
See how many gold, silver and bronze medals Team USA won at the 2026 Winter Olympics and where the U.S. finished in the final standings.
The 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics officially kicked off on February 6 and wrapped on February 22 after more than two weeks of intense competition. Countries from around the world battled for podium spots across figure skating, alpine skiing, snowboarding, ice hockey, speed skating and more, with athletes carving up the ice and charging down the slopes in pursuit of gold.
With recognizable stars like Lindsey Vonn returning to the Olympic stage and breakout athletes delivering headline-making performances, fans tuned in across NBC and Peacock to follow every event. Now that the Games have concluded, many are wondering which country finished on top of the medal standings.
Below, find out the updated Olympic medal count here for Team USA, Canada, Italy and more countries.
Team USA has the most athletes — 235, including three alternates — in this year’s Winter Olympics, followed by Canada, which has 211 athletes, per CBS News. Host country Italy has the third most athletes with 195.
The following consists of the updated medal count for the 2026 Olympics at the time of publication:
Gold Medal:
Norway — 18 gold medals
United States — 12 gold medals
Netherlands — 10 gold medals
Italy — 10 gold medals
Germany — 8 gold medals
France — 8 gold medals
Sweden — 8 gold medals
Switzerland — 6 gold medals
Austria — 5 gold medals
Japan — 5 gold medals
Canada — 5 gold medals
China — 5 gold medals
South Korea — 3 gold medals
Australia — 3 gold medals
Great Britain — 3 gold medals
Czechia — 2 gold medals
Slovenia — 2 gold medals
Spain — 1 gold medal
Brazil — 1 gold medal (first gold in Winter Olympics history)
Kazakhstan — 1 gold medal
Silver Medal:
Norway — 12 silvers
United States — 12 silvers
Germany — 10 silvers
Italy — 6 silvers
Netherlands — 7 silvers
France — 5 silvers
Sweden — 3 silvers
Japan — 3 silvers
Canada — 3 silvers
China — 2 silvers
South Korea (Republic of Korea) — 1 silver
Poland — 1 silver
Czechia — 2 silvers
New Zealand — 1 silver
Denmark — 1 silver
Latvia — 1 silver
Estonia — 1 silver
Georgia — 1 silver
Bronze Medal
Norway — 11
Italy — 14
United States — 9
Japan — 12
Canada — 9
Netherlands — 3
Germany — 8
France — 6
Sweden — 4
Switzerland — 8
China — 6
Republic of Korea (South Korea) — 3
Austria — 5
Poland — 1
New Zealand — 1
Finland — 5
Latvia — 1
Belgium — 1
Spain — 2
Slovenia — 1
Great Britain — 1
Australia — 2
Brazil — 1
Czech Republic (Czechia) — 1
The following list contains the dates for each Winter Olympic sport:
Ice Hockey
February 5–22: Women’s tournament followed by the men’s competition
Figure Skating
Snowboarding
February 6–21: Slopestyle, halfpipe, snowboard cross, big air and parallel giant slalom
Alpine Skiing
February 7–18: Downhill, slalom and combined alpine skiing take place at the Stelvio and Tofane venues
Speed Skating
February 7–21: Speed skating races, including distance and sprint events
Luge
February 7–12: Luge runs in men’s, women’s, doubles and team relay
Skeleton
February 13–20: Men’s and women’s skeleton heats and medal events
Bobsleigh
February 14–22: Two-man, two-woman and four-man events
Ski Mountaineering
February 8–21: This sport makes its Olympic debut
Closing Ceremony
February 22: Final medal events conclude the Games
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