Winter Olympics Medal Count Today (Feb. 14): Norway Up to 10 Gold as Brazil Makes History in Alpine

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Looking for the latest 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics medal count? Below is the updated table and the Feb. 14 results moving the standings right now.


2026 Winter Olympics medal count (Milano Cortina) — live updates

Last updated: Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026 at 4:21 p.m. ET
Top takeaway: Norway has tightened its grip on the top spot with 10 gold medals and 20 total medals, while host Italy is still right in the chase with 6 gold and 18 total medals. Team USA is now up to 5 gold medals and 17 total medals as the table keeps shifting at the halfway mark of the Games.

Biggest movers today

  • Norway: now up to 10 gold (20 total), continuing to separate from the pack in a standard gold-first medal table.

  • Brazil: Lucas Pinheiro Braathen won men’s giant slalom gold, delivering Brazil’s — and South America’s — first-ever Winter Olympic medal, and it’s a gold.

  • Team USA: now up to 5 gold medals and 17 total medals, keeping the U.S. in the top cluster by both golds and volume.

What’s next (next 12 hours): More medals are still to come across alpine, skating and sliding events — and those sports can flip the mid-table quickly when one nation stacks multiple podiums in a short window.


Updated 2026 Winter Olympics medal count (Top 10)

(Standard display: gold-first, then silver, then bronze.)

Rank Country Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Norway 10 3 7 20
2 Italy 6 3 9 18
3 United States 5 8 4 17
4 Austria 4 6 3 13
5 France 4 6 2 12
6 Germany 4 5 4 13
7 Sweden 4 4 1 9
8 Switzerland 4 2 3 9
9 Japan 3 4 8 15
10 Netherlands 3 4 1 8

Team USA check: United States — 5 gold, 8 silver, 4 bronze (17 total).

Note: Some trackers sort by total medals instead of gold-first. This post reflects Reuters medal totals at the time of update, displayed in gold-first order.


Brazil’s breakthrough: Pinheiro Braathen wins giant slalom gold

One of the biggest “medal count today” moments didn’t come from the usual Winter powers. Lucas Pinheiro Braathen won men’s giant slalom gold, giving Brazil — and all of South America — its first-ever Winter Olympic medal, and it was a gold.

For standings-watchers, that’s the kind of result that creates instant search interest: a brand-new nation enters the medal table, and it enters at the top step of the podium.


Norway’s edge is still the simplest explanation: more golds, more total medals

Italy has been the story of the home Games on the “volume” side, but Norway continues to win the sorting battle most fans see first: gold medals. With 10 gold, Norway stays comfortably ahead of Italy (6) even though the total medal counts are close (20 vs. 18).

That “gold-first” reality is why the top of the medal table can look different than a “total medals” graphic — and why a single gold often matters more than a pair of bronzes in the early-to-mid Games picture.


Why today matters: the Games hit the halfway mark

Saturday is also a natural check-in point: organizers said the Milano Cortina Olympics have reached the halfway mark, with strong demand and viewership after years of bumpy preparation. That context helps explain why the medal race and host-nation results (Italy) are drawing so much attention right now.


Medal count FAQ

How is the Olympic medal table ranked?
Most standings are shown gold-first, then silver, then bronze — although some sites emphasize total medals.

Who leads the 2026 Winter Olympics medal count right now?
As of 4:21 p.m. ET on Feb. 14, Norway leads with 10 gold medals and 20 total medals.

When does the medal count update?
We refresh after major medal finals — especially when new golds hit the standings and the top cluster shifts.

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Winter Olympics Medal Count Today (Feb. 14): Norway Up to 10 Gold as Brazil Makes History in Alpine

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