Winter Olympics Medal Count Today (Feb. 13): Norway Stays No. 1 as France Adds Biathlon Gold

Looking for the latest 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics medal count? Below is the updated table and the Feb. 13 results moving the standings right now.


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

Last updated: Friday, Feb. 13, 2026 at 10:37 a.m. ET
Top takeaway: Norway remains No. 1 in the medal race with 8 gold medals (18 total), while Italy is right there on volume with 18 total medals but fewer golds (6). Team USA is sitting at 4 gold medals and 14 total medals as Day 7 finals keep stacking table-changers.

Biggest movers today

  • Norway: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo won men’s 10km freestyle for his third gold of these Games and eighth career Olympic gold, keeping Norway in control at the top.

  • France: Quentin Fillon Maillet delivered a huge biathlon swing with gold in the men’s 10km sprint, one of the most reliable “medal table movers” on the Winter schedule.

  • Australia: Josie Baff won women’s snowboard cross gold, another headline “new gold” moment that instantly pops in medal-count searches.

What’s next (next 12 hours): More medals are still on the board today, including men’s 10,000m speed skating plus additional finals across the Day 7 slate.


Updated 2026 Winter Olympics medal count (Top 10)

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

Rank Country Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Norway 8 3 7 18
2 Italy 6 3 9 18
3 United States 4 7 3 14
4 France 4 5 1 10
5 Germany 4 3 2 9
6 Sweden 4 3 1 8
7 Switzerland 4 1 2 7
8 Austria 3 6 3 12
9 Netherlands 3 3 0 6
10 Japan 2 2 6 10

Team USA check: United States — 4 gold, 7 silver, 3 bronze (14 total).

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


Norway’s “gold-first” edge is the separator, even with Italy tied on total medals

Italy matching Norway on 18 total medals is the kind of headline that grabs casual readers, but the key detail is how tables are typically displayed: gold-first sorting keeps Norway on top because 8 gold beats 6.

  Raiders Told to Reunite With Super Bowl Winning CB in Free Agency

Klaebo’s win keeps Norway rolling as the standings tighten behind it

Klaebo’s victory in the men’s 10km freestyle was a classic Norway table-builder: another gold in a Nordic event, and another reason Norway stays hard to catch when the schedule hits its cross-country and biathlon clusters.

If you’re tracking momentum: this was Klaebo’s third gold of these Games, and it also pushed him to eight career Olympic golds, tying the Winter record.


France’s biathlon gold is a real medal-table mover

Fillon Maillet’s men’s biathlon sprint gold is the type of result that often reshapes the mid-table chase, because biathlon medals come in waves and nations can stack podiums quickly once they’re locked in.

In this one, Norway also landed silver and bronze, which matters for the “total medals” view even when the gold goes elsewhere.


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 10:37 a.m. ET on Feb. 13, Norway leads with 8 gold medals and 18 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.

Like Heavy Sports’s content? Be sure to follow us.

This article was originally published on Heavy Sports


The post Winter Olympics Medal Count Today (Feb. 13): Norway Stays No. 1 as France Adds Biathlon Gold appeared first on Heavy Sports.

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *