The Winter Olympics has hit its stride with medal finals and drama filling up the schedule each day from Milano Cortina.

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Viewers in the UK have been revelling in the Euro-friendly timezone coverage and the first winter Games to appeal to British body clocks since 2006.

However, with so much action playing out across two major sites, it's hard to stay on top of everything.

Highlights have taken a different form in 2026 with a regular show dropped from the free-to-air slate.

RadioTimes.com brings you all the details on how to watch highlights of the Winter Olympics 2026.

Winter Olympics 2026 highlights on BBC

There is no dedicated BBC highlights show in 2026 with the popular Today at the Games format dropped for the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Instead, the BBC has been showing snippets of the best action from the day during the evening coverage with Clare Balding, depending on which live events run into the night.

Of course, most outdoor events require daylight, meaning there can be a lack of action in the evenings outside of events such as curling, ice hockey and figure skating.

This offers an opportunity for the BBC to be flexible in showing live coverage of those events, or running through the day's highlights.

The BBC website also boasts plenty of clips from the biggest events for you to scroll through at your leisure.

Winter Olympics 2026 highlights on TNT Sports and discovery+

TNT Sports boast a regular, daily highlights show, Ciao Cortina, at 10:30pm each night.

The show contains half an hour of highlights and discussion of the biggest storylines.

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Check out more of our Sport coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what's on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

Authors

Radio Times sports editor Michael Potts. He has a beard, is looking at the camera and smiling
Michael PottsSport Editor

Michael Potts is the Sport Editor for Radio Times, covering all of the biggest sporting events across the globe with previews, features, interviews and more. He has worked for Radio Times since 2019 and previously worked on the sport desk at Express.co.uk after starting his career writing features for What Culture. He achieved a first-class degree in Sports Journalism in 2014.

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