NBC signs $3B Olympic media rights deal through 2036, including Salt Lake City Winter Games

International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach signs the 2034 torch display in Park City on Sept. 28. 2024. The IOC has signed a $3 billion deal for broadcasting rights, including the 2036 Games in Salt Lake City.

International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach signs the 2034 torch display in Park City on Sept. 28. 2024. The IOC has signed a $3 billion deal for broadcasting rights, including the 2036 Games in Salt Lake City. (Isaac Hale, Deseret News)


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LAUSANNE, Switzerland — The International Olympic Committee has signed a $3 billion deal with its long-time United States broadcast partner NBC for the 2034 Salt Lake City Olympics and the 2036 Summer Games.

The International Olympic Committee said in a statement Thursday the agreement elevates Comcast NBCUniversal to being a strategic partner instead of just a media rights holder, promising "innovative joint strategic initiatives and projects" and involving the streaming platform Peacock.

The committee said it would benefit from "Comcast's investment in relevant and innovative start-ups" in a deal that is was surprisingly announced in the final weeks of Thomas Bach's leadership of the Olympic body.

The 2036 host has yet to be decided with interest shown by Olympic officials in countries including India, Qatar, Turkey, Hungary and Indonesia.

NBC signed its most recent Olympic rights deal in 2014 covering each Summer Games and Winter Games through 2032. That was valued at $7.75 billion.

That deal done 11 years ago was a major decision early in Bach's Olympic presidency that secured the financial future of the Olympic body.

The new U.S. rights deal has been sealed just one week before Bach's successor is to be elected at an International Olympic Committee meeting in Greece on March 20.

"The media landscape is evolving rapidly and, by partnering with one of the world's leading media and technology companies, we will ensure that fans in the United States are able to experience the Olympic Games like never before," Bach said in the statement.

NBC has broadcast every Summer Olympics since 1988 and every Winter Games since 2002 in Salt Lake City — all the games since the 2000 Sydney Olympics. A previous renewal in 2011 secured each games from 2014 through 2020 for $4.38 billion.

"It is our honor to continue to bring the full power of our company's expertise in creating and distributing content that connects with Americans," Comcast Chairman and CEO Brian Roberts said, "as well as to begin to provide even more innovative technological support and solutions to the IOC and its stakeholders in areas that benefit athletes and the many people dedicated to organizing the Olympic Games around the world."

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