2026 Asian Games

Multi-sport event in Aichi and Nagoya, Japan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2026 Asian Games

The 2026 Asian Games (2026年アジア競技大会), also known as 20th Asian Games (第20回アジア競技大会) and Aichi-Nagoya 2026 (愛知/名古屋2026), will be a multi-sport event celebrated around the Aichi Prefecture in Japan from 19 September to 4 October 2026. The prefecture capital Nagoya will be the epicenter of the events.[2] Nagoya will be the third Japanese city to host the Asian Games, after Tokyo in 1958 and Hiroshima in 1994. The event is set to return to its traditional 4-year cycle, after the 2022 edition were postponed to 2023 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Quick Facts Host city, Motto ...
XX Asian Games
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Host cityAichi Prefecture and Nagoya, Japan
MottoImagine One Asia (Japanese: ここで、ひとつに, romanized: Koko de, hitotsu ni)[1]
Nations45
Events42 sports (expected)
Opening19 September 2026
Closing4 October 2026
Opened byEmperor Naruhito (expected)
Main venueNew Paloma Mizuho Stadium
Websiteaichi-nagoya2026.org/en/
Summer
Winter
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Bidding process

The Olympic Council of Asia (OCA) welcomed the joint proposal from Aichi prefecture and its capital Nagoya to host the Games at their annual general assembly session in Da Nang, Vietnam, on 25 September 2016.[3][4] The joint bid proposal almost did not happen due to financial differences between the two interested parties; these were resolved between 2015 and 2016, allowing the joint bid to be accepted.[5] The OCA originally planned to choose the 2026 host city in 2018, but brought the planning date forward due to the intensity of the region's sporting calendar, including the next two Winter Olympic Games and FIFA World Cups between 2018 and 2022 (held in Pyeongchang and Beijing, as well in Russia and Qatar) and the next Summer Olympic Games (scheduled for Tokyo in 2020).[6]

More information City, NOC ...
2026 Asian Games bidding results
City NOC Round 1
Aichi and Nagoya[7] Japan Unanimous
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Development and preparations

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Costs

The city of Nagoya received an estimate of roughly ¥85 billion ($560 million) in costs from the Aichi Prefecture government for the event, 30% of which is expected to be covered by sponsorships and other revenue, while the remainder is planned to be split on a 70–30 basis between Nagoya and Aichi Prefecture.[5][8] In February 2023, the cost ballooned to ¥140.5 billion ($927 million).[9]

Venues

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Nagoya Civic General Gymnasium
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Okazaki Chuo Sogo Park
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Toyota Stadium

In addition to Nagoya, events will be spread across 16 other cities across Aichi Prefecture and some venues in the Greater Tokyo Area that also hosted events during the 2020 Summer Olympics. Originally the plans are that Paloma Mizuho Stadium will host both the opening and closing ceremonies and athletics events, Nippon Gaishi Hall is scheduled to be the venue for both gymnastics and aquatics, the Vantelin Dome Nagoya will be used for baseball, and the Toyota Stadium will serve as the main venue for football.[3]

Cycling events are scheduled to be held at the Izu Velodrome in Izu, Shizuoka Prefecture. Aquatic events were originally scheduled to be held at the Rainbow Pool (Nagoya City General Gymnasium), but with less than three years to go, the OCA pointed out that the facilities did not meet the latest World Aquatics regulations.[10] After discussions, it was decided to abandon the Rainbow Pool and hold the event at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre in Kōtō, Tokyo, in the Greater Tokyo Area. Similarly, equestrian events were moved from Aichi Prefectural Forest Park to the Tokyo Equestrian Park in Setagaya, Tokyo, and water polo was moved from Kasugai City Heated Pool to the Rainbow Pool.[11][12]

Nagoya

More information Venue, Sports ...
Venue Sports Capacity Status
New Paloma Mizuho Stadium Ceremonies, Athletics 35,000 New
Nippon Gaishi Hall Gymnastics 10,000 Existing
Aquatics (water polo) 3,500
Downtown Nagoya Athletics (race walk) Temporary
Kinjō-futō Station Square 3x3 Basketball
Aichi International Arena Breaking 15,000 New
Judo
Wrestling
Obata Ryokuchi Urban Forest Cycling (mountain bike) Existing
Nagoya Velodrome Cycling (BMX racing)
CS Asset Minato Soccer Stadium Football 6,700
Paloma Mizuho Rugby Stadium 11,900
Rugby Sevens
Aichi Country Club Higashiyama Course Golf
Aichi Budokan Ju-jitsu 1,500
Kurash
Wushu
Paloma Mizuho Arena Sepak Takraw 1,200
Nagoya International Exhibition Hall Sport Climbing 5,900 Temporary
Nagoya Kinjo Pier Arena Squash 2,600 Existing
Nagoya City Higashiyama Park Tennis Center Tennis 4,000
Soft Tennis
Nagoya City Trade and Industry Centre Weightlifting
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Aichi Prefecture

More information Venue, City ...
Venue City Sports Capacity Status
Shinmaiko Marine Park Chita Aquatics (marathon swimming) Temporary
Okazaki Central Park Okazaki Archery
Ichinomiya City Municipal Gymnasium Ichinomiya Badminton 2,000 Existing
Okazaki Chuo Sogo Park Baseball Stadium Okazaki Baseball 20,000
Toyohashi Municipal Baseball Stadium Toyohashi 15,895
Anjō Softball Ground Anjō Softball 2,500
Wing Arena Kariya Kariya Basketball 2,376
Nishio City General Gymnasium Nishio Boxing 2,900
Miyoshi Lake Miyoshi Canoeing (sprint)
Yahagi River Canoe Slalom Course Toyota Canoeing (slalom)
Shinshiro Road Cycling Course Shinshiro Cycling (road) Temporary
Aichi Sky Expo Tokoname Cycling (BMX freestyle)
Esports Existing
Fencing
Skateboarding Temporary
Toyota Stadium Toyota Football 44,692 Existing
Wave Stadium Kariya Kariya 2,602
Kasugai City General Gymnasium Kasugai Handball 3,000
Toyoda Gosei Memorial Gymnasium Inazawa 3,500
Tōkai Citizens Gymnasium Tōkai Kabaddi 1,300
Toyohashi City General Gymnasium Toyohashi Karate 3,000
Taekwondo
Anjō Sports Park Anjō Modern Pentathlon 1,700
Kaiyoh Yacht Harbor Gamagōri Sailing Temporary
Triathlon
Aichi General Shooting Range Toyota Shooting Existing
Akabane Long Beach Tahara Surfing Temporary
Sky Hall Toyota Toyota Table Tennis 6,500 Existing
Okazaki Central Park General Gymnasium Okazaki Volleyball 4,673
Park Arena Komaki Komaki 5,000
Hekinan Ryokuchi Beach Court Hekinan Beach Volleyball Temporary
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Outlying venues

Gifu Prefecture
More information Venue, City ...
Venue City Sports Capacity Status
Gifu Nagaragawa Stadium Gifu Football 26,109 Existing
Gifu Prefectural Green Stadium Kakamigahara Field hockey 1,600
Nagaragawa International Regatta Course Kaizu Rowing
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Shizuoka Prefecture
More information Venue, City ...
Venue City Sports Capacity Status
Furuhashi Hironoshin Memorial Hamamatsu Swimming Centre Hamamatsu Aquatics (artistic swimming) 2,200 Existing
Izu Velodrome Izu Cycling (track) 3,600
Shizuoka Stadium Fukuroi Football 50,889
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Tokyo
More information Venue, Ward ...
Venue Ward Sports Capacity Status
Tokyo Aquatics Centre Kōtō Aquatics (diving, swimming) 10,000 Existing
Tokyo Equestrian Park Setagaya Equestrian 1,500
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Kansai region
More information Venue, City ...
Venue City Sports Capacity Status
Kyoto Stadium Kameoka, Kyoto Prefecture Football 21,600 Existing
Nagai Stadium Osaka, Osaka Prefecture 47,816
Kobe Universiade Memorial Stadium Kobe, Hyōgo Prefecture 35,910
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Marketing

Emblem

The emblem of the Games was unveiled during a ceremony on 1 April 2020. Each colour has its own meaning, with purple representing the iris laevigata, gold for Shachihoko, the golden tiger-fish roof ornaments which are the symbol of Nagoya Castle, and green representing environmental consciousness.[13]

Mascot

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Mascot of the 20th Asian Games, Honohon, at an event in Nagoya in September 2024

The mascot of the Games, Honohon (Japanese: ホノホン) was unveiled on 14 July 2024. Its design is based on the shachihoko.[14]

Motto

The official motto of the 2026 Asian Games, "Imagine One Asia" was announced on 1 April 2020 to mark six years before the opening ceremony.[1]

Sponsors

More information Sponsors of the 2026 Asian Games ...
Sponsors of the 2026 Asian Games[15]
Prestige Partners
Official Partners
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The Games

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Perspective

Sports

2026 Asian Games Sports Programme [17]
  • Aquatics
  •  Archery
  •  Athletics
  •  Badminton
  • Baseball
  • Basketball
  •  Boxing
  •  Breaking
  •  Canoeing
    • Slalom
    • Sprint
  •  Cycling
    • BMX
    • Mountain bike
    • Road
    • Track
  •  Equestrian
  •  Esports (11)
  •  Fencing
  •  Field hockey
  •  Football
  •  Golf
  •  Gymnastics
    • Artistic
    • Rhythmic
    • Trampoline
  •  Handball
  •  Ju-jitsu
  •  Judo
  •  Kabaddi
  •  Karate
  •  Kurash
  •  Mixed martial arts (6)
  •  Modern pentathlon
  •  Rowing
  •  Rugby sevens
  •  Sailing
  •  Sepak takraw
  •  Shooting
  •  Skateboarding
  •  Sport climbing
  •  Squash
  •  Surfing
  •  Table tennis
  •  Taekwondo
  • Tennis
    •  Soft tennis
    •  Tennis
  •  Triathlon
  • Volleyball
    •  Beach volleyball
    •  Volleyball
  •  Weightlifting
  •  Wrestling
  •  Wushu

Core Sports

32 sports from the 2024 Summer Olympics + 10 other sports and disciplines.

Five regional sports that were nominated by each region of the Olympic Council of Asia:

  1. Wushu (East Asia)
  2. Sepak takraw (Southeast Asia)
  3. Kabaddi (South Asia)
  4. Kurash (Central Asia)
  5. Jujitsu (West Asia)

Three sports that were part of the 2024 Summer Olympics and are not part of the core Asian Games program:

  1. Dancesport (Breakdancing)
  2. Roller sports (Skateboarding)
  3. Surfing

Two sports proposed by the Olympic Council of Asia:

  1. Esports[18][19][20]
  2. Mixed martial arts[21]

A final decision on the inclusion of cricket is scheduled for 2025, with the Asian Cricket Council having pushed for the bid and OCA President Randhir Singh "hopeful" for it. Its potential inclusion would act as the Asian qualifiers event for the 2028 Summer Olympics.[22][23][24][25]

Ceremonies

Participation

All 45 National Olympic Committees who are members of the Olympic Council of Asia are expected to send delegations.

More information Participating National Olympic Committees ...
Participating National Olympic Committees
  •  Afghanistan
  •  Bahrain
  •  Bangladesh
  •  Bhutan
  •  Brunei
  •  Cambodia
  •  China
  •  Hong Kong
  •  India
  •  Indonesia
  •  Iran
  •  Iraq
  •  Japan (host)
  •  Jordan
  •  Kazakhstan
  •  Kuwait
  •  Kyrgyzstan
  •  Laos
  •  Lebanon
  •  Macau
  •  Malaysia
  •  Maldives
  •  Mongolia
  •  Myanmar
  •  Nepal
  •  North Korea
  •  Oman
  •  Pakistan
  •  Palestine
  •  Philippines
  •  Qatar
  •  Saudi Arabia
  •  Singapore
  •  South Korea
  •  Sri Lanka
  •  Syria
  •  Chinese Taipei
  •  Tajikistan
  •  Thailand
  •  Timor-Leste
  •  Turkmenistan
  •  United Arab Emirates
  •  Uzbekistan
  •  Vietnam
  •  Yemen
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See also

References

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