Alpine Skiing at the 2026 Winter Olympics Schedule, Timings, and Medal Table

Alpine skiing is always one of the most dramatic parts of the Winter Games, and the Milano Cortina 2026 edition keeps that tradition alive. Speed events, technical races, and combined competitions are spread across two iconic Italian venues: Stelvio Ski Centre and Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre.

From the first downhill training run to the final slalom, every day on the mountain has a clear rhythm: morning course inspections, intense race runs, and small gaps for athletes to reset. This guide brings together the full alpine skiing schedule, timings in CET, venues, and a ready-to-use medal table layout that can be updated once results start coming in.

Alpine skiing at the 2026 Winter Olympics

Alpine skiing venues and events at Milano Cortina 2026

The alpine skiing program for 2026 is divided between two main venues:

  • Stelvio Ski Centre – Traditionally used for men’s speed and power events, including downhill, Super-G, and parts of the combined.
  • Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre – Known for technical and women’s events, such as downhill, Super-G, giant slalom, and slalom.

The key disciplines featured in this schedule include:

  • Downhill (men’s and women’s)
  • Team combined events (downhill + slalom segments)
  • Super-G
  • Giant slalom
  • Slalom

Training sessions are built into the timetable so racers can learn the track, adjust their lines, and tune their equipment before the medals are decided.


Alpine skiing at the 2026 Winter Olympics schedule and timings (CET)

All times below are in Games Time (CET) as referenced in the official timetable. Training runs and race sessions are listed with their start times and venues.

Detailed day-by-day schedule

Date (Feb 2026)Time (CET)EventVenueType
Wed 4 Feb11:30Men’s Downhill – 1st official trainingStelvio Ski CentreTraining
Thu 5 Feb11:30Men’s Downhill – 2nd official trainingStelvio Ski CentreTraining
11:30Women’s Downhill – 1st official trainingTofane Alpine Skiing CentreTraining
Fri 6 Feb11:30Men’s Downhill – 3rd official trainingStelvio Ski CentreTraining
11:30Women’s Downhill – 2nd official trainingTofane Alpine Skiing CentreTraining
Sat 7 Feb11:30Men’s DownhillStelvio Ski CentreRace
11:30Women’s Downhill – 3rd official trainingTofane Alpine Skiing CentreTraining
Sun 8 Feb11:30Women’s DownhillTofane Alpine Skiing CentreRace
Mon 9 Feb10:30Men’s Team Combined DownhillStelvio Ski CentreRace segment
11:30Women’s Downhill – 4th official trainingTofane Alpine Skiing CentreTraining
14:00Men’s Team Combined SlalomStelvio Ski CentreRace segment
Tue 10 Feb10:30Women’s Team Combined DownhillTofane Alpine Skiing CentreRace segment
14:00Women’s Team Combined SlalomTofane Alpine Skiing CentreRace segment
Wed 11 Feb11:30Men’s Super-GStelvio Ski CentreRace
Thu 12 Feb11:30Women’s Super-GTofane Alpine Skiing CentreRace
Sat 14 Feb10:00Men’s Giant Slalom – Run 1Stelvio Ski CentreRace run
13:30Men’s Giant Slalom – Run 2Stelvio Ski CentreRace run
Sun 15 Feb10:00Women’s Giant Slalom – Run 1Tofane Alpine Skiing CentreRace run
13:30Women’s Giant Slalom – Run 2Tofane Alpine Skiing CentreRace run
Mon 16 Feb10:00Men’s Slalom – Run 1Stelvio Ski CentreRace run
13:30Men’s Slalom – Run 2Stelvio Ski CentreRace run
Wed 18 Feb10:00Women’s Slalom – Run 1Tofane Alpine Skiing CentreRace run
13:30Women’s Slalom – Run 2Tofane Alpine Skiing CentreRace run

This layout helps fans clearly see:

  • When each alpine skiing event starts
  • Which discipline is taking place on a given day
  • Which venue is in action at a specific time

Understanding training days vs medal days

If you look closely at the schedule, there is a natural build-up from training to medal events:

  • 4–6 February are dominated by men’s and women’s downhill training runs. These days are crucial for athletes to understand the snow conditions, adjust skis, and pick out race lines.
  • 7–8 February bring the headline downhill races:
    • Men’s downhill on 7 February at Stelvio
    • Women’s downhill on 8 February at Tofane
  • 9–10 February focus on the team combined events, where athletes must handle both a speed section (downhill) and a technical section (slalom) on the same day.
  • 11–12 February are dedicated to Super-G, another high-speed discipline with fewer gates than giant slalom but more than downhill.
  • 14–18 February cover the technical events:
    • Giant slalom for men (14th) and women (15th)
    • Slalom for men (16th) and women (18th)

For spectators planning their viewing, this means early Games are all about raw speed, while the second half brings more technical, gate-heavy races where precision and rhythm matter as much as courage.

Follow the Full Winter Olympics Schedule 2026.


Alpine skiing medal table at the 2026 Winter Olympics

Even though the schedule is fixed, the medal results will only become clear once each event is completed. A simple and clean alpine skiing medal table helps track which nations are performing strongly across the different disciplines.

You can use a structure like the one below and update it as events finish:

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1
2
3
4
5

A medal table like this allows you to:

  • See which nations excel in alpine skiing over the full program
  • Compare the performance between speed-focused teams and those strong in technical events
  • Keep track of total medals without needing to scan every individual result

Until the races are complete, the cells can be left blank or marked with placeholders; once each event finishes, the counts can be updated in real time.


Quick reference: key alpine skiing days to follow

For viewers and fans who just want the big highlights, here is a compact list of must-follow alpine skiing dates from the timetable above:

  • 7 February – Men’s downhill at Stelvio Ski Centre (classic speed event)
  • 8 February – Women’s downhill at Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre
  • 9–10 February – Men’s and women’s team combined events (downhill + slalom on the same day)
  • 11 February – Men’s Super-G at Stelvio
  • 12 February – Women’s Super-G at Tofane
  • 14–15 February – Men’s and women’s giant slalom (two runs each day)
  • 16 February – Men’s slalom (two runs)
  • 18 February – Women’s slalom (two runs)

These dates cover the heart of alpine skiing at the 2026 Winter Olympics, from the first medal chances in downhill to the final slalom runs that close out the program.