How to watch, schedule of events, and everything else you need to know about the Winter Games

The 2026 Winter Olympics are taking place in Italy this year, with all events taking place in Milan and the Alpine city of Cortina. This year marks the fourth time Italy has hosted the Winter Games; Most recently, Turin hosted in 2006. Of the 16 sports appearing at the Winter Olympics, there will be 15 favorites, including figure skating, alpine skiing, curling, ice hockey, speedskating, snowboarding, freestyle skiing and ski jumping, and an entirely new sport, snow mountaineering. (Will it be as big a hit as the new addition to the 2024 Summer Games, Breaking? That remains to be seen.)

Live coverage of every event at the Olympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026 will be available to stream on Peacock – although due to the time difference between Italy and the US, you’ll have to be up (or stay awake) until 2AM or 3AM ET to watch many events live. Primetime replays and select live coverage will air on NBC. The Games will officially begin with the opening ceremony on February 6, 2026.

What else you need to know about watching the 2026 Winter Olympics.

How to watch the 2026 Winter Olympics

Image for Mini Product Module
Image for Mini Product Module

Dates: February 6 – February 22

TV Channel: nbc

Streaming: Peacock

When are the 2026 Winter Olympics?

The Winter Olympics will officially begin with the opening ceremony on February 6, although some events will begin as early as February 4). The Milan Cortina 2026 Games will run until February 22. The closing ceremony of the 2026 Winter Olympics will take place on 22 February at the Arena di Verona.

Where are the Winter Olympics this year?

The 2026 Winter Olympics will be held in northern Italy, primarily in Milan and the alpine mountain resort town of Cortina d’Ampezzo, where events such as bobsled, skeleton, alpine skiing, curling, para snowboard and more will take place.

What channel are the Olympics on?

The 2026 Winter Olympics will air on NBC and stream live on Peacock.

How to watch the 2026 Winter Olympics without cable

Image for small product module
For $11/month, an ad-supported Peacock subscription lets you live stream sports and events broadcast on NBC, including the 2026 Winter Olympics, Super Bowl LX, and more. Plus, you’ll get access to thousands of hours of shows and movies, including beloved sitcoms parks and Recreation And Office, Every Bravo show and more.

For $17 monthly you can upgrade to an ad-free subscription that includes live access to your local NBC affiliate (not just during designated games and events) and the ability to download select titles for offline viewing.

Image for Mini Product Module

When is the Winter Olympics opening ceremony?

The opening ceremony of Milano Cortina 2026 will be held on February 6, 2026. Due to time differences, the ceremony will begin at approximately 2 p.m. ET/11 a.m. PT.

Winter Olympics time difference

This year’s Olympic Games are in Italy, which is 6 hours ahead of US Eastern Time. This means some events will start bright and early for US viewers, and live coverage is likely to end around 4pm ET each day. NBC will have primetime replays of the biggest moments each night.

2026 Winter Olympics TV/Streaming Schedule:

Eastern all the time.

Wednesday, February 4 (Preliminary competition begins)

  • Curling (Round Robin) – 2AM (Peacock – Live)

  • Curling (Round Robin) – 8am (Peacock – Live)

  • Alpine Skiing Training – 3-6am (Peacock – Live)

Thursday, February 5

  • Curling (Round Robin) – 2AM (Peacock – Live)

  • Curling (Round Robin) – 8am (Peacock – Live)

  • Freestyle Skiing Qualification – 4am (Peacock – Live)

  • Snowboard Qualification – 6am (Peacock – Live)

Friday, February 6 – Opening Ceremony

  • Curling (Round Robin) – 2AM (Peacock – Live)

  • Figure Skating (Team Event Short Program) – 6 am (Peacock – Live)

  • Snowboard Slopestyle Qualification – 6am (Peacock – Live)

  • Speedskating (beginning distance) – 8 am (MORE – LIVE)

  • Opening Ceremony – 2 PM (Peacock – Live)

  • Opening Ceremony – 8 pm (NBC – Primetime)

Saturday, February 7

  • Alpine Skiing (Men’s Downhill) – 3 AM (Peacock – Live)

  • Snowboard Slopestyle Final – 6am (Peacock – Live)

  • Speedskating Medals – 7am ​​(Peacock – Live)

  • Figure Skating (Team Free Event) – 8 a.m. (Peacock – Live)

  • Hockey (group play starts) – 10 am (Peacock – Live)

Sunday, February 8

  • Alpine Skiing (Women’s Downhill) – 3 AM (Peacock – Live)

  • Freestyle Skiing Moguls Final – 6am (Peacock – Live)

  • Figure Skating (Pairs Short Program) – 8am (Peacock – Live)

  • Luge (single run) – 9am (Peacock – Live)

  • Hockey (Group Game) – 12 noon (Peacock – Live)

Monday, February 9

  • Biathlon Sprint – 5am (Peacock – Live)

  • Speedskating Medals – 7am ​​(Peacock – Live)

  • Figure Skating (Pairs Free Skate – Medals) – 8 a.m. (Peacock – Live)

  • Curling (Round Robin) – 9am (Peacock – Live)

  • Skeleton (Heat 1-2) – 11am (Peacock – Live)

Tuesday, February 10

  • Alpine Skiing (Giant Slalom) – 4 am (Peacock – Live)

  • Snowboard Halfpipe Qualification – 6am (Peacock – Live)

  • Figure Skating (Men’s Short Program) – 8 am (Peacock – Live)

  • Curling (Round Robin) – 10am (Peacock – Live)

Wednesday, February 11

  • Nordic Joint – 4am (Peacock – Live)

  • Freestyle Skiing Aerial Final – 6am (Peacock – Live)

  • Figure Skating (Men’s Free Skate – Medals) – 8 a.m. (Peacock – Live)

  • Speedskating Medals – 11am (Peacock – Live)

Thursday, February 12

  • Alpine Skiing (Slalom) – 4 am (Peacock – Live)

  • Snowboard Halfpipe Finals – 6am (Peacock – Live)

  • Figure Skating (Ice Dance Rhythm Dancing) – 8am (Peacock – Live)

  • Curling (Medal Round Qualifier) ​​- 10am (Peacock – Live)

Friday, February 13

  • Biathlon Quest – 5am (Peacock – Live)

  • Figure Skating (Ice Dance Free Dance – Medals) – 8 a.m. (Peacock – Live)

  • Skeleton Final – 10am (Peacock – Live)

  • Hockey (Quarterfinals) – 12 noon (Peacock – Live)

Saturday, February 14

  • Alpine Skiing (Team Combined) – 4 am (Peacock – Live)

  • Cross-Country Skiing Distance Race – 6am (Peacock – Live)

  • Figure Skating (Women’s Short Program) – 8 am (MORE – Live)

  • Speedskating Medals – 11am (Peacock – Live)

Sunday, February 15

  • Snowboard Cross Finals – 6am (Peacock – Live)

  • Figure Skating (Women’s Free Skate – Medals) – 8 a.m. (Peacock – Live)

  • Luge Relay – 11am (Peacock – Live)

  • Hockey (Semi-finals) – 1 pm (Peacock – Live)

Monday, February 16

  • Freestyle Skiing Dual Moguls – 6am (Peacock – Live)

  • Cross-Country Skiing Team Sprint – 8 a.m. (Peacock – Live)

  • Curling (Medal Play) – 10am (Peacock – Live)

Tuesday, February 17

  • Biathlon Relay – 5am (Peacock – Live)

  • Speedskating Team Pursuit – 7am ​​(Peacock – Live)

  • Hockey (Placement Games) – 12 noon (Peacock – Live)

Wednesday, February 18

  • Alpine Skiing (Final Technical Event) – 4am (Peacock – Live)

  • Freestyle Skiing Big Wind – 6am (Peacock – Live)

  • Curling (Gold Medal Match) – 9am (Peacock – Live)

Thursday, February 19

  • Cross-Country Skiing Marathon – 6 am (Peacock – Live)

  • Snowboard Parallel Program – 8am (Peacock – Live)

  • Hockey (Bronze Medal Game) – 1 pm (MORE – Live)

Friday, February 20

  • Biathlon mass start – 6 am (Peacock – live)

  • Speedskating Final Medals – 8am (Peacock – Live)

  • Figure Skating Ceremony – 1 pm (Peacock – Live)

Saturday, February 21

  • Men’s Hockey Gold Medal Game – 12 noon (Peacock – Live)

  • Women’s Hockey Gold Medal Game – 3 PM (Peacock – Live)

  • Men’s Hockey Gold Medal Game – 8 p.m. (NBC – Primetime)

Sunday, February 22 – closing ceremony

  • Cross-Country Skiing Final Event – ​​6am (Peacock – Live)

  • Closing Ceremony – 2 PM (Peacock – Live)

  • Finale – 8 PM (NBC – Primetime)

More ways to watch the 2026 Winter Olympics on NBC

While Peacock is the best way to watch the Winter Olympics, there are other options if you want to limit yourself to the NBC broadcast. As our guide to the best live TV streaming services for cutting cable notes, YouTube TV and Hulu + Live TV are both excellent options, but you may want to skip Fubo until the service resolves its contract dispute with Comcast, as the NBC channels aren’t available right now.

Image for Mini Product Module
Image for Mini Product Module
Image for Mini Product Module



<a href

Leave a Comment