10 of the biggest non-football international events in 2026

The 2026 FIFA World Cup and other football tournaments inevitably hog global headlines for the upcoming year, but it is equally defined by an extraordinary slate of other major sports. With mega-events spread across every continent, 2026 shapes up as one of the most packed and significant sporting years of the modern era.

Here are some of the biggest non-football events set to define 2026.

Winter Olympics & Paralympics

February 6-22 & March 6-15
For the first time since 2006, Italy returns to the Olympic and Paralympic stage as Milan-Cortina hosts the world’s premier winter multi-sport spectacles. The Olympics will debut ski mountaineering as an official medal sport, while the Paralympics are projected to be among the largest in history by participation, reflecting the continued evolution of the winter programmes.

 

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ICC T20 World Cup (Men & Women)

February 7-March 8 & June 12-July 5
India and Sri Lanka host the men’s tournament, while England and Wales take charge of the women’s counterpart. With cricket now confirmed for the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles as well as other major multi-sport events, both T20 competitions serve as critical benchmarks for the sport’s next global expansion phase.

World Baseball Classic

March 5-17
Following its dramatic global breakthrough in 2023, the World Baseball Classic returns as the sport’s true international showcase. Shohei Ohtani and Japan enter as defending champions against an even deeper field led by the United States, Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Mexico and South Korea. Crucially, Major League Baseball player participation is again expected to be near full strength, reinforcing the tournament’s legitimacy as a true world championship.

 

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World Team Table Tennis Championships

April 28-May 10
London hosts the centenary edition exactly 100 years after staging the inaugural event in 1926, the same year the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) was founded. China enter once more as overwhelming favourites: the men’s team have won 23 titles, while the women’s team have lost only twice since 1975. However, as what we have seen from recent WTT events, Chinese players are not unbeatable and the likes of Japan, South Korea, Germany and France could be David to China’s Goliath.

UFC White House

June 14
Possibly the most ambitious crossover between global sport, politics and entertainment in modern sports history, the UFC’s proposed MMA spectacle has been publicly confirmed by both US President Donald Trump and UFC CEO Dana White. The fight card has yet to be confirmed, but world-class fighters are expected to vie for a place in the historic event.

Nations Championship

July 4-November 29
The debut edition of the Nations Championship represents the most sweeping structural reform in modern international rugby union. The 12-team competition unites the six Six Nations teams (England, France, Ireland, Italy, Scotland and Wales), the four Rugby Championship sides (New Zealand, Australia, South Africa and Argentina), plus invited unions Japan and Fiji.

Commonwealth Games

July 23-August 2
Originally awarded to Australia’s Victoria before being cancelled by its state government in 2023 due to spiralling costs, the 2026 edition arrives in Glasgow under compressed circumstances. Only 10 sports are set to be contested, while major staples such as badminton, table tennis, gymnastics and field hockey have been dropped. Despite the reduced scope, the Games still carry deep historical and sporting weight.

FIH Hockey World Cup (Men & Women)

August 15-30
For the third time in FIH Hockey World Cup history, both men’s and women’s tournaments take place concurrently in the same host nations as Belgium and the Netherlands welcome the world’s best field hockey teams.

 

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Asian Games & Para Games

September 19-October 4 & October 18-24
Japan hosts the Asian Games for the third time after Tokyo 1958 and Hiroshima 1994, and hosts the Para Games for the first time. Staged across Aichi Prefecture and Nagoya, the Asian Games program combines all 32 core Olympic sports alongside a vast set of additional disciplines including wushu, kabaddi, sepak takraw, kurash, jujitsu, dancesport, surfing, cricket, esports, MMA and padel. Meanwhile, 18 sports are expected to he held for the Para Games.

Rugby League World Cup (Men, Women & Wheelchair)

October 15-November 15
As in 2021, the men’s, women’s and wheelchair tournaments will again be staged simultaneously. From 2026 onward, however, the three competitions will diverge into separate cycles after financial and logistical concerns cancelled the planned 2025 edition. As a result, this edition co-hosted by Australia, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea will be the final time fans are able to experience all three World Cups as a single global festival.

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