• Primary host region: The 2030 Games will take place across the northern and southern French Alps, particularly in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes and Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur regions, from February 1 to February 17. This extensive arrangement seeks to bring together diverse mountain communities beneath a single Olympic umbrella for the first time.

  • Key competition hubs: Competitions will be split across four principal clusters, incorporating Haute-Savoie, Savoie, Briançon, and the Mediterranean city of Nice. While the mountainous terrain will accommodate snow sports, Nice will serve as the "ice pole" for disciplines such as hockey, figure skating and curling.

  • Sustainability and infrastructure: The French proposal places considerable emphasis on environmental accountability by utilising existing or temporary facilities for 93% of the competitions. Numerous venues are legacy sites from the 1992 Albertville Games, minimising the requirement for costly new developments.

  • Swedish bid: Sweden emerged as a leading bidder, putting forward a Stockholm-centred proposal that would have used existing world-class facilities nationwide. Despite enjoying robust public and governmental backing, the IOC eventually declined the bid, leaving Swedish representatives disappointed.

  • Swiss proposal: Switzerland originally pursued the 2030 Games with a nationwide decentralised hosting framework. While they were not selected for 2030, the IOC was sufficiently impressed by their concept that they awarded Switzerland "privileged dialogue" to stage the 2038 Winter Games instead.

  • Tactical approach: Salt Lake City, USA, was initially a 2030 contender but indicated a clear preference for the 2034 slot to avoid clashing with the 2028 Los Angeles Summer Games. The IOC accommodated by granting them the 2034 Games simultaneously with the 2030 announcement.

  • Withdrawn interest: Various initial expressions of interest from cities such as Sapporo (Japan) and Vancouver (Canada) ultimately withdrew from contention. These pullouts were predominantly driven by insufficient local public backing or apprehensions about the long-term financial burden of hosting.

  • Environmental concerns: The selection process for 2030 was notably complicated, as the IOC postponed the final decision to assess the effects of rising temperatures on winter sports. This led to a new "targeted dialogue" strategy, focusing on areas with reliable snow conditions and established sustainability frameworks.

  • READ MORE: When the 2026 Winter Olympics end and how to watch the closing ceremony

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