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| Event type

500 metres, Women

Date15 February 2026 — 17:03
StatusOlympic
LocationMilano Speed Skating Stadium, Fiera Milano Rho, Rho, Milano, ITA
Participants29 from 15 countries
Olympic Record 36.94 / Nao Kodaira JPN / 18 February 2018 / Details
RefereeKarl SkoogSWE
StarterAndré de VriesNED

Few people doubted that the gold medal in this event would be won by Femke Kok. The Dutch sprinter had gone unbeaten for two years, and had claimed the World title in the event in 2023-25. In the 2025/26 season, she had won all seven World Cups that she had raced in, her smallest margin of victory being 0.29 seconds. In Salt Lake City she had recorded a massive improvement of the world record, lowering it to 36.09, a time that would have been a men’s world record as recently as 1993. Moreover, Kok had claimed silver in the 1,000 m in Milano. Of the other participants, medal contenders appeared to be defending champion Erin Jackson, who had recorded good results during the season but had also struggled with a back injury. Kaja Ziomek-Nogal and Yukino Yoshida had both won a World Cup race - in Kok’s absence. The 1,000 m gold medalist Jutta Leerdam had shown her form and was also considered for the podium.

Early in the program was Miho Takagi of Japan. Although a silver medallist in 2022, she rarely skated the 500 m internationally, having won a World Cup B group race in the season. She recorded a terrific opening of 10.40 and continued on to 37.27, her best time since becoming World Sprint Champion in 2024. Few skaters could approach the time in the next pairs. Serena Pergher came surprisingly close with 37:30, just 0.01 outside of her personal best. Leerdam raced in pair 11. Trailing Sophie Warmuth at the 100 m line, she clocked a great 26.5-lap to move into first with 37:15. Ziomek (37.39) and Yoshida (37.98) failed to make it into the medal positions. In the final pair, Jackson and Kok raced each other. They started with the fastest two openings of the day: 10.18 (Kok) and Jackson (10.25). Kok then powered away to a massive 36.49, the sixth fastest 500 m of all time, while Jackson finished just behind Takagi and Pergher with 37.32. In addition to a new Olympic Record, it was also a new unofficial low-altitude world record.

This gave the podium to the same three skaters as in the 1,000 m, but with first and second place reversed. Before this race, the Netherlands had only won a single bronze medal in the 500 m, but with Kok and Leerdam it now had two skaters on the podium. Takagi recorded her ninth Olympic medal. The 0.66 difference between gold and silver was the largest in the event since 1972, when Anne Henning won with 0.68, skated in a re-skate.

PosPairCompetitorNOCTime
115OFemke KokNED36.49GoldOR
212IJutta LeerdamNED37.15Silver
34OMiho TakagiJPN37.27Bronze
410OSerena PergherITA37.30
515IErin JacksonUSA37.32
613OKaja Ziomek-Nogal POL37.39
79OBéatrice LamarcheCAN37.53
812OSophie WarmuthGER37.75
97ORio YamadaJPN37.78
1013ILee Na-HyeonKOR37.86
=118OAndżelika WójcikPOL37.914
=1111OChen Ying-ChuTPE37.914
1314OYukino YoshidaJPN37.98
1410IKim Min-SeonKOR38.010
1514IAnna BoersmaNED38.013
168ITian RuiningCHN38.14
1711IMartyna BaranPOL38.15
189IKristina SilaevaKAZ38.33
195IBrooklyn McDougallCAN38.36
206IJulie Nistad SamsonsenNOR38.37
217ICarolina Hiller-DonnellyCAN38.38
224IWang JingziqianCHN38.57
235OFran VanhoutteBEL38.63
243IMaybritt ViglITA38.66
251IEllia SmedingGBR38.93
262INikola ZdráhalováCZE39.00
276OAnna OstlenderGER39.02
282OSarah WarrenUSA39.19
293OArina IlyachshenkoKAZ39.38