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2026 Asian Games
Multi-sport event in Aichi and Nagoya, Japan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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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.
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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]
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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

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. The Paloma Mizuho Stadium will host the ceremonies and athletics events, Nippon Gaishi Hall is scheduled to be the venue for both gymnastics and water polo, 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.Some aquatic events were originally scheduled to be held at the Nagoya Rainbow Pool, but with less than three years to go, OCA pointed out that the facilities did not meet the latest World Aquatics regulations.[10] After discussions, it was decided to move the swimming events to Tokyo Aquatics Centre and the equestrian events to the Tokyo Equestrian Park, the water polo was also moved to the Rainbow Pool.[11][12]
Nagoya
Aichi Prefecture
Outlying venues
Gifu Prefecture
Shizuoka Prefecture
Tokyo
Kansai region
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

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
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Broadcasting
In January 2025, the AINAGOC mentioned the "Host Broadcaster's Work" in a Q&A session. This indicates that a host broadcaster will be appointed to manage the primary coverage of the Games. The Nagoya International Exhibition Hall will serve as the Main Media Centre (MMC), which will include the Main Press Centre (MPC) and the International Broadcast Centre (IBC).[17]
Broadcasting rights
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The Games
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Sports
2026 Asian Games Sports Programme [18] |
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Core Sports
32 sports from the 2024 Summer Olympics + 11 other sports and disciplines.
Five regional sports that were nominated by each region of the Olympic Council of Asia:
- Wushu (East Asia)
- Sepak takraw (Southeast Asia)
- Kabaddi (South Asia)
- Kurash (Central Asia)
- Jujitsu (West Asia)
Three sports that were part of the 2024 Summer Olympics and are not part of the core Asian Games program:
Three sports proposed by the Olympic Council of Asia:
A final decision on the inclusion of cricket was 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.[25][26][27][28] On 28 April, the organizing committee approved the inclusion of cricket and mixed martial arts to the programme, following a request from OCA. In addition, open water swimming was removed from the programme.[19]
Ceremonies
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Participation
All 45 National Olympic Committees who are members of the Olympic Council of Asia are expected to send delegations.
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See also
- Asian Games celebrated in Japan
- 2026 Asian Para Games
References
External links
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