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Looking for the latest 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics medal count? Below is the updated table and the Feb. 15 results moving the standings right now.

2026 Winter Olympics medal count (Milano Cortina) — live updates

Last updated: Sunday, Feb. 15, 2026 at 9:41 a.m. ET
Top takeaway: Norway has stretched its lead to 11 gold medals and 22 total medals, while host Italy sits at 6 gold (19 total) and Team USA is at 5 gold (17 total) as another wave of finals hits the standings.

Biggest movers today

Norway: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo led Norway to men’s 4×7.5km relay gold, part of Norway’s surge to 11 gold / 22 total in the overall table.

Italy: Federica Brignone won women’s giant slalom gold, her second gold of these Games, helping Italy keep pace in the chase pack.

Sweden: Martin Ponsiluoma won men’s 12.5km biathlon pursuit gold, a big single-gold swing in a sport that can reshuffle the Top 10 quickly.

What’s next (next 12 hours): More medals are still coming across alpine, biathlon and snow sports — the kinds of sessions where one country can stack podiums and jump multiple spots fast.

Updated 2026 Winter Olympics medal count (Top 10)

(Standard display: gold-first, then silver, then bronze.)

Rank
Country
Gold
Silver
Bronze
Total

1
Norway
11
4
7
22

2
Italy
6
3
10
19

3
United States
5
8
4
17

4
Sweden
5
4
1
10

5
France
4
7
3
14

6
Austria
4
6
3
13

7
Germany
4
5
4
13

8
Netherlands
4
4
1
9

9
Switzerland
4
2
3
9

10
Japan
3
5
8
16

Team USA check: United States — 5 gold, 8 silver, 4 bronze (17 total).

Note: Some trackers sort by total medals instead of gold-first. This table reflects the Reuters medal totals at the time of update, displayed in gold-first order.

Norway’s separator is still simple: more gold, more total

Even when Italy hangs close on volume, Norway keeps winning the “default sort” battle most readers see first: gold medals. With 11 gold, Norway is controlling the top line of the medal table — and it also leads in overall total medals (22).

That combination matters for search because fans often bounce between “total medals” graphics and gold-first standings. Right now, Norway is winning both views.

Klæbo’s relay win adds another Norway gold — and another historic note

The relay was a headline Norway moment, with Klæbo anchoring the men’s 4×7.5km team to gold, and in the process reaching a record ninth career Olympic gold medal.

It’s also why Norway’s lead is expanding: these Nordic events can deliver table-changing golds in a hurry.

Italy’s Brignone double keeps the host push alive

Italy’s chase got another major boost when Federica Brignone completed a home-snow double by taking giant slalom gold after her earlier super-G win.

For medal-count readers, this is exactly the kind of result that keeps the host narrative relevant: one Alpine gold can swing the day’s medal-table conversation even if Norway is still out front.

Medal count FAQ

How is the Olympic medal table ranked?
Most standings are shown gold-first, then silver, then bronze, although some sites emphasize total medals.

Who leads the 2026 Winter Olympics medal count right now?
As of 9:41 a.m. ET on Feb. 15, Norway leads with 11 gold medals and 22 total medals.

When does the medal count update?
We refresh after major medal finals — especially when new golds hit the standings and the top cluster shifts.

Erik Anderson is an award-winning sports journalist covering the NBA, MLB and NFL for Heavy.com. He also focuses on the trading card market. His work has appeared in nationally-recognized outlets including The New York Times, Associated Press , USA Today, and ESPN. More about Erik Anderson

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