Starting today, prospective ticket goers can enter a lottery with a chance to purchase the first tickets to the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Games.
While the Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics begin in a month and the 2028 Summer Games in Los Angeles are two years away, LA28 fans can secure tickets for the 2028 event this week.
To register, visit the LA28 Ticketing page starting this Wednesday and create an online profile. Once registered, you will be automatically entered into a lottery for the opportunity to access the first batch of tickets, which will be sold this spring.
Register First to Enter the Lottery
To access Olympic ticket sales, fans register online for free beginning Wednesday.
Registered users will receive an email between 31 March and 7 April if they are selected through the lottery to purchase tickets. The initial sales window runs from 9–19 April.
Additional registration periods and ticket releases are scheduled for later this year. Tickets for the Paralympic Games will go on sale in 2027.
Largest-Ever Olympic Sports Programme Coming to LA28
LA28 organisers say that tickets to all sports (36 sports in total, including the five aquatic sports of swimming, diving, water polo, artistic swimming, and open water swimming) will be available in this first window, with ticket prices starting at $28 USD.
LA28 expects to offer 14 million tickets to the events, with at least 1 million single tickets priced at $28 and one-third costing less than $100.
Insights into the Detailed Competition Programme for Aquatic Sports at the LA28 Games
The LA28 Olympic competition schedule for aquatic sports includes historic firsts, such as crowning the final LA28 Olympic swimming medallists just before the Closing Ceremony.
World Aquatics will govern 55 medal events in swimming, diving, water polo, artistic swimming, and open water swimming at LA28, the largest share among international federations. This is up from 49 aquatic medal events at the Paris 2024 Games.
The LA28 Olympics will take place from 14 July to 30 July 2028, with aquatic sports featured on every day of the Games. Los Angeles previously hosted the Olympic Games in 1932 and 1984.