Ticket prices for 2026 Milan-Cortina Olympics in Italy range from $33 US to $3,000

Olympic and Paralympic tickets will be available to general public in April 2025

Image | winter-olympics-2026-milan-cortina-240429-1180

Caption: Local organizers announced Thursday more than half the tickets for the Winter Games in February 2026 are priced under 100 euros ($110 US). (Claudio Villa/Getty Images/File)

Ticket prices for the 2026 Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics range from 30 euros ($33 US) for men's and women's hockey preliminary games all the way up to nearly 3,000 euros ($3,300) for the most costly seats at the closing ceremony inside Verona's Arena, a large Roman amphitheatre.
The most expensive sports event is the men's hockey final with prices ranging from 450 to 1,400 euros ($500 to $1,545).
Local organizers announced Thursday more than 20 per cent of the tickets for the games in February 2026, are available for under 40 euros ($44) and more than half are priced at under 100 euros ($110).
Anyone interested in attending should register on the official ticketing platform, to enter a draw that will allocate specific time slots for purchasing tickets in the first phase of sales.
Ticket prices for the Winter Paralympics in March 2026, start at 10 euros ($11) for children under 14 with more than 200,000 tickets, about 90 per cent of the total, available for less than ($40) euros.
It's not necessary to register for a draw for Paralympics tickets, which go on sale in March 2025.
Starting in April 2025, both Olympic and Paralympic tickets will be available to the general public on a first-come, first-served basis, without the need to register in advance.
The 2026 Games will be held across a large swath of northern Italy, with ice sports in Milan, Alpine skiing in Bormio and Cortina, snowboard and freestyle in Livigno, Nordic sports in Val di Fiemme and biathlon in Anterselva.
Questions remain over whether the sliding centre in Cortina will be completed in time or if bobsled, luge and skeleton events will be moved to another track in Austria (Igls), Switzerland (St. Moritz) or New York (Lake Placid).