2026 in rhythmic gymnastics

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Below is a list of notable rhythmic gymnastics international events scheduled to be held in 2026 as well as the medalists.

Gymnasts who announced retirements in 2026
Gymnast Country Date Ref
Justine Lavit France 16 January 2026 [1]
Salome Lozano Leon France 29 January 2026 [2]
Mireia Martínez  Spain 30 January 2026 [3]
Milana Parfilova Kazakhstan 4 February 2026 [4]
Laura Paris  Italy 4 February 2026 [5]
Erika Zhailauova  Kazakhstan 17 February 2026 [6]
Saskia Broedelet  Australia February 2026 [7]
Lily Ramonatxo  France 7 April 2026 [8]

Nationality changes

Gymnasts who changed nationalities in 2026
Gymnast From To Ref
Lisa Garac  Romania  Germany [9]
Nicole Anwa Martyn  Israel  Sierra Leone [9]

Calendar of events

Date Location Event Individual winners Group winners
February 25–March 1 Estonia Tartu Miss Valentine[10] AA: Ukraine Taisiia Onofriichuk

HO: Ukraine Taisiia Onofriichuk

BA: Italy Tara Dragas

CL: Poland Liliana Lewinska

RI: Ukraine Taisiia Onofriichuk

AA:  Ukraine

5 BA:  Ukraine

3 HO & 2 CL:  Canada

March 28–30 Bulgaria Sofia FIG World Cup[11] AA: Ukraine Taisiia Onofriichuk

HO: Ukraine Taisiia Onofriichuk

BA: Ukraine Taisiia Onofriichuk

CL: Bulgaria Eva Brezalieva

RI: Ukraine Taisiia Onofriichuk

AA:  Authorised Neutral Athletes

5 BA:  China

3 HO & 2 CL:  Authorised Neutral Athletes

April 10–12 Uzbekistan Tashkent FIG World Cup[12] AA: Authorised Neutral Athletes Maria Borisova

HO: Uzbekistan Takhmina Ikromova

BA: Uzbekistan Takhmina Ikromova

CL: Germany Darja Varfolomeev

RI: Germany Darja Varfolomeev

AA:  China

5 BA:  China

3 HO & 2 CL:  China

April 17–19 Azerbaijan Baku FIG World Cup[13] AA: Ukraine Taisiia Onofriichuk

HO: Ukraine Taisiia Onofriichuk

BA: Germany Darja Varfolomeev

CL: Germany Darja Varfolomeev

RI: Germany Darja Varfolomeev

AA:  Israel

5 BA:  Israel

3 HO & 2 CL:  Spain

April 30 – May 3 Azerbaijan Baku European Cup[14] Cross battle:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

Cross battle:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

April 30 – May 2 South Africa Tshwane African Championships[15][16] TF:

AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

April 30 – May 2 South Africa Tshwane Oeanian Championships[17] TF:

AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

May 15–17 Portugal Portimão FIG World Challenge Cup[18] AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

May 23–26 Kyrgyzstan Bishkek Asian Championships[19][20] TF:

AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

May 27–31 Bulgaria Varna European Championships[21] TF:

AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

June 5 – 7 Brazil Rio de Janeiro Pan American Championships[22][23] TF:

AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

April 10–12 Uzbekistan Tashkent FIG World Cup[24] AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

June 19–21 China Beijing FIG World Challenge Cup[25][26] AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

July 2–7 Paraguay Asunción Senior South American Championships[27] TF:

AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

July 10–12 Italy Milan FIG World Cup[28] AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

July 24–August 8 Dominican Republic Santo Domingo Central American and Caribbean Games AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

August 12–16 Germany Frankfurt World Championships[29] TF:

AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

August 22–26 Italy Taranto XX Mediterranean Games AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

September 12–26  Argentina South American Games TF:

AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

September 19–October 4 Japan Nagoya Asian Games TF:

AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:

November 4–8 Colombia Medellín Junior South American Championships TF:

AA:

HO:

BA:

CL:

RI:

AA:

5 BA:

3 HO & 2 CL:


Medalists

Season's best international scores

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI