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List of Olympic medalists in figure skating

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Figure skating records and statistics
Medal records
Other events
Highest scores statistics
Other records and statistics

Figure skating has been part of the Olympic Games since 1908 and has been contested at 26 Olympic Games. There have been 301 medals (101 gold, 100 silver, and 100 bronze) awarded to figure skaters representing 30 National Olympic Committees. Six events have been contested, but one, men's special figures, was discontinued after a single Olympics.

Canadian ice dancers Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir are the only figure skaters to win five Olympic medals (three gold medals and two silver medals). Swedish figure skater Gillis Grafström, Russian figure skater Evgeni Plushenko, and Japanese figure skaters Yuma Kagiyama and Kaori Sakamoto have each won four medals. The only skaters with three consecutive titles are Grafström in men's singles, Sonja Henie for Norway in women's singles, and Irina Rodnina from the Soviet Union in pair skating. Americans Nathan Chen and Alysa Liu, along with Canadians Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir, are the only skaters to win two gold medals in the same Olympics.

Medalists

Mikhail Shaidorov at the 2024 Grand Prix Final
Alysa Liu at the 2025 Skate America
Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara at the 2024 World Championships
Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron
From left to right: The reigning Olympic figure skating champions: Mikhail Shaidorov of Kazakhstan (men's singles); Alysa Liu of the United States (women's singles); Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara of Japan (pair skating); and Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron of France (ice dancing)

Men's singles

Men's event medalists
Year Location Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
1908 United Kingdom London Sweden Ulrich Salchow Sweden Richard Johansson Sweden Per Thorén [1]
1912 Sweden Stockholm Figure skating not contested at these Olympics
1920 Belgium Antwerp Sweden Gillis Grafström Norway Andreas Krogh Norway Martin Stixrud
1924 France Chamonix Sweden Gillis Grafström Austria Willy Böckl Switzerland Georges Gautschi [2]
1928 Switzerland St. Moritz Sweden Gillis Grafström Austria Willy Böckl Belgium Robert van Zeebroeck [3]
1932 United States Lake Placid Austria Karl Schäfer Sweden Gillis Grafström Canada Montgomery Wilson [4]
1936 Germany Garmisch-Partenkirchen Austria Karl Schäfer Germany Ernst Baier Austria Felix Kaspar [5]
1948 Switzerland St. Moritz United States Dick Button Switzerland Hans Gerschwiler Austria Edi Rada [6]
1952 Norway Oslo United States Dick Button Austria Helmut Seibt United States James Grogan [7]
1956 Italy Cortina d'Ampezzo United States Hayes Alan Jenkins United States Ronnie Robertson United States David Jenkins [8]
1960 United States Squaw Valley United States David Jenkins Czechoslovakia Karol Divín Canada Donald Jackson [9]
1964 Austria Innsbruck Germany Manfred Schnelldorfer France Alain Calmat United States Scott Allen [10]
1968 France Grenoble Austria Wolfgang Schwarz United States Timothy Wood France Patrick Péra [11]
1972 Japan Sapporo Czechoslovakia Ondrej Nepela Soviet Union Sergei Chetverukhin France Patrick Péra [12]
1976 Austria Innsbruck United Kingdom John Curry Soviet Union Vladimir Kovalev Canada Toller Cranston [13]
1980 United States Lake Placid United Kingdom Robin Cousins East Germany Jan Hoffmann United States Charles Tickner [14]
1984 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Sarajevo United States Scott Hamilton Canada Brian Orser Czechoslovakia Jozef Sabovčík [15]
1988 Canada Calgary United States Brian Boitano Canada Brian Orser Soviet Union Viktor Petrenko [16]
1992 France Albertville Unified Team at the Olympics Viktor Petrenko United States Paul Wylie Czechoslovakia Petr Barna [17]
1994 Norway Lillehammer Russia Alexei Urmanov Canada Elvis Stojko France Philippe Candeloro [18]
1998 Japan Nagano Russia Ilia Kulik Canada Elvis Stojko France Philippe Candeloro [19]
2002 United States Salt Lake City Russia Alexei Yagudin Russia Evgeni Plushenko United States Timothy Goebel [20]
2006 Italy Turin Russia Evgeni Plushenko Switzerland Stéphane Lambiel Canada Jeffrey Buttle [21]
2010 Canada Vancouver United States Evan Lysacek Russia Evgeni Plushenko Japan Daisuke Takahashi [22]
2014 Russia Sochi Japan Yuzuru Hanyu Canada Patrick Chan Kazakhstan Denis Ten [23]
2018 South Korea Pyeongchang Japan Yuzuru Hanyu Japan Shoma Uno Spain Javier Fernández [24]
2022 China Beijing United States Nathan Chen Japan Yuma Kagiyama Japan Shoma Uno [25]
2026 Italy Milan Kazakhstan Mikhail Shaidorov Japan Yuma Kagiyama Japan Shun Sato [26]

Men's special figures

Men's special figures was only included in one Olympic Games before being discontinued. The sole winner of the event was Russian Nikolai Panin, who gave his country its first ever Olympic gold medal.[27]

Men's special figures event medalists
Year Location Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
1908 United Kingdom London Russian Empire Nikolai Panin United Kingdom Arthur Cumming United Kingdom Geoffrey Hall-Say [1]

Women's singles

Women's event medalists
Year Location Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
1908 United Kingdom London United Kingdom Madge Syers German Empire Elsa Rendschmidt United Kingdom Dorothy Greenhough-Smith [1]
1912 Sweden Stockholm Figure skating not contested at these Olympics
1920 Belgium Antwerp Sweden Magda Julin Sweden Svea Norén United States Theresa Weld
1924 France Chamonix Austria Herma Szabo United States Beatrix Loughran United Kingdom Ethel Muckelt [2]
1928 Switzerland St. Moritz Norway Sonja Henie Austria Fritzi Burger United States Beatrix Loughran [3]
1932 United States Lake Placid Norway Sonja Henie Austria Fritzi Burger United States Maribel Vinson [4]
1936 Germany Garmisch-Partenkirchen Norway Sonja Henie United Kingdom Cecilia Colledge Sweden Vivi-Anne Hultén [5]
1948 Switzerland St. Moritz Canada Barbara Ann Scott Austria Eva Pawlik United Kingdom Jeannette Altwegg [6]
1952 Norway Oslo United Kingdom Jeannette Altwegg United States Tenley Albright France Jacqueline du Bief [7]
1956 Italy Cortina d'Ampezzo United States Tenley Albright United States Carol Heiss Austria Ingrid Wendl [8]
1960 United States Squaw Valley United States Carol Heiss Netherlands Sjoukje Dijkstra United States Barbara Roles [9]
1964 Austria Innsbruck Netherlands Sjoukje Dijkstra Austria Regine Heitzer Canada Petra Burka [10]
1968 France Grenoble United States Peggy Fleming East Germany Gabriele Seyfert Czechoslovakia Hana Mašková [28]
1972 Japan Sapporo Austria Beatrix Schuba Canada Karen Magnussen United States Janet Lynn [12]
1976 Austria Innsbruck United States Dorothy Hamill Netherlands Dianne de Leeuw East Germany Christine Errath [13]
1980 United States Lake Placid East Germany Anett Pötzsch United States Linda Fratianne West Germany Dagmar Lurz [14]
1984 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Sarajevo East Germany Katarina Witt United States Rosalynn Sumners Soviet Union Kira Ivanova [15]
1988 Canada Calgary East Germany Katarina Witt Canada Elizabeth Manley United States Debi Thomas [16]
1992 France Albertville United States Kristi Yamaguchi Japan Midori Ito United States Nancy Kerrigan [17]
1994 Norway Lillehammer Ukraine Oksana Baiul United States Nancy Kerrigan China Chen Lu [18]
1998 Japan Nagano United States Tara Lipinski United States Michelle Kwan China Chen Lu [19]
2002 United States Salt Lake City United States Sarah Hughes Russia Irina Slutskaya United States Michelle Kwan [20]
2006 Italy Turin Japan Shizuka Arakawa United States Sasha Cohen Russia Irina Slutskaya [21]
2010 Canada Vancouver South Korea Yuna Kim Japan Mao Asada Canada Joannie Rochette [22]
2014 Russia Sochi Russia Adelina Sotnikova South Korea Yuna Kim Italy Carolina Kostner [23]
2018 South Korea Pyeongchang International Olympic Committee Alina Zagitova International Olympic Committee Evgenia Medvedeva Canada Kaetlyn Osmond [24]
2022 China Beijing Russia Anna Shcherbakova Russia Alexandra Trusova Japan Kaori Sakamoto [25]
2026 Italy Milan United States Alysa Liu Japan Kaori Sakamoto Japan Ami Nakai [26]

Pairs

At the 1964 Olympics, Marika Kilius and Hans-Jürgen Bäumler of Germany, Debbi Wilkes and Guy Revell of Canada, and Vivian Joseph and Ronald Joseph of the United States placed second, third, and fourth, respectively. Two years later, Kilius and Bäumler's results were invalidated because the pair had signed a professional contract before the Olympics. The silver medals were re-allocated to Wilkes and Revell and the bronze medals to Joseph and Joseph. However, in 1987, the German team was re-awarded their silver medals after an appeal. In November 2014, the International Olympic Committee clarified that both the German and Canadian teams were the silver medalists, and the U.S. team were the bronze medalists.[29][30]

At the 2002 Winter Olympics, a controversy involving allegations of vote swapping and buying of votes of the French judge culminated in the judge's scores being discarded and Jamie Salé and David Pelletier of Canada, who had originally finished second, being awarded gold medals, with Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze of Russia, who originally finished first, being allowed to keep theirs.[31] An arrangement had allegedly been concocted whereby the French judge, Marie-Reine Le Gougne, was to award the gold medal to the Russian pairs team, while the Russian ice dance judge was to award the gold medal to the French ice dance team.[32] In April 2002, the International Skating Union (ISU) announced that Marie-Reine Le Gougne and Didier Gailhaguet, president of the French Federation of Ice Sports, had both been suspended for three years for their roles in the scandal and also prohibited from any official involvement with the 2006 Winter Olympics.[33][32]

Pairs' event medalists
Year Location Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
1908 United Kingdom London
  • German Empire
[1]
1912 Sweden Stockholm Figure skating not contested at these Olympics
1920 Belgium Antwerp
1924 France Chamonix [2]
1928 Switzerland St. Moritz [3]
1932 United States Lake Placid [4]
1936 Germany Garmisch-Partenkirchen [5]
1948 Switzerland St. Moritz [6]
1952 Norway Oslo [7]
1956 Italy Cortina d'Ampezzo [8]
1960 United States Squaw Valley [9]
1964 Austria Innsbruck
[34]
1968 France Grenoble [35]
1972 Japan Sapporo [12]
1976 Austria Innsbruck [13]
1980 United States Lake Placid [14]
1984 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Sarajevo [15]
1988 Canada Calgary [16]
1992 France Albertville [17]
1994 Norway Lillehammer [18]
1998 Japan Nagano [19]
2002 United States Salt Lake City
No silver medals awarded [20]
2006 Italy Turin [21]
2010 Canada Vancouver [22]
2014 Russia Sochi [23]
2018 South Korea Pyeongchang [24]
2022 China Beijing [25]
2026 Italy Milan [26]

Ice dance

Ice dance event medalists
Year Location Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
1976 Austria Innsbruck [13]
1980 United States Lake Placid [14]
1984 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Sarajevo [15]
1988 Canada Calgary [16]
1992 France Albertville [17]
1994 Norway Lillehammer [18]
1998 Japan Nagano [19]
2002 United States Salt Lake City [20]
2006 Italy Turin [21]
2010 Canada Vancouver [22]
2014 Russia Sochi [23]
2018 South Korea Pyeongchang [24]
2022 China Beijing [25]
2026 Italy Milan [26]

Team event

The team event is the newest Olympic figure skating event, first contested in the 2014 Games. It combines the four Olympic figure skating disciplines (men's singles, women's singles, pairs, and ice dance) into a single event; gold is awarded to the team that earns the most placement points.

The results of the 2022 team event were fraught with controversy. The medal ceremony originally scheduled for February 8 was delayed over what International Olympic Committee (IOC) spokesperson Mark Adams described as a situation that required "legal consultation" with the International Skating Union.[36] Several media outlets reported that the issue was over a positive test from December 2021 that showed the presence of trimetazidine in a sample given by Kamila Valieva from the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC),[37][38] which was officially confirmed on February 11. The Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA), under suspension from the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) since 2015[39] for its years of serving solely to hide the positive doping results of Russian athletes,[40][41] cleared Valieva on February 9, a day after the December test results were released and two months after the test. The IOC, WADA, and the ISU appealed the RUSADA's decision.[42]

On February 14, the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) ruled that Valieva be allowed to compete in the individual women's event, on grounds that preventing her from competing "would cause her irreparable harm in the circumstances",[43] though her gold medal in the team event was still under consideration. The favorable decision from the Court was made in part due to her age, as minor athletes were subject to different rules than adult athletes.[43][44] The IOC announced that the medal ceremony would not take place until the investigation was over and there was a concrete decision of whether to strip Russia of their medals.[45]

On January 29, 2024, the CAS disqualified Valieva for four years retroactive to 25 December 2021 for the positive test for trimetazidine, which they ruled constituted an anti-doping rule violation.[46] On 30 January 2024, the ISU, among other actions, subtracted Valieva's points from Russia's score without changing any other scores, and re-allocated the medals in the figure skating team event, upgrading the United States and Japan to gold and silver, respectively, while downgrading Russia to bronze.[47] The American and Japanese teams ultimately received their medals at a ceremony which took place on 7 August 2024 at the Jardins du Trocadéro during the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris.[48]

Team event medalists
Year Location Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
2014 Russia Sochi  Russia
Evgeni Plushenko
Yulia Lipnitskaya
Tatiana Volosozhar
Maxim Trankov
Ksenia Stolbova
Fedor Klimov
Ekaterina Bobrova
Dmitri Soloviev
Elena Ilinykh
Nikita Katsalapov
 Canada
Patrick Chan
Kevin Reynolds
Kaetlyn Osmond
Meagan Duhamel
Eric Radford
Kirsten Moore-Towers
Dylan Moscovitch
Tessa Virtue
Scott Moir
 United States
Jeremy Abbott
Jason Brown
Ashley Wagner
Gracie Gold
Marissa Castelli
Simon Shnapir
Meryl Davis
Charlie White
[49]
2018 South Korea Pyeongchang  Canada
Patrick Chan
Kaetlyn Osmond
Gabrielle Daleman
Meagan Duhamel
Eric Radford
Tessa Virtue
Scott Moir
International Olympic Committee OAR
Mikhail Kolyada
Evgenia Medvedeva
Alina Zagitova
Evgenia Tarasova
Vladimir Morozov
Natalia Zabiiako
Alexander Enbert
Ekaterina Bobrova
Dmitri Soloviev
 United States
Nathan Chen
Adam Rippon
Bradie Tennell
Mirai Nagasu
Alexa Scimeca Knierim
Chris Knierim
Maia Shibutani
Alex Shibutani
[50]
2022 China Beijing  United States
Nathan Chen
Vincent Zhou
Karen Chen
Alexa Knierim
Brandon Frazier
Madison Hubbell
Zachary Donohue
Madison Chock
Evan Bates
 Japan
Shoma Uno
Yuma Kagiyama
Wakaba Higuchi
Kaori Sakamoto
Riku Miura
Ryuichi Kihara
Misato Komatsubara
Tim Koleto
Russia ROC
Mark Kondratiuk
Kamila Valieva (DQ)
Anastasia Mishina
Aleksandr Galliamov
Victoria Sinitsina
Nikita Katsalapov
[51]
2026 Italy Milan  United States
Ilia Malinin
Alysa Liu
Amber Glenn
Ellie Kam
Daniel O'Shea
Madison Chock
Evan Bates
 Japan
Yuma Kagiyama
Shun Sato
Kaori Sakamoto
Riku Miura
Ryuichi Kihara
Utana Yoshida
Masaya Morita
 Italy
Daniel Grassl
Matteo Rizzo
Lara Naki Gutmann
Sara Conti
Niccolò Macii
Charlène Guignard
Marco Fabbri
[52]

Skaters who won multiple Olympic medals

Ice dancers Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir dancing on ice together.
Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir of Canada are the most decorated Olympic figure skaters, having won a total of five medals.
An ice dance couple performing a routine. The man, on the right, is dressed with a dark suit and holds his white-dressed partner by her waist and left hand.
Marina Klimova and Sergei Ponomarenko of the Soviet Union won bronze medals in 1984, silver in 1988, and gold in 1992.
Madison Chock and Evan Bates of the United States are the first in history to win two Olympic gold medals in the team events competition

Skaters who won the most Olympic medals

These skaters have won three or more Olympic medals.

Skaters who have won three or more Olympic medals
Skater Nation Event(s) Olympics Gold medal – first place Silver medal – second place Bronze medal – third place Total Ref.
Scott Moir  Canada Ice dance &
team event
2010, 2014, 2018 3 2 5 [53]
Tessa Virtue
Gillis Grafström  Sweden Men's singles 1920, 1924, 1928, 1932 3 1 4 [54]
Sonja Henie  Norway Women's singles 1928, 1932, 1936 3 3 [55]
Irina Rodnina[a]  Soviet Union Pairs 1972, 1976, 1980 3 3 [56]
Evgeni Plushenko  Russia Men's singles
& team event
2002, 2006, 2010, 2014 2 2 4 [57]
Evan Bates  United States Ice dance &
team event
2022, 2026 2 1 3 [58]
Madison Chock
Guillaume Cizeron[b]  France Ice dance 2018, 2022, 2026 2 1 3 [59]
[60]
Artur Dmitriev[c]  Unified Team
 Russia
Pairs 1992, 1994, 1998 2 1 3 [61]
[62]
Andrée Brunet  France Pairs 1924, 1928, 1932 2 1 3 [63]
Pierre Brunet
Nathan Chen  United States Men's singles
& team event
2018, 2022 2 1 3 [64]
Patrick Chan  Canada Men's singles
& team event
2014, 2018 1 2 3 [65]
Nikita Katsalapov[d]  Russia
 ROC
Ice dance &
team event
2014, 2022 1 1 2 4 [67]
[66]
Meryl Davis  United States Ice dance &
team event
2010, 2014 1 1 1 3 [68]
Meagan Duhamel  Canada Pairs &
team event
2014, 2018 1 1 1 3 [69]
Marina Klimova  Soviet Union
 Unified Team
Ice dance 1984, 1988, 1992 1 1 1 3 [70]
Kaetlyn Osmond  Canada Women's singles
& team event
2014, 2018 1 1 1 3 [71]
Sergei Ponomarenko  Soviet Union
 Unified Team
Ice dance 1984, 1988, 1992 1 1 1 3 [70]
Eric Radford  Canada Pairs &
team event
2014, 2018 1 1 1 3 [69]
Charlie White  United States Ice dance &
team event
2010, 2014 1 1 1 3 [68]
Zhao Hongbo  China Pairs 2002, 2006, 2010 1 2 3 [72]
Aljona Savchenko[e]  Germany Pairs 2010, 2014, 2018 1 2 3 [73]
[74]
Shen Xue  China Pairs 2002, 2006, 2010 1 2 3 [72]
Yuma Kagiyama  Japan Men's singles
& team event
2022, 2026 4 4 [75]
Kaori Sakamoto  Japan Women's singles
& team event
2022, 2026 3 1 4 [76]
Beatrix Loughran  United States Women's singles
& pairs
1924, 1928, 1932 2 1 3 [77]
Shoma Uno  Japan Men's singles
& team event
2018, 2022 2 1 3 [78]
  1. ^ Irina Rodnina won one gold medal with Alexei Ulanov (1972), and two gold medals with Alexander Zaitsev (1976, 1980).[56]
  2. ^ Guillaume Cizeron won one silver medal and one gold medal with Gabriella Papadakis (2018, 2022),[59] and one gold medal with Laurence Fournier Beaudry (2026).[60]
  3. ^ Artur Dmitriev won one gold medal and one silver medal with Natalia Mishkutionok (1992, 1994),[61] and one gold medal with Oksana Kazakova (1998).[62]
  4. ^ Nikita Katsalapov won one gold medal in the team event and one bronze medal in ice dance with Elena Ilinykh (2014),[66] and one silver medal in ice dance and one bronze medal in the team event with Victoria Sinitsina (2022).[67]
  5. ^ Aljona Savchenko won two bronze medals with Robin Szolkowy (2010, 2014),[73] and one gold medal with Bruno Massot (2018).[74]

Multiple gold medals

A male figure skater looks at the camera while performing a figure skating element on an outdoor ice rink.
Swedish Gillis Grafström is a three-time Olympic figure skating gold medalist in the men's singles event.

The only skaters with three consecutive titles are Gillis Grafström in men's singles, Sonja Henie in women's singles, and Irina Rodnina in pairs. The most consecutive titles in ice dance is two, which has only been achieved by Oksana Grishuk and Evgeny Platov. In addition, one women's singles skater, three men's singles skaters, and five pair skaters have earned consecutive titles. Two ice dancers and three pair skaters have earned non-consecutive titles.

Six skaters have won Olympic gold medals in multiple events. Evgeni Plushenko won gold in men's singles in 2006 and team event gold in 2014. Tatiana Volosozhar and Maxim Trankov were the first skaters to win multiple events at a single Olympics, winning in both pairs and the team event. Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir matched this feat four years later, earning golds in ice dance and the team event. Nathan Chen won gold in both men's singles and the team event in 2022.

Skaters who have won multiple Olympic gold medals
Skater Nation Event(s) Olympics A gold circle with a G in it. Ref.
Gillis Grafström  Sweden Men's singles 1920, 1924, 1928 3 [54]
Sonja Henie  Norway Women's singles 1928, 1932, 1936 3 [55]
Scott Moir  Canada Ice dance &
team event
2010, 2018 3 [53]
Irina Rodnina[a]  Soviet Union Pairs 1972, 1976, 1980 3 [56]
Tessa Virtue  Canada Ice dance &
team event
2010, 2018 3 [53]
Evan Bates  United States Team event 2022, 2026 2 [58]
Ludmila Belousova  Soviet Union Pairs 1964, 1968 2 [79]
Andrée Brunet  France Pairs 1928, 1932 2 [63]
Pierre Brunet
Dick Button  United States Men's singles 1948, 1952 2 [80]
Nathan Chen  United States Men's singles
& team event
2022 2 [64]
Madison Chock  United States Team event 2022, 2026 2 [58]
Guillaume Cizeron[b]  France Ice dance 2022, 2026 2 [59]
Artur Dmitriev[c]  Unified Team
 Russia
Pairs 1992, 1998 2 [61]
[62]
Ekaterina Gordeeva  Soviet Union
 Russia
Pairs 1988, 1994 2
Sergei Grinkov  Soviet Union
 Russia
Pairs 1988, 1994 2
Oksana Grishuk  Russia Ice dance 1994, 1998 2
Yuzuru Hanyu  Japan Men's singles 2014, 2018 2 [81]
Alysa Liu  United States Women's singles
& team event
2026 2
Evgeny Platov  Russia Ice dance 1994, 1998 2
Evgeni Plushenko  Russia Men's singles
& team event
2006, 2014 2 [57]
Oleg Protopopov  Soviet Union Pairs 1964, 1968 2 [79]
Karl Schäfer  Austria Men's singles 1932, 1936 2
Maxim Trankov  Russia Pairs &
team event
2014 2
Tatiana Volosozhar  Russia Pairs &
team event
2014 2
Katarina Witt  East Germany Women's singles 1984, 1988 2
Alexander Zaitsev[a]  Soviet Union Pairs 1976, 1980 2
  1. ^ a b Irina Rodnina won three gold medals in pair skating with two different partners: one in 1972 with Alexei Ulanov and one each in 1976 and 1980 with Alexander Zaitsev.
  2. ^ Guillaume Cizeron won one gold medal in ice dance with Gabriella Papadakis and one gold medal with Laurence Fournier Beaudry.
  3. ^ Artur Dmitriev won one gold medal with Natalia Mishkutionok,[61] and one with Oksana Kazakova.[62]

Multiple Olympic medals by event

Men's singles

Male figure skater performing a jump
Karl Schäfer of Austria won two Olympic gold medals in the men's competition in the 1930s.
Male figure skater on the ice
Yuzuru Hanyu of Japan is one of only two skaters to win two Olympic gold medals in the men's competition after World War II.
Skaters who have won multiple Olympic medals in the men's event
Skater Nation Olympics Gold medal – first place Silver medal – second place Bronze medal – third place Total Ref.
Gillis Grafström  Sweden 1920, 1924,
1928, 1932
3 1 4 [54]
Dick Button  United States 1948, 1952 2 2 [80]
Yuzuru Hanyu  Japan 2014, 2018 2 2 [81]
Karl Schäfer  Austria 1932, 1936 2 2
Evgeni Plushenko  Russia 2002, 2006,
2010
1 2 3 [57]
David Jenkins  United States 1956, 1960 1 1 2 [82]
Viktor Petrenko  Soviet Union
 Unified Team
1988, 1992 1 1 2 [83]
Willy Böckl  Austria 1924, 1928 2 2 [84]
Yuma Kagiyama  Japan 2022, 2026 2 2 [75]
Brian Orser  Canada 1984, 1988 2 2 [85]
Elvis Stojko  Canada 1994, 1998 2 2 [86]
Shoma Uno  Japan 2018, 2022 1 1 2 [78]
Philippe Candeloro  France 1994, 1998 2 2 [87]
Patrick Péra  France 1968, 1972 2 2 [88]

Women's singles

A young smiling woman wearing an embroidered hat and a jacket with furred collar and sleeve hems.
Norwegian Sonja Henie won three consecutive gold medals in the women's individual event (1928–1936).
A young smiling woman wearing a traditional Spanish flamenco dress and head gear, and executing the typical flamenco posture.
Katarina Witt from East Germany won the 1988 women's singles gold medal, becoming the second female figure skater in history to win back-to-back Olympic titles.
Female figure skater showing her gold medal
Yuna Kim of South Korea won the women's singles event in 2010 with world record scores in the short program, free skating, and combined total.
Skater Nation Olympics A gold circle with a G in it. A silver circle with an S in it. A bronze circle with a B in it. Total Ref.
Sonja Henie  Norway 1928, 1932, 1936 3 3 [55]
Katarina Witt  East Germany 1984, 1988 2 2
Tenley Albright  United States 1952, 1956 1 1 2
Carol Heiss  United States 1956, 1960 1 1 2
Sjoukje Dijkstra  Netherlands 1960, 1964 1 1 2
Yuna Kim  South Korea 2010, 2014 1 1 2
Jeannette Altwegg  Great Britain 1948, 1952 1 1 2
Fritzi Burger  Austria 1928, 1932 2 2
Beatrix Loughran  United States 1924, 1928 1 1 2 [77]
Nancy Kerrigan  United States 1992, 1994 1 1 2
Michelle Kwan  United States 1998, 2002 1 1 2
Irina Slutskaya  Russia 2002, 2006 1 1 2
Kaori Sakamoto  Japan 2022, 2026 1 1 2
Chen Lu  China 1994, 1998 2 2

Pairs

Skater Nation Olympics A gold circle with a G in it. A silver circle with an S in it. A bronze circle with a B in it. Total Ref.
Irina Rodnina[a]  Soviet Union 1972, 1976, 1980 3 3 [56]
Artur Dmitriev[b]  Unified Team
 Russia
1992, 1994, 1998 2 1 3 [61]
[62]
Andrée Brunet  France 1924, 1928, 1932 2 1 3 [63]
Pierre Brunet
Ludmila Belousova  Soviet Union 1964, 1968 2 2 [79]
Ekaterina Gordeeva  Soviet Union
 Russia
1988, 1994 2 2
Sergei Grinkov  Soviet Union
 Russia
1988, 1994 2 2
Oleg Protopopov  Soviet Union 1964, 1968 2 2 [79]
Alexander Zaitsev[a]  Soviet Union 1976, 1980 2 2
Elena Berezhnaya  Russia 1998, 2002 1 1 2
Han Cong  China 2018, 2022 1 1 2
Ludowika Jakobsson  Finland 1920, 1924 1 1 2
Walter Jakobsson  Finland 1920, 1924 1 1 2
Natalia Mishkutenok[b]  Unified Team
 Russia
1992, 1994 1 1 2
Anton Sikharulidze  Russia 1998, 2002 1 1 2
Sui Wenjing  China 2018, 2022 1 1 2
Aljona Savchenko[c]  Germany 2010, 2014, 2018 1 2 3 [73]
Shen Xue  China 2002, 2006, 2010 1 2 3 [72]
Zhao Hongbo
Hans-Jürgen Bäumler  Germany 1960, 1964 2 2
Marika Kilius  Germany 1960, 1964 2 2
Phyllis Johnson[d]  Great Britain 1908, 1920 1 1 2
Isabelle Brasseur  Canada 1992, 1994 2 2
Lloyd Eisler  Canada 1992, 1994 2 2
Manuela Groß  East Germany 1972, 1976 2 2
Uwe Kagelmann  East Germany 1972, 1976 2 2
László Nagy  Hungary 1952, 1956 2 2
Marianna Nagy  Hungary 1952, 1956 2 2
Emília Rotter  Hungary 1932, 1936 2 2
Robin Szolkowy[c]  Germany 2010, 2014 2 2
László Szollás  Hungary 1932, 1936 2 2
  1. ^ a b Irina Rodnina won three medals in pair skating with two different partners: one gold medal in 1972 with Alexei Ulanov and one gold medal each in 1976 and 1980 with Alexander Zaitsev.
  2. ^ a b Artur Dmitriev won one gold medal and one silver medal with Natalia Mishkutionok,[61] and one gold medal with Oksana Kazakova.[62]
  3. ^ a b Aljona Savchenko won three medals in pair skating with two different partners: two bronze medals in 2010 and 2014 with Robin Szolkowy and one gold medal in 2018 with Bruno Massot.
  4. ^ Phyllis Johnson won two medals in pair skating with two different partners: one silver medal in 1908 with James H. Johnson and one bronze medal in 1920 with Basil Williams.

Ice dance

Skater Nation Olympics A gold circle with a G in it. A silver circle with an S in it. A bronze circle with a B in it. Total Ref.
Tessa Virtue  Canada 2010, 2014, 2018 2 1 3 [53]
Scott Moir
Guillaume Cizeron[a]  France 2018, 2022, 2026 2 1 3 [59]
Oksana Grishuk  Russia 1994, 1998 2 0 2
Evgeny Platov
Marina Klimova  Soviet Union
 Unified Team
1984, 1992 1 1 1 3 [70]
Sergei Ponomarenko
Natalia Bestemianova  Soviet Union 1984, 1988 1 1 2
Andrei Bukin
Meryl Davis  United States 2010, 2014 1 1 2 [68]
Charlie White
Gabriella Papadakis  France 2018, 2022 1 1 2 [59]
Jayne Torvill  Great Britain 1984, 1994 1 1 2
Christopher Dean
Marina Anissina  France 1998, 2002 1 1 2
Gwendal Peizerat
Maya Usova  Unified Team
 Russia
1992, 1994 1 1 2
Alexander Zhulin
Nikita Katsalapov[b]  Russia
 ROC
2014, 2022 1 1 2 [67]
[66]
  1. ^ Guillaume Cizeron won three medals in ice dance with two different partners: a silver medal in 2018 and a gold medal in 2022 with Gabriella Papadakis and a gold medal in 2026 with Laurence Fournier Beaudry.
  2. ^ Nikita Katsalapov won one bronze medal with Elena Ilinykh,[66] and one silver medal with Victoria Sinitsina.[67]

Team event

Skater Nation Olympics A gold circle with a G in it. A silver circle with an S in it. A bronze circle with a B in it. Total Ref.
Madison Chock  United States 2022, 2026 2 2 [58]
Evan Bates
Tessa Virtue  Canada 2014, 2018 1 1 2 [53]
Scott Moir
Meagan Duhamel  Canada 2014, 2018 1 1 2 [69]
Eric Radford
Kaetlyn Osmond  Canada 2014, 2018 1 1 2 [89]
Patrick Chan  Canada 2014, 2018 1 1 2 [65]
Nathan Chen  United States 2018, 2022 1 1 2 [64]
Alexa Knierim  United States 2018, 2022 1 1 2
Ekaterina Bobrova  Russia
 Olympic Athletes from Russia
2014, 2018 1 1 2
Dmitri Soloviev
Nikita Katsalapov[a]  Russia
 ROC
2014, 2022 1 1 2 [67]
[66]
Kaori Sakamoto  Japan 2022, 2026 2 2
Yuma Kagiyama  Japan 2022, 2026 2 2
Riku Miura  Japan 2022, 2026 2 2
Ryuichi Kihara
  1. ^ Nikita Katsalapov won one gold medal with Elena Ilinykh,[66] and one bronze medal with Victoria Sinitsina.[67]

Multiple disciplines

A young smiling woman wearing a fur coat waving.
Beatrix Loughran of the United States won two Olympic medals in women's singles and one in pair skating.

Only three skaters have won Olympic medals in multiple figure skating disciplines. In 1908, Madge Syers of Great Britain became the first skater to medal in multiple figure skating disciplines at a single Olympics. The only skater to match this feat was Ernst Baier of Germany in 1936. Beatrix Loughran of the United States won a silver medal in women's singles at the 1924 Winter Olympics, a bronze medal in women's singles at the 1928 Winter Olympics, and a silver medal in pair skating at the 1932 Winter Olympics.[77]

Skaters who have won Olympic medals in multiple disciplines
Skater Nation Events Olympics A gold circle with a G in it. A silver circle with an S in it. A bronze circle with a B in it. Total Ref.
Ernst Baier  Germany Men's singles 1936 1 2
Pairs 1
Madge Syers  Great Britain Women's singles 1908 1 2
Pairs 1
Beatrix Loughran  United States Women's singles 1924, 1928 1 1 3 [77]
Pairs 1932 1

Total medal count by nation

  • Countries or entities that can no longer participate are indicated in italics with a dagger (†).

Men's singles

A male figure skater poses for a shot at an indoor ice rink; the background is very blurred.
Ulrich Salchow of Sweden, who created the Salchow jump, was the first Olympic champion in men's figure skating.
Number of Olympic medals in men's singles by nation
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 United States83516
2 Sweden4217
3 Russia4206
4 Austria3328
5 Japan2338
6 Great Britain2002
7 Czechoslovakia1124
8 Kazakhstan1012
9 Unified Team1001
 United Team of Germany1001
11 Canada0549
12 Soviet Union0213
 Switzerland0213
14 France0145
15 Norway0112
16 East Germany0101
 Germany0101
18 Belgium0011
 Spain0011
Totals (19 entries)27272781

Women's singles

Number of Olympic medals in women's singles by nation
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 United States88824
2 East Germany3115
3 Norway3003
4 Austria2417
5 Great Britain2136
6 Japan1326
7 Canada1236
8 Netherlands1203
9 Russia1113
 Sweden1113
11 Olympic Athletes from Russia1102
 ROC1102
 South Korea1102
14 Ukraine1001
15 Germany0101
16 China0022
17 Czechoslovakia0011
 France0011
 Italy0011
 Soviet Union0011
 West Germany0011
Totals (21 entries)27272781

Pairs

Number of Olympic medals in pair skating by nation
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Soviet Union74112
2 Russia5308
3 Germany4048
4 China2327
5 Canada2248
6 Austria2215
7 France2013
8 Finland1102
 Unified Team1102
10 Belgium1001
 Japan1001
12 United States0336
13 United Team of Germany0202
14 Hungary0145
15 East Germany0134
16 Great Britain0123
17 ROC0112
18 Georgia0101
 Norway0101
20 West Germany0011
Totals (20 entries)28272782

Ice dance

Number of Olympic medals in ice dance by nation
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Russia3328
 Soviet Union3328
3 France3216
4 Canada2125
5 United States1337
6 Great Britain1012
 Unified Team1012
8 Hungary0101
 ROC0101
10 Italy0011
 Ukraine0011
Totals (11 entries)14141442

Team event

Number of Olympic medals in the figure skating team event by nation
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 United States2024
2 Canada1102
3 Russia1001
4 Japan0202
5 Olympic Athletes from Russia0101
6 Italy0011
 ROC0011
Totals (7 entries)44412

Overall

Total number of Olympic medals by nation
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 United States19172157
2 Russia159327
3 Soviet Union109524
4 Austria79420
5 Canada6111330
6 France53715
 Great Britain53715
8 Sweden53210
9 Japan48517
10 Germany42410
11 East Germany33410
12 Norway3216
13 Unified Team3115
14 China2349
15 ROC1326
16 Netherlands1203
 Olympic Athletes from Russia1203
 United Team of Germany1203
19 Czechoslovakia1135
20 Finland1102
 South Korea1102
22 Belgium1012
 Kazakhstan1012
 Ukraine1012
25 Hungary0246
26 Switzerland0213
27 Georgia0101
28 Italy0033
29 West Germany0022
30 Spain0011
Totals (30 entries)101100100301

See also

References

General

Specific

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