International Olympic Committee
The Lausanne-based nonprofit that governs the global Olympic Games, overseeing 206 national committees and distributing over US$7 billion in broadcasting and sponsorship revenue per four-year cycle.
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What it is
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) is a private nonprofit association registered under Swiss law and headquartered in Lausanne, Switzerland. Founded on June 23, 1894, it is the supreme authority of the Olympic Movement, responsible for organising the Summer, Winter, and Youth Olympic Games. The IOC recognises 206 National Olympic Committees (NOCs), making it represented in every UN member state and several territories, and accredits dozens of International Federations (IFs) that govern individual sports. The IOC's Session, comprising over 100 elected members serving in a personal capacity, is the highest decision-making body. Day-to-day governance rests with a 15-member Executive Board led by the president and four vice-presidents. Since 2009, the IOC has held permanent observer status at the United Nations General Assembly.
History
Pierre de Coubertin, a French educator, and Demetrios Vikelas, a Greek writer, co-founded the IOC at a congress in Paris on June 23, 1894. The first modern Olympic Games followed in Athens in 1896. For the first half of the 20th century the committee operated as a small self-selecting body of amateur sports enthusiasts. Avery Brundage's tenure as president from 1952 to 1972 enforced strict amateurism even as television money mounted. Juan Antonio Samaranch of Spain, who served from 1980 to 2001, transformed the organisation into a commercial powerhouse, opening the Games to professional athletes and landing major broadcasting deals with US networks. A bribery scandal tied to the Salt Lake City, Utah bid for the 2002 Winter Games prompted ethics reforms and expelled several members. Thomas Bach of Germany took office in 2013 and served the maximum 12-year term, steering Olympic Agenda 2020 and Olympic Agenda 2020+5, which reshaped host-city selection and embedded sustainability criteria into the bidding process.
Current state
Kirsty Coventry of Zimbabwe was elected the 10th IOC president on March 20, 2025, at the 144th IOC Session held in Greece, and took office on June 23, 2025. At 41, she is the youngest IOC president in the organisation's 131-year history and the first woman and the first African to hold the role. A seven-time Olympic swimming medalist who later served as Zimbabwe's minister of sport and youth affairs, her mandate runs through 2033. The IOC's financial position is strong: the 2021-2024 quadrennium generated US$7.7 billion in commercial revenue, with approximately 90 percent redistributed to the sporting movement. Total IOC assets reached roughly US$6.97 billion by end of 2025. Broadcasting rights and The Olympic Partners (TOP) sponsorship programme account for about 61 percent of revenue. US$7.5 billion is already locked in for 2025-2028, with US$6.9 billion confirmed for 2029-2032. The Olympic Charter, the IOC's governing legal text, was amended in June 2026 to strengthen political neutrality rules and introduce a framework for programme additions from the 2032 Brisbane Games onward.
Relationships
The IOC sits at the top of a federated ecosystem it governs but does not fully control. NOCs independently select and send national teams. IFs set technical rules and run their own World Championships outside the IOC's direct authority. The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), a joint creation of the IOC and national governments, operates with nominal autonomy, though debates over its funding and independence surface at every Games cycle. Host cities are bound through multi-party contracts among the IOC, the city government, and the relevant NOC. The IOC's management of Russian state-sponsored doping, exposed by the McLaren Report in 2016, has been its sharpest governance test in recent memory: the organisation navigated three consecutive Games cycles of sanctions and appeals to the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne, and ultimately allowed a contingent of individual neutral athletes from Russia and Belarus to compete at the Paris 2024 Games.
What to watch
Los Angeles hosts the 2028 Summer Games from July 14 to 30, 2028, the city's third Olympics and first since 1984. Brisbane, Australia, is scheduled for the 2032 Summer Games from July 23 to August 8, 2032. The June 2026 Charter amendments introduced a new sport-inclusion framework, setting up intense lobbying by IFs seeking placement on the 2032 programme. Coventry's handling of the ongoing Russia question, her approach to Olympic cost control as venue and climate-related pressures grow, and whether the IOC formally integrates esports as part of the Olympic programme are the defining institutional questions of her presidency.