The first window to secure 2028 Los Angeles Olympics seats cracks open Jan 14—enter the random draw now or risk watching from your couch when the world arrives in SoCal.
Two-minute drill: what changes Jan 14
At 9 a.m. PT on Jan 14, 2026, the LA28 ticketing portal flips from “coming soon” to “register now.” Every fan who submits an entry enters a randomized draw that will decide the order of purchasing windows later this year. No payment is taken Jan 14—this is purely a digital lottery for queue position.
How the draw actually works
- Submit name, email, and country on la28.org—one entry per person.
- Within 48 hours of the draw closing (date TBA) you receive an email with a unique 30-minute purchase slot.
- Log in during that slot, pick events, and complete checkout before the timer expires.
- Unsuccessful draw entrants move to a secondary queue for later releases.
Pricing mystery: what we still don’t know
LA28 has not released a single price point. Paris 2024 opened at €24 for preliminary football and peaked at €690 for the men’s 100 m final. Organizers hint at a tiered structure with “access” seats under $50 and prime finals topping $1,000, but the full matrix is expected only after the draw closes.
Geography twist: not every ticket involves LA traffic
Southern California will host 85 % of competitions, yet softball and canoe slalom will be staged in Oklahoma City—roughly 1,300 miles east. Those sessions will carry separate inventory, sold through the same draw but labeled “OKC venue,” giving budget-minded fans a cheaper travel option.
Scalper shield and purchase limits
LA28 is borrowing the Paris playbook: tickets are nominative, non-transferable without an official exchange platform, and capped at four per session per buyer. Resale above face value violates California civil code §1738.5, but enforcement details remain under wraps.
Paralympic timeline: 2027
If you want to watch Oct 14-26, 2028 Paralympic action, circle spring 2027 on your calendar. A separate draw—no crossover with Olympic entries—will run next year for those sessions.
Host-city history: why this drought feels so long
The U.S. last lit a Summer cauldron in Atlanta in 1996. Salt Lake 2002 was the most recent Games on American soil, meaning by 2028 the gap will hit 26 years. Compare that to 1932-1984 when Los Angeles alone hosted twice in 52 years. The long absence super-charged demand: Paris 2024 sold 10.9 million tickets; LA28 organizers quietly predict 12 million requests for roughly 8 million available ducats.
Insider checklist: boost your draw odds
- Use a Gmail or Outlook address—spam filters on lesser clients sometimes block LA28 mail.
- Register immediately after 9 a.m. PT; earlier submissions historically receive better slots.
- Add tickets@la28.org to contacts now so your time-slot email isn’t buried.
- Pre-load a Visa or Mastercard; AmEx and PayPal are not expected to be accepted at launch.
What happens if you skip January
Registration will reopen in waves, but each subsequent round sits behind the previous one in the purchase queue. Waiting until summer 2026 probably means leftovers: early heats of modern pentathlon or distant seats for synchronized swimming—fine for completists, brutal if you crave the 4×100 m relay final at the refurbished LA Coliseum.
Bigger picture: why this matters beyond sports
LA28 is the first Olympics operating under California’s expanded data-privacy laws. Your draw entry doubles as consent for facial-recognition security cameras around venues. The ticket terms also waive class-action rights, pushing disputes into individual arbitration—language that drew lawsuits in prior U.S. Games and will likely return here.
Bottom line: the Jan 14 draw is free, takes 60 seconds, and carries zero downside. Ignore it and you’ll be staring at four-figure resale prices in 2028. Enter, secure your slot, and decide on spending later—LA’s traffic is legendary, but the queue for Olympic history moves even slower.
For the fastest breakdowns on Olympic ticketing, athlete roster moves, and every 2028 storyline as it breaks, keep your browser locked on onlytrustedinfo.com—where the sports desk never sleeps.