The International Olympic Committee doesn't award Olympians prize money for earning medals. Yet gold, silver and bronze medalists from different countries can still collect a range of rewards for outstanding performances.
Individual governments and private sponsors often compensate athletes with cash, property and even more unusual prizes, like livestock. This year, for example, Olympic track and field gold medalists will win $50,000 from World Athletics, making it the first international federation to award prize money at an Olympic Games, the organization announced in April.
World Athletics President Sebastian Coe said in a recent interview with CNBC that athletes deserve a share of the income they generate for the organization.
"Athletes are, in essence, the bearers of the revenues that we get," he told CNBC. "Their performances at an Olympic Games, in our own World Championships, provide world athletics with broadcast revenue from the International Olympic Committee and at a world championship level."
The Paris Olympics will run from July 26 to August 11. Here are how some countries reward their top performers.
Indonesian badminton athletes Greysia Polii and Apriyani Rahayu, who earned gold medals at the Tokyo Games in 2021, were promised five cows, a meatball restaurant and a new house, according to a Reuters report. The government also offered the pair a cash prize worth roughly $350,000.
Additionally, Rahayu, from Sulawesi island, was offered five cows and a house by the district's head, according to the report.
The Hong Kong Sports Institute also gives its athletes prize money, based on how they place in competitions. At the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, gold medalists in individual events from Hong Kong will get $768,000.
Youth and Sports Minister Hannah Yeoh in February said national athletes who make the Olympic podium will be rewarded with a foreign-made car, sponsored by an unnamed automaker, according to a report from Malay Mail, a Malaysian news outlet.
The nation's Road To Gold (RTG) Committee received an offer from a car company that said it will provide athletes with its vehicles, the publication reported.
"We also want to give a chance to local brands (to reward Olympics medallists) because now only a foreign brand has made the offer," Yeoh added, according to the report.
If an athlete from the Republic of Kazakhstan places in their event, the Republic's Ministry of Culture and Sports gives them an apartment. Its size depends on how well the prize winner does in their event.
Gold medalists get three-room apartments; silver medalists get two-room apartments; and bronze medalists get one-room apartments.
Singapore's National Olympic Council also has its own "incentive scheme" to reward Olympic medalists. It pays Olympic gold medalists in individual sports $1,000,000 Singapore dollars, equal to about $744,000 U.S. dollars. Silver medalists earn roughly $372,000, and bronze medalists earn about $186,000.
The governments of Italy, Morocco, Estonia and other nations have also promised cash prizes for medalists at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.
Megan Cerullo is a New York-based reporter for CBS MoneyWatch covering small business, workplace, health care, consumer spending and personal finance topics. She regularly appears on CBS News 24/7 to discuss her reporting.
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