Russia at the Olympics


Russia, referred to by its formal name; the Russian Federation, by the International Olympic Committee, has competed at the modern Olympic Games on many occasions, but as different nations in its history. As the Russian Empire, the nation first competed at the 1900 Games, and returned again in 1908 and 1912. After the Russian revolution in 1917, and the subsequent establishment of the Soviet Union in 1922, it would be thirty years until Russian athletes next competed in the 1952 Summer Olympics. After the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia competed as part of the Unified Team in 1992, and finally returned once again as Russia at the 1994 Winter Olympics.
The Russian Olympic Committee was created in 1991 and recognized in 1993. The Soviet Union hosted the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, and the Russian Federation hosted the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.
In twelve appearances from 1994 to 2016, Russian athletes won a total of 422 medals at the Summer Olympic Games and another 120 at the Winter Olympic Games. Russia's 542 total medals, including 193 gold medals, are second behind only the United States in that timespan.
In 2017, Russia was suspended from competing at the Olympic Games due to the state-sponsored doping scandal. Russian athletes were allowed to participate in the 2018 Winter Olympics as the Olympic Athletes from Russia. They were also allowed to compete at the 2020 Summer Olympics and the 2022 Winter Olympics, representing the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC).
Amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the International Olympic Committee allowed Russian athletes to participate at the 2024 Summer Olympics and 2026 Winter Olympics as Individual Neutral Athletes (AIN).

Hosted Games

Russia has hosted the Games on two occasions. Moscow was the host of the 1980 Summer Games, when Russia was part of the Soviet Union. Sochi was the host of the 2014 Winter Games, as part of the Russian Federation.
GamesHost cityDatesNationsParticipantsEvents
1980 Summer OlympicsMoscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union19 July–3 August805,179203
2014 Winter OlympicsSochi, Krasnodar Krai, Russian Federation7–23 February882,87398

Participation

Combined medals

The Russian Federation, the Russian Empire, the Olympic Athletes from Russia, and the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) are sometimes combined outside of IOC sources. The Soviet Union is often combined with the post-union team that competed in 1992. Some sources combine the Soviet Union and Russia, despite the fact that many republics which subsequently gained or re-gained independence contributed to the medal tally of the USSR, and there are sources that combine all medals of RU1, URS, EUN, OAR, ROC and RUS. On 31 January 1992, the United Nations recognized, without objection, Russia as legal successor of the rights and obligations of the former Soviet Union, but this has no significance in medal tallies.
Neutral Russian athletes that competed as Individual Neutral Athletes (AIN) at the 2024 Summer Olympics and the 2026 Winter Olympics are also included in the table.
Medal counts:

Russia combined with precursors

''status after the 2024 Olympics''

Medal tables

Medals by Summer Games


Stripped Olympic medals

Due to doping violations, Russia has been stripped of 46 Olympic medals – the most of any country, four times the number of the runner-up, and 30% of the global total. It was the leading country in terms of the number of medals removed due to doping at the 2002 Winter Olympics, the 2006 Winter Olympics, the 2008 Summer Olympics, the 2012 Summer Olympics, 2014 Winter Olympics and the joint most at the 2004 Summer Olympics, the 2016 Summer Olympics, and the 2022 Winter Olympics.
OlympicsAthleteMedalEventRef
2002 Winter OlympicsOlga DanilovaGoldCross-country skiing, women's 5 km + 5 km combined pursuit
2002 Winter OlympicsOlga DanilovaSilverCross-country skiing, women's 10 km classical
2002 Winter OlympicsLarisa LazutinaGoldCross-country skiing, women's 30 km classical
2002 Winter OlympicsLarisa LazutinaSilverCross-country skiing, women's 15 km freestyle
2002 Winter OlympicsLarisa LazutinaSilverCross-country skiing, women's 5 km + 5 km combined pursuit
2004 Summer OlympicsIrina KorzhanenkoGoldAthletics, women's shot put
2004 Summer OlympicsSvetlana KrivelyovaBronzeAthletics, women's shot put
2004 Summer OlympicsOleg PerepetchenovBronzeWeightlifting, men's 77 kg
2006 Winter OlympicsOlga PylevaSilverBiathlon, women's individual
2008 Summer OlympicsRelay team GoldAthletics, women's 4 × 100 m relay
2008 Summer OlympicsRelay team
SilverAthletics, women's 4 × 400 m relay
2008 Summer OlympicsMaria AbakumovaSilverAthletics, women's javelin throw
2008 Summer OlympicsRelay team BronzeAthletics, men's 4 × 400 m relay
2008 Summer OlympicsYekaterina VolkovaBronzeAthletics, women's 3000 m steeplechase
2008 Summer OlympicsAnna ChicherovaBronzeAthletics, women's high jump
2008 Summer OlympicsKhadzhimurat AkkayevBronzeWeightlifting, men's 94 kg
2008 Summer OlympicsDmitry LapikovBronzeWeightlifting, men's 105 kg
2008 Summer OlympicsMarina ShainovaSilverWeightlifting, women's 58 kg
2008 Summer OlympicsNadezhda EvstyukhinaBronzeWeightlifting, women's 75 kg
2008 Summer OlympicsKhasan BaroyevSilverWrestling, men's Greco-Roman 120 kg
2008 Summer OlympicsTatyana LebedevaSilverAthletics, women's triple jump
2008 Summer OlympicsTatyana LebedevaSilverAthletics, women's long jump
2008 Summer OlympicsTatyana ChernovaBronzeAthletics, Women's heptathlon
2012 Summer OlympicsTatyana LysenkoGoldAthletics, women's hammer throw
2012 Summer OlympicsYuliya ZaripovaGoldAthletics, women's 3000 m steeplechase
2012 Summer OlympicsSergey KirdyapkinGoldAthletics, men's 50 km walk
2012 Summer OlympicsTatyana ChernovaBronzeAthletics, women's heptathlon
2012 Summer OlympicsDarya PishchalnikovaSilverAthletics, women's discus throw
2012 Summer OlympicsYevgeniya KolodkoSilverAthletics, women's shot put
2012 Summer OlympicsOlga KaniskinaSilverAthletics, women's 20 km walk
2012 Summer OlympicsApti AukhadovSilverWeightlifting, men's 85 kg
2012 Summer OlympicsAleksandr IvanovSilverWeightlifting, men's 94 kg
2012 Summer OlympicsNatalia ZabolotnayaSilverWeightlifting, women's 75 kg
2012 Summer OlympicsSvetlana TsarukayevaSilverWeightlifting, women's 63 kg
2012 Summer OlympicsRelay SilverAthletics, women's 4 × 400 m relay
2012 Summer OlympicsMariya SavinovaGoldAthletics, women's 800 m
2012 Summer OlympicsNatalya AntyukhGoldAthletics, women's 400 m hurdles
2012 Summer OlympicsRuslan AlbegovBronzeWeightlifting, Men's +105 kg
2014 Winter OlympicsAlexandr Zubkov, Alexey VoyevodaGoldBobsleigh, Two-man
2014 Winter OlympicsAlexandr Zubkov, Alexey Negodaylo, Dmitry Trunenkov and Alexey VoyevodaGoldBobsleigh, Four-man
2014 Winter OlympicsRelay team SilverBiathlon, Women's relay
2016 Summer OlympicsMikhail AloyanSilverBoxing, men's flyweight
2022 Winter OlympicsTeam event Gold → BronzeFigure Skating, Team event

2016–present partial ban

Russia was partially banned from participation at the 2016 Summer Olympics due to the state-sponsored doping scandal. Russian athletes were then allowed to participate in the 2018 Winter Olympics as the Olympic Athletes from Russia, and in both the 2020 Summer Olympics and the 2022 Winter Olympics as the Russian Olympic Committee athletes (ROC).
Amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the International Olympic Committee announced in January 2023 plans to have Russian athletes introduced as Individual Neutral Athletes at the 2024 Summer Olympics. The IOC also published a statement stating that it supported the return of Russian athletes, as long as they did not "actively" advocate for the war and as long as their flag, anthem, colors, and organizations were excluded. With the Russo-Ukrainian war extending into 2026, Russian athletes were also introduced as Individual Neutral Athletes at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Flag bearers