be contested. The ICC has previously warned that USA Cricket’s governance would need to be reformed in order to meet USOPC standards.

Participating National Olympic Committees

As of March 31, 2026, five nations have qualified for the 2028 Summer Olympics. In 2025, the International Olympic Committee is looking at ways to include more nations, including possibly Russia and Belarus. The leader of the committee, Kirsty Coventry, supports this idea to keep the Olympics open to everyone.

Participating National Olympic Committees
 Brazil (18)
 Colombia (18)
 Dominican Republic (24)
 United States (410) (host)
 Venezuela (24)

Calendar

On July 13, 2025, the group planning the games shared the first schedule of events. Then, on November 12, 2025, they shared a full schedule showing when each event will happen during the Olympics in Los Angeles.

To let SoFi Stadium be used for both the opening ceremonies and swimming, the order of swimming and athletics events was changed. Athletics will happen in the first week, and the stadium will be changed to get the pool ready for swimming in the second week. This is the first time since the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City that athletics will happen in the first week of the Games.

All times and dates use Pacific Daylight Time (UTC-7).

OCOpening ceremonyEvent competitions1Gold medal eventsCCClosing ceremony
July 202814th
Fri
30th
Sun
Events
CeremoniesOCCC—N/a
Aquatics Artistic swimming2
Diving8
Marathon swimming2
Swimming541
Water polo2
Archery6
Athletics148
Badminton5
Baseball/Softball Baseball1
Softball1
Basketball Basketball12
3×3 Basketball2
Boxing414
Canoeing Slalom6
Sprint10
Cricket2
Cycling Road cycling4
Track cycling312
BMX4
Mountain biking2
Equestrian Dressage2
Eventing2
Jumping2
Fencing12
Field hockey2
Flag football2
Football2
Golf3
Gymnastics Artistic15
Rhythmic2
Trampoline2
Handball2
Judo15
Lacrosse2
Modern pentathlon2
Rowing Rowing12
Coastal rowing3
Rugby sevens2
Sailing10
Shooting15
Skateboarding4
Sport climbing6
Squash2
Surfing2
Table tennis6
Taekwondo8
Tennis5
Triathlon3
Volleyball Beach volleyball2
Volleyball12
Weightlifting12
Wrestling318
Daily medal events018353
Cumulative total0353

Marketing

Branding

On September 1, 2020, the group organizing the 2028 Summer Olympics showed the Games' new symbol. It shows "LA" and "28" stacked together. The letter "A" in "LA" can change, and many different versions were made with help from athletes, artists, designers, and famous people like Billie Eilish, Lilly Singh, and Reese Witherspoon. Some versions remember the design from the 1984 Summer Olympics. For the first time, the symbol also has versions to show support for official sponsors like Delta Air Lines and broadcaster NBC.

The leader of the organizing group, Casey Wasserman, said these different versions show the creativity of the community.

On March 28, 2026, the organizing group showed the full branding for the Games, called "LA in full bloom". The design is inspired by a special time in California when many flowers bloom. The branding also uses several types of letters inspired by street signs in the city.

Corporate sponsorship

The group for LA2028 worked with NBCUniversal, which owns the U.S. media rights to the Olympics, to manage sponsorship sales for the Games. As part of this, and because of its partnership with the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee, the parent company Comcast will be called a "Founding Partner" of LA 2028.

For the first time in Olympic history, places where events happen can show the name of their sponsor during the Games, if that sponsor is a Worldwide Olympic Partner or a Founding Partner of LA28. The organizing group also plans to sell naming rights for temporary places.

Broadcasting rights

Main article: List of 2028 Summer Olympics broadcasters

In the United States, the 2028 Summer Olympics will be shown on NBCUniversal and Versant properties. This is because of a long agreement that will last until 2036. The parent company, Comcast, will help with broadcasting services. In January 2026, Comcast and NBCUniversal created a new company called Versant. This company will show Olympics coverage on channels like CNBC and USA Network. Hollywood Park Studios will be the place for the International Broadcast Centre during the Games.

Images

Fans watching a football game inside the LA Memorial Coliseum in 2019.
A beautiful view of the Los Angeles skyline and the San Gabriel mountains in the background.
A friendly baseball icon representing sports activities.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on 2028 Summer Olympics, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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