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Los Angeles 2028 sailing schedule and the World Sailing review process explainedLos Angeles 2028 sailing schedule and the World Sailing review process explained">

Los Angeles 2028 sailing schedule and the World Sailing review process explained

Джеймс Міллер, GetExperience.com
до 
Джеймс Міллер, GetExperience.com
4 хвилини читання
Новини
Лютий 24, 2026

Under World Sailing‘s Regulation 11, at least four Olympic events must be reviewed every four years: the 2025 General Assembly confirmed that the Men's Kite, Women's Kite, Mixed Dinghy і Mixed Multihull are now under formal review, with proposals from stakeholders due by 31 March 2026 and any equipment changes subject to a further review in 2027.

Review scope, decision options and submission logistics

The Assembly vote begins a structured process. For each event under review, the options are:

  • Retain the event and existing equipment
  • Keep the event, but evolve the equipment.
  • Keep the event but adopt entirely new equipment
  • Replace the event (equipment to be determined)

Where a vote proposes equipment evolution or replacement, a follow-up assessment is required in 2027. All proposals intended to inform the joint events-and-equipment working group must be submitted by Member National Authorities, World Sailing Class Associations, Continental Associations, Associate Members, committees or race officials to [email protected] using the prescribed template. Final selections remain subject to approval by the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

Who can influence outcomes?

  • National authorities and class associations—primary technical and participation input
  • Continental associations—regional sailing development considerations
  • Committees, officials and associate members—operational and regulatory perspective

At a glance, the process balances participation, broadcast appeal and gender equity objectives whilst acknowledging logistical constraints such as class equipment supply chains, transport and venue readiness.

Los Angeles 2028 sailing schedule and venues

The Olympic sailing programme scheduled for 16–28 July 2028 splits competition across Long Beach and Los Angeles waters, with classes allocated as follows.

Week / DatesПодіяClass / EquipmentVenue
First Week (16–20 July)Men's KiteboardFormula KiteLong Beach, CA
First Week (16–20 July)Women's KiteboardFormula KiteLong Beach, CA
First Week (16–20 July)Men's WindsurfingiQFOiLLong Beach, CA
First Week (16–20 July)Women's WindsurfingiQFOiLLong Beach, CA
Second Week (23–28 July)Men's Singlehanded DinghyILCA 7Los Angeles, CA
Second Week (23–28 July)Women's Singlehanded DinghyILCA 6Los Angeles, CA
Second Week (23–28 July)Mixed Two Person Dinghy470Los Angeles, CA
Second Week (23–28 July)Men's SkiffForty-ninerLos Angeles, CA
Second Week (23–28 July)Women's Skiff49erFXLos Angeles, CA
Second Week (23–28 July)Mixed MultihullNacra 17Los Angeles, CA

Operational impacts for teams and host cities

Equipment changes or a switch in event lineup will affect procurement, freight logistics, customs clearance and on-site rigging facilities. Sailors and national programmes must plan for:

  • Transport and storage of boats and foils through ports and airports
  • Local testing windows and shore facilities for foiling classes, like iQFOiL і Formula Kite
  • Broadcast infrastructure to support dynamic camera work and spectator viewing
  • Venue operations for Long Beach and Los Angeles, including spectator access and marine traffic management

What spectators and travellers should consider

Fans planning to attend should factor in staggered schedules across the two-week window to minimise travel between venues. Local tour operators and charter providers will likely expand services—race viewing trips, yacht charters and museum tours with live guides—to meet demand. For those arranging shore-side experiences, options range from adventure rafting trips for beginners to exclusive yacht charters for events along the Southern California coast.

Major stakeholder engagement this cycle creates opportunities for tourism operators to package sailing-related travel experiences: cruise packages, yacht parties for race viewing, and educational museum visits tied to maritime history. Platforms that allow secure online payments and tailored requests can simplify planning and protect bookings for international visitors.

The review highlights the sport’s push for gender balance, broadcast-friendly formats and sustainable equipment choices, all of which will influence travel patterns and event-based tourism in 2028. On GetExperience, you book your experience from verified providers at reasonable prices. This empowers you to make the most informed decision without unnecessary expenses or disappointments. GetExperience offers a diverse selection of tours in the Los Angeles and Long Beach area—race-viewing cruises, coastal excursions and bespoke shore programmes that suit various budgets and tastes; Book your Trip GetExperience.com

In summary: the World Sailing review under Regulation 11 places four events under scrutiny with proposals due by 31 March 2026 and possible equipment decisions deferred to 2027. The Los Angeles 2028 sailing schedule is set across Long Beach and Los Angeles, featuring Formula Kite, iQFOiL, ILCA classes, 470, 49er, 49erFX and Nacra 17. Logistics—equipment supply chains, venue readiness and broadcast infrastructure—will dictate implementation and will also shape travel experiences and tourism offerings. Whether you’re chasing luxury adventure travel experiences, eco-friendly wildlife safaris or interactive online cultural workshops to complement your trip, advance planning for travel experiences and adventure activities will be essential to get the most from the Games and avoid disappointment.