Germany at the Olympics

Germany at the
Olympics
IOC codeGER
NOCGerman Olympic Sports Confederation
Websitewww.dosb.de (in German, English, and French)
Medals
Ranked 4th
Gold
326
Silver
327
Bronze
328
Total
981
Summer appearances
Winter appearances
Other related appearances
1906 Intercalated Games

––––

 Saar (1952)
 United Team of Germany (1956–1964)
 East Germany (1968–1988)
 West Germany (1968–1988)

Athletes from Germany have taken part in most of the modern Olympic Games held since 1896. Germany has hosted three Olympic Games, in 1936 both the Winter and Summer Games, and the 1972 Summer Olympics. In addition, Germany had been selected to host the 1916 Summer Olympics as well as the 1940 Winter Olympics, both of which had to be cancelled due to World Wars. After these wars, Germany was banned from participating in the 1920, 1924 and 1948 Olympics.

While the country was divided, each of the two German states boycotted one of the Summer Games. In 1980, West Germany was one of 66 nations which did not go to Moscow in protest at the Soviet Union's invasion of Afghanistan, and in 1984 East Germany joined the Soviet Union and several others in the boycott of the Summer Games in Los Angeles. In 1990, East Germany and West Germany would reunite, with Germany once again competing as a single full sovereign state since the 1992 Olympic year.

The IOC currently splits German results among four codes, even though only the German Democratic Republic (GDR) from 1968 to 1988 had sent a separate team to compete against the team of the German NOC that represented Germany (GER) since 1896.

German post-WW2 division until 1990

After German organisations had been dissolved by the Allies in 1947, in 1950 the IOC recognized the reorganized Nationales Olympisches Komitee für Deutschland for all of Germany, based in (West) Germany.

Due to the Cold War, an East German state (German Democratic Republic) was created in October 1949, and a separate National Olympic Committee (NOC) for East Germany was established in 1951. It was not immediately recognized by the IOC, which until 1965 required that athletes of the NOC of East Germany join the German team represented by the West Germany-based NOC of Germany. This team, which competed together from 1956 to 1964, is nowadays called the United Team of Germany (EUA, "Equipe Unifiée Allemande"), but was Germany (GER) then. As a result of Germany being divided, from 1968 to 1990 two independent teams competed in each of the Games; the original designations were GER for the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) and GDR for the German Democratic Republic (East Germany). In 1980 the West German code was changed to FRG (which is currently also applied by the IOC in retrospect). After the GDR ceased to exist in 1990 and its states joined the Federal Republic of Germany, Germany once again was represented by a single team, designated GER.

Additionally, in the early 1950s the French-occupied Saar had its own NOC and competed at the 1952 Summer Olympics before joining the German Olympic team in 1956 and the (West) German state by 1957.

Overview of Olympic participation

Timeline of participation

Olympic
year/s
team
1896–1912 Germany (GER)
1920–1924 denied participation after WWI
1928–1932 Germany (GER)
1936
1948 occupied country after WWII:
former German Olympic Committee
was dissolved
1952 Germany (GER)
Saar (SAA)

East Germany
did not participate
1956–1964 United Team of Germany (EUA)
1968–1988 Germany (FRG) East Germany (GDR)
since 1992      (GER)

Germany at the Summer Olympics

  Host country

Germany at the Winter Olympics

  Host country

Medals by Summer Sport

  Leading in that sport
SportGoldSilverBronzeTotal
 Canoeing36212683
 Equestrian32151461
 Rowing24161555
 Athletics20303787
 Cycling15171749
 Gymnastics15121441
 Swimming14183163
 Shooting109524
 Weightlifting67922
 Wrestling5131129
 Fencing57921
 Boxing491124
 Field hockey43411
 Tennis36211
 Sailing35715
 Judo341522
 Diving281222
 Beach volleyball2114
 Triathlon2103
 Modern pentathlon2013
 Handball1214
 Marathon swimming1214
 Water polo1203
 Football1146
 3x3 basketball1001
 Table tennis0459
 Archery0325
 Taekwondo0112
 Golf0101
 Rugby union0101
Totals (30 entries)212219255686

*This table does not include two medals – one gold and one silver – awarded in the figure skating events at the 1908 Summer Olympics.

Medals by Winter Sport

  Leading in that sport
SportGoldSilverBronzeTotal
 Luge25131048
 Biathlon21201455
 Bobsleigh1913840
 Speed skating13151038
 Alpine skiing1210729
 Ski jumping77317
 Nordic combined66416
 Figure skating42410
 Cross country skiing310417
 Skeleton26412
 Snowboarding1427
 Freestyle skiing1113
 Ice hockey0112
Totals (13 entries)11410872294

*This table includes two medals – one gold and one silver – awarded in the figure skating events at the 1908 Summer Olympics.

Best results in non-medaling sports

Summer
Sport Rank Athlete Event & Year
  Artistic swimming 14th Monika Müller Women's solo in 1992
Monika Müller & Margit Schreib Women's duet in 1992
 Badminton 5th Huaiwen Xu Women's singles in 2008
Michael Fuchs &
Birgit Michels
Mixed doubles in 2012
 Basketball 4th Germany men's team Men's tournament in 2024
 BMX freestyle 6th Lara Lessmann Women's freestyle in 2020
 BMX racing 14th Nadja Pries Women's racing in 2016
 Karate 5th Noah Bitsch Men's -75 kg in 2020
 Polo 5th Germany men's polo national team Men's tournament in 1936
 Skateboarding 9th Lilly Stoephasius Women's park in 2020
 Sport climbing 9th Yannick Flohe Men's combined in 2020
Men's combined in 2024
 Surfing 17th Leon Glatzer Men's shortboard in 2020
Tim Elter Men's shortboard in 2024
Camilla Kemp Women's shortboard in 2024
 Volleyball 5th Germany men's national volleyball team Men's tournament in 2012
Winter
Sport Rank Athlete Event & Year
 Curling 5th Natalie Nessler
Sabine Belkofer
Heike Wieländer
Andrea Stock
Karin Fischer
Women's tournament in 2002
 Short track speed skating 5th Tyson Heung Men's 500m in 2010
 Ski mountaineering 4th Tatjana Paller Women's sprint in 2026

Combined medals of all German NOCs

Germany has competed at the Olympics under five different designations, including as two separate teams at several Games. Sources vary in how they present the medals won by these teams. The table below shows sourced combinations of these teams, when applied to the main table. Saar competed independently in the Summer Olympic games in 1952, but failed to win any medals. Due to most lists only listing medal counts, it's possible but not certain Saar was included as part of Germany in their calculations.

Medal counts:
status after the 2026 Olympics

Summer Games Winter Games Combined total
Team (IOC code)

No.

No.

No.

   Germany 18 213 220 255 688 14 113 107 73 293 32 326 327 328 981
 Saar 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0
 United Team of Germany 3 28 54 36 118 3 8 6 5 19 6 36 60 41 137
 West Germany 5 56 67 81 204 6 11 15 13 39 11 67 82 94 243
 East Germany 5 153 129 127 409 6 39 36 35 110 11 192 165 162 519
Total 28 450 470 499 1419 23 171 164 126 461 51 621 634 625 1880
Combined IOC codes No. Games Combined total
 Germany (GER) 32 326 327 328 981
 Germany (GER) (EUA) 38 362 387 369 1,118
 Germany (GER) (EUA) (FRG) 50 429 469 463 1,361
 Germany (GER) (EUA) (FRG) (GDR) 61[a] 621 634 625 1,880
  1. ^ Counting the 10 Games (four at the Summer and six at the Winter Olympics), where both East Germany (GDR) and West Germany (FRG) competed as two appearances.

Hosted Games

For the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, West Germany, see West Germany at the Olympics.

Games Host city Dates Nations Participants Events
1936 Winter Olympics Garmisch-Partenkirchen 6 – 16 February 28 646 17
1936 Summer Olympics Berlin 1 – 6 August 49 3,963 129

Unsuccessful bids

Games City Winner of bid[1]
1908 Summer Olympics Berlin London, United Kingdom
2000 Summer Olympics Berlin Sydney, Australia
2012 Summer Olympics Leipzig[a] London, United Kingdom
2018 Winter Olympics Munich Pyeongchang, South Korea
2024 Summer Olympics Hamburg Paris, France
  1. ^ Not shortlisted into candidate stage

See also

References

  1. ^ "Past Olympic host city election results". GamesBids. Archived from the original on January 24, 2011. Retrieved January 31, 2022.