LA 2028 Olympic Sponsorship Portfolio Crosses $2 Billion With JPMorgan Banking First
Twenty-six months out, the organizing committee has signed deals at a pace that suggests a final haul north of $3 billion—and reshaped global Olympic category rights in the process.
Published May 24, 2026Source MSN SportsFrom the chopped neck
Subject on the desk
LA 2028 Olympics Organizing Committee
DIAMOND · May 24, 2026
ISABELLA'S ISLAY· May 24, 2026
LA 2028 Olympic Sponsorship Portfolio Crosses $2 Billion With JPMorgan Banking First
Twenty-six months out, the organizing committee has signed deals at a pace that suggests a final haul north of $3 billion—and reshaped global Olympic category rights in the process.
The Los Angeles Olympic and Paralympic Organizing Committee passed $2 billion in committed sponsorship revenue this week, with JPMorgan Chase & Co. entering as the first banking-sector partner in International Olympic Committee history. The timing matters: LA 2028 is still 908 days from opening ceremony, and the revenue run rate suggests a final domestic sponsorship figure well above the $1.3 billion the same committee raised for the 1984 Games in inflation-adjusted terms.
JPMorgan's deal breaks a category exclusivity the IOC held for Visa Inc. since 1986. The shift reflects a broader renegotiation of global sponsorship architecture that began after Tokyo 2020, when several TOP-tier partners declined renewal and the committee started carving sector definitions more narrowly. Banking is now separate from payments. JPMorgan gets U.S. exclusivity and global activation rights; Visa retains its TOP deal for payment networks through Brisbane 2032. The structuring is worth noting because it creates a template for future category splits—insurance, technology, automotive—that other federations are already modeling.
The $2 billion figure includes contributions from Comcast NBCUniversal, Delta Air Lines, Gatorade, and Salesforce, among others. For comparison, the Rio 2016 organizing committee raised roughly $1.1 billion domestically, and Tokyo 2020 hit $3.6 billion but across a significantly larger corporate base with different cost structures. LA's number is particularly clean because the city is using existing venues—no Olympic Park construction, no village build from scratch—which reduces both capex and the political exposure that has made recent Games harder to finance through public channels.
What the number does not yet reflect is the second-order revenue LA expects from sponsor activation spend—the money brands deploy separately on hospitality, advertising, and experiential work around the Games. Organizing committee officials have indicated privately they expect total Games-related corporate spend in Los Angeles to approach $5 billion when activation is included, though that figure flows through agencies, venues, and media platforms rather than the OCOG itself. The distinction matters for municipal tax planning and for understanding why LA agreed to host in the first place: the Games are a private-sector revenue event with favorable optics, not a public-works project.
The JPMorgan deal also clarifies which financial institutions are still in play for category adjacencies. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley are both known to be in conversations about wealth-management or capital-markets partnerships, which would sit outside JPMorgan's retail and commercial exclusivity. Bank of America Corp. has been quiet, which is unusual given its historical Olympic involvement and its Los Angeles headquarters. That silence likely reflects internal reallocation toward FIFA and individual athlete deals rather than federation-level spend.
Sponsor negotiations for the remaining Tier 1 categories—technology hardware, QSR, retail—are expected to close by June 2025, which would give brands roughly three years of lead time for product development and campaign planning. The timeline is tighter than ideal but workable for categories where activation is more about media than on-ground experiential. Salesforce's deal, signed in late 2024, demonstrated that enterprise software companies are now willing to move on Olympic timelines if the data and CRM access is structured clearly.
The broader implication is that LA 2028 has effectively re-priced what an Olympic sponsorship is worth in a U.S. media market. The $2 billion domestic figure exceeds the total TOP program revenue the IOC collects globally across a four-year cycle. That imbalance will shape how future host cities approach their own sponsorship strategies, particularly as the IOC pushes a "New Norm" model that emphasizes lower public cost and higher private revenue. Brisbane 2032 is already using LA's category splits as a negotiating reference.
What to watch: the technology hardware category, where Apple Inc. and Alphabet Inc. have both been in discussions but neither has signed. A deal there would likely close at $200-250 million and would clarify whether premium consumer brands see Olympic association as worth the spend in a cycle where most are pulling back from large-scale sports sponsorships. Also watch for details on the athletes' village sponsor, expected to be announced by March, which will reveal how LA is structuring hospitality and housing partnerships. That deal will likely sit around $150 million and will be the first signal of whether real estate and construction firms see the Games as a branding or a deal-flow play.
The $2 billion mark means LA has now raised more, faster, than any Olympic organizing committee in history. The IOC's finance staff is paying attention.
The takeaway
LA 2028 has raised **$2 billion** in sponsorships with **26 months** to go, reshaping Olympic category economics and setting a pace that suggests a **$3 billion+** final haul.
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