Los Angeles 2028


 * The Los Angeles and Orange County articles provide a more comprehensive guide to those visiting the city and locations where the games will be taking place.

The Games of the XXXIV Olympiad, the 2028 Summer Olympics, will be held in Los Angeles from July 21 to August 6 2028. They will be followed by the Paralympics from August 22 to September 3 2028. Some events will be held in other locations throughout Orange County, and soccer/football matches will be using the infrastructure and stadiums built for the 2026 FIFA World Cup across the United States.

Los Angeles will be hosting the games for the third time, and is the third city to do so, after London and Paris. It previously hosted the games in 1932 and 1984.

Get in
General information about traveling to Los Angeles appears in the Los Angeles article.

By train
Several Amtrak routes serve Los Angeles; they are a slow but scenic way to travel from other parts of the US.

Brightline West, a private high-speed rail line from Las Vegas to the Los Angeles area, is under construction and may be completed in time for the Olympics.

Get around
During the 1984 Olympics traffic was feared to be nightmarish and local media were drumming on about this for months ahead of the games, which led many locals to forego driving during the games, actually resulting in better than usual driving. Back then the LA Metro did not yet exist, while it includes roughly of light and heavy rail lines as of 2017 with a lot of new construction planned to happen before the games - much of it approved in a 2016 ballot measure unconnected to the games. Many venues are connected to public transport already and for many others, such a connection is planned. Choosing lodging with good public transit access can make getting around much easier.

Where
One of the selling points of Los Angeles for these Games, as well as for the earlier 1932 and 1984 editions, was its number of pre-existing facilities, some of them left over from 1984 or even 1932. Some new venues are being built, but these are mostly stadiums for major U.S. professional sports teams that would have been built with or without the Olympics, and are scheduled to be completed years ahead of the Games.

Go next

 * Las Vegas
 * San Diego
 * San Francisco