"2028 Olympics", "LA2028", "LA28", and "Los Angeles 2028" redirect here. For the Summer Paralympics, see2028 Summer Paralympics. For the Winter Youth Olympics in the Dolomites and Valtellina, see2028 Winter Youth Olympics.
Games of the XXXIV Olympiad
One of the many variations of the Los Angeles 2028 logo
The2028 Summer Olympics, officially theGames of the XXXIV Olympiad and commonly known asLos Angeles 2028 orLA 28, is an upcoming internationalmulti-sport event scheduled to take place from July 14 to 30, 2028, in theUnited States.Los Angeles will be thehost city, with various events also scheduled to be held at other cities spread across theGreater Los Angeles area,[3] plus two subsites inOklahoma City.[4][5]
Los Angeles had originallybid for the2024 Summer Olympics. Following multiple withdrawals, theInternational Olympic Committee (IOC) approved a process to concurrently award the 2024 and 2028 Games to Los Angeles and Paris as the two remaining candidates; Paris was preferred as host for 2024, while Los Angeles agreed to host in 2028. Los Angeles was formally awarded the Games at the131st IOC Session inLima, Peru, on September 13, 2017. They will mark the fifth Summer Olympics, and ninth Olympics overall to be hosted by the United States; having previously hosted the Summer Olympics in1932 and1984, Los Angeles becomes the third three-time host city afterLondon (1908,1948,2012) and Paris (1900,1924,2024), and the first non-European city to do so. These will be the first Summer Olympics held under theIOC presidency ofKirsty Coventry.
On September 16, 2015, the International Olympic Committee announced the candidature process and the five candidate cities for the 2024 Games:Budapest,Hamburg, Los Angeles, Paris, andRome.[6] Budapest, Hamburg, and Rome eventually withdrew, leaving only Los Angeles and Paris.[7] A similar situation had already occurred during thebidding for the 2022 Winter Olympics whenKraków,Lviv,Oslo, andStockholm withdrew, resulting in a two-way decision betweenBeijing, China, andAlmaty, Kazakhstan, with Beijing ultimately declared the winner. On April 3, 2017, at the IOC convention in Denmark, Olympic officials met with bid committees from Los Angeles and Paris to discuss the possibility of naming two winners in the competition to host the 2024 Summer Games.
After these withdrawals, the IOC Executive Board met inLausanne, Switzerland, on June 9, 2017, to discuss the 2024 and 2028 bid processes.[8] The IOC formally proposed electing the 2024 and 2028 host cities at the same time in 2017, a proposal that an Extraordinary IOC Session approved on July 11, 2017, in Lausanne. The IOC set up a process where the Los Angeles and Paris 2024 bid committees and the IOC held meetings in July 2017 to decide which city would host in each of the two years.[9]
Following the decision to award the 2024 and 2028 Games simultaneously, Paris was understood to be preferred for the 2024 Games, as it would also mark the centennial of the1924 Summer Olympics in Paris.[10] On July 31, 2017, the IOC announced Los Angeles as the sole candidate for 2028, with $1.8 billion of additional funding from the IOC,[11] allowing Paris to be confirmed as the host for 2024. On August 11, 2017, theLos Angeles City Council voted unanimously to approve the bid.[12] On September 11, 2017, Los Angeles received formal approval from the IOC's evaluation commission.[13] On September 13, 2017, Los Angeles was formally awarded the 2028 Games following a unanimous vote by the IOC.[14] IOC presidentThomas Bach praised the LA bid for using a record-breaking number of existing and temporary facilities and for relying entirely on corporate funding.[15][16]
On October 16, 2017, LA 2028 received official endorsement from the state ofCalifornia.[17] On August 29, 2018, Olympic officials arrived for a two-day visit that included meetings with local organizers and a tour of the city's newest venues.[18] At the time,LMU andLA Times polls stated that more than 88% ofAngelenos were in favor of the city hosting the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games.[19] In March 2023, a poll conducted by Suffolk University and theLA Times indicated 57% of Angelenos believed the Olympics would be good for the city, while 20% indicated they thought it would have a negative impact.[20]
TheTwenty-eight by '28 initiative is an effort by formerMayorEric Garcetti that theLA Metro complete 28 transit infrastructure projects before the start of the Games.[21][22] Most of these projects and initiatives were already in the planning stages during the bid, but will receive accelerated priority, while several minor new projects were programmed with the initiative. In August 2024, MayorKaren Bass announced that LA plans the Olympics to be car-free, also termed '[public] transit-first' by organizers.[23][24] Promoting public transit as an alternative to driving is intended to reduce congestion and travel times. In addition to physical and organizational improvement of the city's own public transit infrastructure, Bass has suggested strategies such as encouraging remote work during the event.[25][26]
Infrastructure improvements are being funded byMeasure R, a temporary half-cent sales tax increase, andMeasure M, a continuation of Measure R's tax increase plus an additional permanent half-cent sales tax increase, both tax measures applicable toLos Angeles County.[27]
While various infrastructure improvements were planned regardless of the outcome of the Los Angeles Olympic bid, theextension of theMetro D Line will be expedited to serve the Olympics. Three phases were created to extend the line. The first phase will extend the D Line from theWilshire/Western station to the newWilshire/La Cienega station. This phase will be completed by 2025. The second phase will extend the D Line toCentury City by 2026, while the third and final phase will extend the line to theWest Los Angeles VA Medical Center inWestwood with a completion date set for 2027. The third phase will also include a station adjoining theUCLA campus, connecting Olympic Village with venues in downtown Los Angeles.[28][29] Construction began in 2014 and remains on schedule.[28][30][31]
LA28 organizers estimate Los Angeles will need an extra 2,700 buses to move spectators and athletes during events, doublingMetro's current fleet. The organizers anticipate LA Metro to meet the demand and stated they support Metro in their transportation infrastructure development plans.[40] Metro reports it would take an estimated $700 million to $1 billion to cover the cost.[41] Through the Vision 2028 plan, they are applying for federal grants and identifying other nationwide agencies in need of new fleet buses after the games to streamline re-sale.[42]
In April 2019, the estimated cost of the Games was assessed as being approximately $6.88 billion, with all the money coming from the private sector. The organizers adjusted the budget for inflation after LA, which originally bid for the 2024 Games, agreed to wait four more years.[43][44]
The City of Los Angeles is the lead public guarantor, committing to spend up to $250 million to cover shortfalls. In 2016, the California legislature took action so that the Governor is empowered to negotiate the next $250 million in public backup, but only after the city backup money has been used first. LA 2024 also agreed to purchase a wide range of insurance policies to cover financial relief in the event of natural disaster, terrorism, event cancellation, as well as reduced ticket sales. The Games are expected to generate as much as they cost, with $2.5 billion coming in through sponsorships and nearly $2 billion earned through ticket sales. Average ticket prices for the Games will range between $13 and $457 (in 2016 dollars).[44]
Security will be handled by the U.S. federal government with an agreement signed by the LA organizing committee andDepartment of Homeland Security (DHS) in February 2020, but it will not be involved in the Games' funding, covering only the aforementioned security costs.[45]
Casey Wasserman has insisted that there will be no issues with the federal government on obtaining visas for athletes, security and delivery at the144th IOC Session. Concerns were raised by IOC officials regarding travel bans and ongoing tensions within the US. Wasserman also stated they have received bipartisan support from all previous US presidents, along withDonald Trump. LA28 officials met with then President-elect Trump atMar-a-Lago and his administration pledged to help Los Angeles recover from thewildfires, and hold "the greatest games".[46][47][48] In July 2025, $1 billion in funding was earmarked for aHomeland Security Grant Program for federal security and planning costs as part of theOne Big Beautiful Bill Act.[49]
TheLos Angeles Memorial Coliseum (left) andSoFi Stadium (named "2028 Stadium" during the games) (right) will host the ceremonies, as well as the athletics and swimming events respectively.
The Coliseum underwent a major renovation and restoration program from 2017 to 2019.[61] A new press box,loge boxes, and club seats were installed.[62][63] Crypto.com Arena underwent renovations completed in 2024,[64] and theNBA'sLos Angeles Clippers opened a new arena inInglewood known asIntuit Dome in August 2024;[65] venue for basketball during the Games.[66]
To reduce costs and use more pre-existing facilities, LA28 announced changes to its venue plans in June 2024. The temporary aquatics venue that was scheduled to be built at USC'sDedeaux Field was scrapped, in favor of holding swimming at SoFi Stadium and artistic swimming in Long Beach. Diving was originally set for the historicLA84 Foundation/John C. Argue Swim Stadium (which was built for the 1932 Games) but was later changed to the Rose Bowl Aquatic Center in Pasadena due to cost and safety concerns in September 2025.[67] With a planned configuration for 38,000 spectators, SoFi Stadium will be the largest swimming venue in Olympic history. Equestrian will return toSanta Anita Park once again, as Arcadia had previously hosted the event in 1984, whilesoftball andcanoe slalom were moved to existing venues inOklahoma City,Oklahoma, instead of building new venues in Los Angeles County.[4][5][57]
The opening ceremonies will be held on July 14, 2028, and will be co-hosted by SoFi Stadium and the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. The Coliseum will host the closing ceremonies.[69] Filmmaker and media executivePeter Rice was named "head of ceremonies and content" for LA 2028, overseeing the ceremonies for both the Olympics and Paralympics. Wasserman did not specifically state a planned budget, but said that he would provide Rice with any resources he needs, explaining 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 andHollywood is a big piece of that, but we better knock people's socks off."[70]Ben Winston will serve as executive producer and creative director, alongside veteran Olympic and Paralympic ceremonies producer Scott Givens. The ceremony will be produced by FulFive, a new joint-venture production company betweenFulwell 73 and FiveCurrents.[71]
The concept of using both stadiums had been discussed by the Los Angeles bid committee as early as 2017; it proposed that aprologue to the opening ceremony could be held at the Coliseum (culminating with the launch of the final leg of the torch relay to Inglewood) with the rest of the protocol beingsimulcast from SoFi Stadium on screens, and the closing ceremony likewise beginning at SoFi Stadium and concluding at the Coliseum.[2]
Skateboarding(pictured),surfing, andsport climbing will be inducted into the core Olympic program, after being selected as discretionary sports at the previous two editions of the games.
The 2028 Summer Olympics is expected to include 353 medal events in 36 sports, an increase of 24 events and four sports over the2024 Summer Olympics;[72][73] this includes 31 mandatory "core" sports, and five optional sports that were proposed by the organizing committee to help improve local interest. The core program consists of the 28 core sports contested since2016, along with skateboarding,sport climbing, andsurfing—three sports that have been officially promoted to the core program after being contested as optional sports in 2020 and 2024.[74][75][76][77] The five optional sports will include the Olympic debuts offlag football (a non-contact variant ofgridiron football) andsquash, the return ofbaseball/softball for the first time since 2020, the return ofcricket for the first time since 1900, andlacrosse for the first time since 1908.[78][79]
Cricket will consist of men's and women's tournaments using theTwenty20 (T20) format, with six teams each.[80] Flag football will consist of men's and women's tournaments.[81] On May 20, 2025, theNational 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'splayers' union.[82][83] In November 2025, theCanadian Football League (whose regular season falls during the Olympics) announced a similar allowance.[84][85]
Lacrosse will utilize thelacrosse sixes format.[86] There have been calls from American and Canadian officials (including then-president and prime ministerJoe Biden andJustin Trudeau) to allow a special dispensation for theHaudenosaunee Nationals (formerly Iroquois Nationals) to compete in the Olympics, due to the historical significance of lacrosse to theHaudenosaunee people.World Lacrosse recognizes Haudenosaunee as a member and it has competed in world championships, but it does not have aNational Olympic Committee; its players could still theoretically play for the Canada or the United States teams, but most have stated that they would only play for Haudenosaunee.[86]
Of the 16 new disciplines proposed by existing Olympic sports,beach sprint rowing was the only one to be accepted by the IOC. It will replace thelightweight double sculls category, and consist of individual events for men and women as well as a mixed double sculls event.[87] Modern pentathlon is expected to employ a new format which replacesshow jumping withobstacle course racing.[75]
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 teamcompound archery (the discipline's Olympic debut), all-round artistic gymnastics, golf, and table tennis events. In sport climbing, the combinedboulder-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 thewomen's football (soccer) tournament would expand from 12 to 16 due to the increasing popularity of the sport.[88][89] The men's football tournament will be reduced from 16 to 12 teams, while themarathon 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.[90][72] On September 19, 2025, the IOC announced that one additional weightlifting weight class per gender would be contested.[91]
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.[92][93][94] On December 9, 2021, the IOC executive board proposed that skateboarding, sport climbing, and surfing, which all successfully debuted as optional sports at the2020 Summer Olympics, and returned in the same capacity in2024,[95][96] be promoted to the core program of the 2028 Summer Olympics to replaceboxing,modern pentathlon, andweightlifting, which were provisionally dropped from the program pending the resolution of governance issues, with the IOC setting a deadline of 2023:[77]
TheInternational Boxing Association (IBA) was suspended by the IOC in 2019 for governance, financial, and corruption issues, which resulted in boxing at the2020 and2024 Games being overseen by an external, IOC task force. Governance concerns increased following the election ofUmar Kremlev as its president in December 2020 due to his opposition to the independent appointment of judges and officials, and allegations of increasing Russian influence (including moving some of its operations to Russia, and his appointment of state-owned oil and gas companyGazprom as the organization's main sponsor in 2021). The IBA had also stifled attempts by candidates to challenge Kremlev's presidency, and lifted an IOC-recommended ban on Russian and Belarusian athletes (in response to theRussian invasion of Ukraine) in October 2022.[97] A competing governing body known asWorld Boxing was established in April 2023 by a consortium of national federations that had expressed concerns over the impact of the Russian invasion of Ukraine on the IBA, and the future of boxing as an Olympic event. In June 2023, the IOC executive board voted to strip the IBA of its recognition, citing a lack of progress since the original suspension.[98][99][100]
TheUnion Internationale de Pentathlon Moderne (UIPM) was seeking approval for its proposed replacement of show jumping in the modern pentathlon withobstacle course racing;[95][101][102][103] the campaign to replace riding was motivated primarily by incidents during thewomen's modern pentathlon at the 2020 Summer Olympics, which saw German team coachKim Raisner disqualified after she hit a horse that did not follow the instructions of jockeyAnnika Schleu.[104] The UIPM ratified the changes in November 2022, and they are expected to officially take effect for senior competition after the 2024 Summer Olympics.[101]
In August 2022, the LA Organizing Committee shortlisted nine proposed sports for consideration as optional events for these Olympics:baseball/softball,breaking (breakdance),cricket,flag football,karate,kickboxing,lacrosse,squash, andmotorsport.[105] On October 9, 2023, the Organizing Committee announced that they had officially submitted baseball/softball, cricket, flag football, lacrosse, and squash for consideration by the IOC.[103] All five sports were approved at the141st IOC Session in Mumbai, India.[78] The IOC also reinstated modern pentathlon and weightlifting for the core program, citing that the sports' governing bodies had made sufficient efforts in carrying out reforms.[74][75] The IOC withheld a decision on boxing due to the IBA's expulsion and insufficient reach by World Boxing;[74][75] in February 2025, the IOC granted provisional recognition to World Boxing, citing its progress on reach and commitments to integrity.[106][107][108]
On March 20, 2025, at the144th IOC Session in Greece, the IOC voted unanimously to approve a recommendation by the IOC Executive Board to reinstate boxing, with the event being sanctioned by World Boxing.[76]
Notwithstanding the approval of cricket by the IOC, USA Cricket is not currently certified as a national governing body by theUnited 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, and began a process to "reset" the organization to meet them.[109][110]
In order to facilitate use of SoFi Stadium for both the opening ceremonies and swimming, the scheduling of swimming and athletics events will be reversed. Athletics events will take place during the first week of the Games instead, during which SoFi Stadium will be reconfigured to uncover the pool in preparation for swimming competition during the second week. This will be the first time since the1968 Summer Olympics inMexico City that athletics competitions will take place in the first week of the Games.[4][5]
On July 13, 2025, the organizing committee published the first version of the competition schedule.[111][112][113][114] On November 12, 2025, an updated comprehensive competition schedule by event, outlining when every medal event will take place during the upcoming Olympic Games in Los Angeles, with details across all confirmed sports and venues.[115][116]
On September 1, 2020, the LA28 Organizing Committee unveiled the emblem for the 2028 Summer Olympics, featuring the characters "LA" and "28" in a stacked layout. The "A" in "LA" was designed to be interchangeable, with numerous variations created in collaboration with athletes, artists, designers, and celebrities, includingVanessa Bryant,Billie Eilish,Lilly Singh, andReese Witherspoon. Variants have also included designs honoring the1984 Summer Olympics "Stars in Motion" emblem and a French–U.S. flag version used during the handover celebration at theclosing of the Paris 2024 Games.[117][118]
Organizing committee chair Casey Wasserman stated that the variations were intended to "showcase our community's collective creativity and celebrate the diversity that makes us strong", reflecting a city that "defies a singular identity". Chief marketing officer Amy Gleeson said the emblem was designed to connect with an audience who will be in their 20s and 30s when the Games take place.[119][117]
The LA2028 OCOG partnered withNBCUniversal—owner of the U.S. media rights to the Olympics—to coordinate sponsorship sales for the Games. As part of the agreement and its sponsorship with theUnited States Olympic & Paralympic Committee (USOPC), NBCU parent companyComcast will be billed as a "Founding Partner" of LA 2028.[120] For the first time, the IOC will allow venues to keep its sponsored name naming rights, breaking the IOC's long-sacrosanct policy of keeping brand names off its arenas and stadiums. For exampleHonda Center will host volleyball in Anaheim, whileComcast has made a deal for the temporary naming of the venue that will host squash.[121][122]
On January 16, 2023, the IOC renewed its European pay television and streaming rights agreements withWarner Bros. Discovery through 2032, covering 49 European territories. Unlike the previous contract where corporate precursorDiscovery, Inc. was responsible for sublicensing them to broadcasters in each country, free-to-air rights packages were concurrently awarded to theEuropean Broadcasting Union (EBU) and its members, where each broadcaster would carry at least 200 hours of coverage of the 2028 Summer Olympics.[162]
In March 2025, Comcast and NBCUniversal announced that it had renewed itslong-running rights to the Olympic Games in the United States through 2036, under an agreement valued at US$3 billion. Aside from the extension, Comcast will be partnering with the IOC on providingOBS with support for in-venue distribution, as well as collaborating on digital advertising opportunities in the U.S. among others.[163][164]
^AB InBev cannot marketCorona Cero in the United States due toConstellation Brands having the rights to bottle the brand there. As a result, Michelob Ultra, which is bottled locally by its US subsidiaryAnheuser-Busch is used instead.
^"LA28 Medal Event program updates".la28.org. Los Angeles Organizing Committee for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games.Archived from the original on April 9, 2025. RetrievedApril 9, 2025.
^"LA28 OLYMPIC GAMES Daily Competition Schedule"(PDF).la28.org. Los Angeles Organizing Committee for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games. July 13, 2025.Archived(PDF) from the original on July 16, 2025. RetrievedJuly 14, 2025.