The World Athletics Indoor Tour is soon returning, and it’s set to be the biggest edition yet, nearly 80 meetings packed into a busy few months of competition around the globe.
With the first Gold-level event fast approaching, the full calendar has now been confirmed. Events will take place in 24 countries across Asia, Europe, and North America, with the key scoring disciplines also revealed.
What began as a modest seven-meeting series in 2020 has ballooned into a 77-event juggernaut for the 2025/26 season. The action begins on December 13th in Bucharest, Romania (Challenger level), and runs through to March 26th in Uppsala, Sweden (Silver level).
The top tier Gold circuit features eight events, starting with the New Balance Indoor Grand Prix in Boston on January 24th and finishing in Torun, Poland, on February 22nd, just weeks before the same venue hosts the 2026 World Athletics Indoor Championships from March 20th to 22nd.
2026 World Athletics Indoor Tour Gold Meetings
January 24th: New Balance Indoor Grand Prix – Boston, USA
February 1st: Millrose Games – New York, USA
February 3rd: Czech Indoor Gala – Ostrava, Czechia
February 6th: World Indoor Tour Gold Madrid 2026 – Madrid, Spain
February 8th: INIT Indoor Meeting Karlsruhe – Karlsruhe, Germany
February 11th: Belgrade Indoor Meeting – Belgrade, Serbia
February 19th: Meeting Hauts-de-France Pas-de-Calais Trophée EDF – Liévin, France
February 22nd: ORLEN Copernicus Cup – Torun, Poland
Scoring Events and Prize Money
The World Athletics Indoor Tour rotates its scoring events each year. For 2026, the Gold-level scoring disciplines will be:
Women: 400m, 1500m, 60m hurdles, high jump, long jump
Men: 60m, 800m, 3000m/5000m, pole vault, triple jump, shot put
Points system:
1st – 10 points
2nd – 7 points
3rd – 5 points
4th – 3 points
Athletes’ three best results count towards their final total. The overall winner in each discipline earns a US$10,000 bonus and a wild card entry for the World Indoor Championships in Torun.
Each Gold-level event will also offer at least US$7000 in prize money for every individual discipline.