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How the opening ceremony Parade of Nations country order works for the 2026 Winter Olympics

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Viewers from around the world will be tuning in Friday as the 2026 Winter Olympics kick off, watching as nearly 3,000 athletes from countries around the world gather for the opening ceremony’s Parade of Nations. 

Athletes, usually wearing their nation’s official uniforms, will march in, grouped by country. Each delegation will be led by flagbearers. For Team USA, speedskater Erin Jackson and bobsledder Frank Del Duca were chosen to serve as flagbearers.

The Olympic cauldron will also be lit using the Olympic torch at the opening ceremony. This year, there will be two cauldrons, one in Milan and one in Cortina, the two host cities in northern Italy. 

How is the order of countries in the opening ceremony’s Parade of Nations decided?

The order of countries in the Parade of Nations changes from year to year, with just one constant: Greece always enters first as it is the birthplace of the Games. 

After Greece, countries enter in alphabetical order based on the language of the country hosting the Games. In Italian, Japan is spelled “Giappone,” and Hungary is “Ungheria,” meaning that Japan will enter before Hungary, even though Hungary comes before Japan in the English alphabet. 

There are a few exceptions to the alphabetical order. The final country to enter is the host country. 

The penultimate country to enter is the nation hosting the next Games. In this case, because it’s the Winter Games, France will enter just before Italy because the 2030 Winter Games will be in the French Alps. 

While the lineup of nations often includes an Olympic Refugee Team, there will be no Olympic Refugee Team taking part in the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games.

AIN, Individual Neutral Athletes — the term for athletes from Russia and Belarus participating in the Olympics — will not participate in the opening ceremony parade, according to the International Olympic Committee.

How many countries are in the Parade of Nations?

Officially, there are no countries in the Parade of Nations. Rather, athletes from National Olympic Committees – the governing bodies that represent their nations in the Olympic Movement — are considered participants. 

There are 206 National Olympic Committees, but fewer participate in the Winter Olympics than in the Summer Games — usually around 90. This year, 92 are expected to participate in the Milano Cortina Games.

History of the opening ceremony and the Parade of Nations 

The modern Olympics began in 1896, with the Parade of Nations introduced at the 1908 London Games, according to Mark McDowell, a tour guide at the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Museum. In the years since, the Parade of Nations has become an integral part of the opening ceremony. 

“They worked the balance between national pride and coming together as people of a global world and competing together peacefully,” McDowell said.

Swedish athletes, dressed in white and led by dignitaries in ceremonial uniforms, at the inaugural Parade of Nations at the 1908 Summer Olympics in London, on April 27, 1908.

Topical Press / Hulton Archive / Getty Images / Topical Press Agency


The structure of the opening ceremony has largely remained the same over the years, but there have been some notable changes. In the 1920s, athletes marched with their equipment, carrying skis and skates with them, according to the Olympics. That’s no longer the case.

It was also in 1928 that the tradition of the Greek delegation of athletes marching first was introduced.

One big change has been the scale of the ceremony, McDowell said. Today’s Games have athletes representing many more countries than the earlier Olympics. 

The Parade of Nations for the Summer and Winter Olympics are structurally similar, but the Summer Games typically have more athletes because there are more sports during that competition. Athletes are also more bundled up during the Winter Games opening ceremony. 

All athletes in the Games are invited to participate, but not all do, McDowell said. It can be physically demanding to be on your feet for an hours-long ceremony the day before competing in a sport. 

But for many, being part of the Parade of Nations is a point of pride. 

“Many of the U.S. athletes say the opening ceremony, the Parade of Nations, is the biggest lasting impact of the games,” McDowell said. “That sense of pride, camaraderie and going out there for your country is just something that’s hard to replicate.”

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