- Associated Press - Wednesday, June 24, 2026

LAUSANNE, Switzerland — It’s not Olympic prize money officially, but it is a significant amount of cash going directly to athletes after a Summer or Winter Games.

The International Olympic Committee pledged Wednesday to pay up to $140 million to athletes through the 2028 Los Angeles Summer Games by creating a fund for $10,000 grants for which they can apply after competing.

The IOC’s cash commitment came after growing calls were strongly resisted in recent years to pay prize money at the Olympics, and signaled another policy shift under its president Kirsty Coventry.



IOC member and former NBA star Pau Gasol announced the project that will first be open to nearly 2,900 athletes who competed at the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Games.

Around 11,000 athletes due to compete in 2028 at L.A. also can apply for grants totaling about $110 million after those Olympics, if they meet integrity criteria such as not testing positive for doping.

“This is a win for all of us,” said Gasol, who represents athletes on the 15-member IOC executive board, adding that it was “not prize money.”

The money allocated by the IOC is not dependent on an athlete continuing their career.

The cash promise was the signature issue of an IOC meeting setting a future strategy under its president Kirsty Coventry exactly one year after she formally took office.

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Gasol said the IOC had heard a consistent message during its strategy review: “Athletes want more direct support throughout their Olympic journey and beyond.”

The 42-year-old Coventry is a five-time Olympian and two-time swimming gold medalist for Zimbabwe. She was elected as the youngest president, and most recent former athlete, in the IOC’s modern history.

Paying prize money to Olympic medalists was a central policy for one of Coventry’s election opponents, World Athletics leader Sebastian Coe, who oversaw rewarding track and field champions at the 2024 Paris Olympics with $50,000.

“This is a historic moment for the movement and I’m absolutely delighted to be in the room when this has been announced,” Coe told his fellow IOC members, praising Coventry’s policy.

In Los Angeles, World Athletics is adding to its prize fund to pay silver and bronze medalists as well.

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Coventry restated two weeks ago her long-held belief that the IOC should not use its Olympic revenues to pay prize money to an elite tier of medalists.

That question to Coventry at an IOC news conference followed a fierce reaction by some athletes to her comments while on Olympic business in New Zealand last month that prize money would not be paid.

“The backlash was a little frustrating,” Coventry acknowledged Wednesday at a news conference, because the policy plan had still been confidential. “It is not something that just happened over the last few weeks.”

The IOC already funds a program called “Olympic Solidarity” that directs grants worth thousands of dollars to athletes from less-wealthy countries preparing to qualify for and co

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