Sporting calendars in 2026 promise an electric mix of global showpieces, annual classics and the domestic leagues that keep fans hooked year-round. From the biggest multi-sport gatherings to the Grand Slams and top domestic competitions, here’s a clear guide to the major events to watch next year.
Global multi-sport events
- 2026 Winter Olympics — Milan Cortina (Italy)
The Winter Games arrive in Italy early in the year, bringing alpine drama and winter-sport stars into the spotlight. Expect high-octane action across skiing, skating and snow disciplines.
- 2026 FIFA World Cup — USA, Canada & Mexico
Football’s biggest party returns in the summer. This expanded tournament will deliver headline fixtures across North America and will be one of the year’s unmissable sporting spectacles.
- 2026 Commonwealth Games — Victoria (Australia)
Commonwealth nations will gather for a packed programme across familiar and emerging sports. It’s always a great stage for rising talent and established stars alike.
- 2026 Asian Games — Nagoya (Japan)
Asia’s biggest multi-sport festival showcases continental rivalries and Olympic-calibre performances in a wide range of events.
Tennis — the four Grand Slams
The Grand Slams remain constant highlights of the year and are essential viewing for any sports fan:
- Australian Open — January
- French Open (Roland Garros) — Late May to early June
- Wimbledon — Late June to early July
- US Open — August to September
Each Slam brings its own atmosphere: the heat of Melbourne, clay-court drama in Paris, the grass-court theatre of London, and the hard-court intensity in New York.
Cricket highlights and annual leagues
For cricket fans, 2026 will be a full year of formats and fixtures. The international calendar will run alongside high-profile franchise tournaments, providing plenty of drama:
- Indian Premier League (IPL) — the usual April–May window, centre-stage for marquee signings and T20 fireworks.
- Big Bash League (BBL) — Australia’s summer T20fest, featuring international stars and rising local talent.
- Caribbean Premier League (CPL), Pakistan Super League (PSL) and other domestic T20 competitions — keep the short-form excitement going throughout the year.
- Full international seasons — bilateral series, Test tours and white-ball assignments will fill the calendar between leagues.
Expect selectors and team owners to juggle workloads carefully — 2026 will be as much about player management as it is about big scores and match-winning spells.
Football beyond the World Cup
- Domestic leagues — the 2025–26 seasons for the Premier League, La Liga, Serie A, Bundesliga and others will conclude in spring 2026.
- UEFA Champions League 2025–26 — knockout rounds and the final will provide top-club drama in the spring.
Rugby, golf and other internationals
- Six Nations — northern hemisphere rugby rivals clash in early 2026.
- Rugby Championship — southern hemisphere test series during the mid-year window.
- Major golf events — the four Majors continue to define the season for golf fans.
Motorsports and cycling
- Formula 1 — the 2026 season promises further evolution in technology and the usual globe-trotting calendar.
- Tour de France — July’s three-week battle remains a headline event for cycling fans.
- Other Grand Tours — Giro d’Italia and Vuelta a España keep the pro-cycling storylines alive.
Basketball, American football and baseball
- NBA — the 2025–26 season and playoffs will create fresh rivalries and highlight superstar performances.
- NFL — the 2025 season will build to the Super Bowl in early 2026, the annual spectacle for American football.
- MLB — a full season of baseball, playoff drama and the World Series in the autumn.
What to watch for as a sports fan
- Big global stages: The Winter Olympics and FIFA World Cup will dominate headlines and bring cross-sport buzz.
- Franchise power: Leagues such as the IPL and Big Bash will continue to shape short-format cricket and generate global interest.
- Continental pride: Events like the Asian Games and Commonwealth Games spotlight emerging stars and national programmes.
- Season-long narratives: League campaigns, Grand Slams and tour seasons create storylines that build over months — worth following for the full payoff.
2026 will be a packed year for sport. Whether you follow cricket closely or prefer the Winter Olympics or football’s summer spectacle, there will be plenty of moments to savour, argue about and remember.