• Loading stock data...
Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Surfing Thrills in 2024 Olympics, but Faces Funding Hurdles Until 2028

  • Surfing’s international organization won’t get the same millions as other Olympic sports until the next Summer Games.
  • The IOC distributed between $13 million and $39 million among sports federations after Tokyo.
Teahupo'o Tahiti Surfing
Manea Fabisch / Tahiti Tourisme

Surfing in Tahiti has proved to be one of the most captivating parts of the 2024 Olympics, from Colin Jost’s ongoing medical crises to a viral shot of a surfer suspended in midair.

But for all the buzz it’s creating, surfing still doesn’t get a full share of media-rights revenue, and it won’t until the 2028 Los Angeles Games.

The international federations of the different Olympic sports, known as the ASOIF, or Association of Summer Olympic International Federations, all receive a cut of revenue from broadcast rights at the Games. The total pot was $540 million in Rio and Tokyo, and the ASOIF asked the International Olympic Committee for at least $596 million in Paris. It’s a fair ask, because the IOC made $3.1 billion in TV rights from the Tokyo Games. More popular sports like swimming, track, and gymnastics get a bigger cut (World Athletics got $39 million after Tokyo), and revenue is divvied up by tiers down to the least popular sports (rugby, golf, and modern pentathlon got $12.98 million apiece from Tokyo).

None of the new sports in Tokyo received any of the broadcast revenue because they were added through a new, expedited process, according to surfing magazine The Inertia. But the International Surfing Association got only $2.7 million from the IOC to carry it over from Tokyo to Paris, The Inertia reported. That’s at least a step up from the “hundreds of thousands” of dollars the federation made before its Olympic debut, its president Fernando Aguerre told Bloomberg.

Ahead of Paris, the ASOIF amended its rules in 2022 so that full members (those who receive broadcast revenue) need to have competed in the three more recent Summer Games. That set back surfing’s share of the rights to 2028.

The sport will now enter another multiyear stretch when it’s technically an Olympic sport but doesn’t get the same resources. Compare that to FIFA, which on top of its ASOIF cash injection from the Olympics, will get broadcast revenue from the men’s and women’s World Cups and Club World Cups. Surfing’s deals with NBCUniversal and Globo aren’t quite as lucrative.

“We will continue to do the best we can with the modest resources at our disposal to self-fund the organization, but at least we have the certainty that at the LA28 Olympics we will be part of the revenue distribution, which is important,” Aguerre told The Inertia in the fall.

At Home in Cali

The next Games should also be the first time surfers get a traditional Olympic experience. Team USA surfer John John Florence told Front Office Sports his team didn’t stay in the Olympic Village in Tokyo due to distance, and Tahiti is nearly 10,000 miles from Paris, with surfers shacked up in local residents’ homes or aboard a cruise ship. 

Given Southern California’s multitude of surfing options, including World Surf League favorite Lower Trestles in San Clemente, Calif., it’s likely surfers will finally join the festivities in 2028.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

All the Sports Figures in the Latest Epstein Emails

The DOJ released millions of new records Friday.

NBC Sports Parent Earnings Slip As Subscriber Numbers Slide

The NBC Sports parent company again touts its live-rights portfolio.

Featured Today

Feb 1, 2026; Santa Clara, CA, USA; New England Patriots players arrive prior to Super Bowl LX at San Jose Mineta International Airport.

Private Equity Has Reached the Super Bowl

The Patriots are one of four NFL teams with PE investment.
University of Southern California
January 31, 2026

College Athletic Departments Are Wooing Recruits With Content Studios

Schools are creating content studios to win recruits and donor dollars.
Dec 25, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; Denver Nuggets forward Spencer Jones (21) reacts against the Minnesota Timberwolves during the second half at Ball Arena
January 30, 2026

Spencer Jones Is Having a Moment in the NBA—and on LinkedIn

The Nuggets forward and Stanford grad is a prolific poster and investor.
Tim Jenkins
January 24, 2026

How One NFL Pass Turned Into a Career on YouTube

Tim Jenkins missed the NFL. He took his football IQ to YouTube.

NFL’s Latest Pro Bowl Experiment: Indoors, Smaller Field—and Crowd

The league dramatically retools its all-star showcase once again.
February 3, 2026

NFLPA Chief Says Players Have ‘No Appetite’ for 18th Game

The league is making a growing push for an expanded schedule.
exclusive
February 3, 2026

RedZone’s Scott Hanson Explains His Credential Snafu at NFL Radio Row

The RedZone host left his pass with an assistant after opening night.
Sponsored

From Kobe Bryant to Tom Brady: Mike Repole’s Billion-Dollar Playbook

Mike Repole shares an inside look into building brands & working with star athletes.
Jan 11, 2026; Lecanto, Florida, United States; Richard T. Lee and Bjorn Hellgren are sprayed with Champagne after taking the top two spots in the LIV Golf Black Diamond Ranch Propmotions golf tournament at Black Diamond Ranch.
February 3, 2026

LIV Golf Finally Awarded World Ranking Points Ahead of 2026 Season

LIV wasn’t pleased with the new development.
The second day of the NFL Draft presented by Bud Light at the Draft Theater Friday, April 25, 2025, outside of Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wisconsin. Wm. Glasheen USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin
February 3, 2026

Pittsburgh Draft Organizers Expect Up to 700K Fans

A two-site event plan will lean in to the city’s unique setting.
February 2, 2026

Goodell on Epstein-Linked Owner, Belichick Snub, and Bad Bunny

The commissioner says the league “will follow the facts” regarding Steve Tisch.
February 2, 2026

Goodell: NFL Must ‘Make Progress’ After No Black Head Coach Hires

There were a record-tying 10 head coach vacancies this year.