Canada fell well short of hitting the 25-medal mark for a fifth Winter Olympics in a row at Milano Cortina 2026.
A men's hockey silver put the country's total at 21.
Canada sent 207 athletes to this year's competition.
Follow along here for Canada's medal total, along with recaps of all the podium performances.
Day 16, Feb. 22
Canadian men's hockey team (silver)
Team USA's Jack Hughes scored in overtime to hand Canada a heartbreaking loss to end the Olympics.
Day 15, Feb. 21
Brad Jacobs, Marc Kennedy, Ben Hebert, Brett Gallant, Tyler Tardi (gold, men's curling)
Jacobs becomes the first men's skip to win two Olympic gold medals after an impressive victory over Great Britain's Bruce Mouat. It is Canada's first Olympic curling gold medal since Jacobs won with another rink in 2014.
Ivanie Blondin (silver, women's speedskating, mass start)
The Ottawa native won silver in this event for the second Olympics in a row. Earlier in the Olympics, Blondin helped Canada defend its gold in the team pursuit.
Rachel Homan, Tracy Fleury, Emma Miskew, Sarah Wilkes, Rachelle Brown (bronze, women's curling)
The world's top-ranked rink fell short in a semifinal against Sweden before bouncing back to knock off the U.S. for bronze. It is Canada's first women's curling medal since 2014.
Day 14, Feb. 20
Brendan Mackay (bronze, men's freeski halfpipe)
Mackay snuck onto the podium when he nailed his final run to vault up the leaderboard into bronze-medal position. It's the first career Olympic medal for the 28-year-old Calgarian, who finished ninth in his debut at Beijing 2022.
Valerie Maltais (bronze, women's 1,500m speedskating)
Maltais captured her third medal of the Olympics with a surprising bronze. The 35-year-old Maltais finished 13th in this event at last year's world championships.
Day 13, Feb. 19
Women's hockey (silver)
A heartbreaker for the Canadian women's hockey team as it coughed up a late one-goal lead before falling to the U.S. in overtime on a Megan Keller winner. Canada walks away from the Olympics with silver for the first time since 2018 and just the third time ever.
Day 12, Feb. 18
Steven Dubois (gold, men's 500m short-track)
After a rough start to the Olympics, Dubois reached the top of the podium in the final individual event for men. Dubois also won gold in this event at last year's world championships.
Courtney Sarault, Danae Blais, Kim Boutin, Florence Brunelle (bronze, women's short-track 3,000m relay)
The Canadians stayed up after an collision with the Netherlands midway through the four-team race to basically ensure a medal. It was the fourth medal of the Games for Sarault.
Day 11, Feb. 17
Isabelle Weidemann, Ivanie Blondin, Valerie Maltais (gold, women's team pursuit speedskating)
The Canadians won gold for the second Olympics in a row in this event, erasing an early deficit to beat the Netherlands in the final.
Day 10, Feb. 16
Megan Oldham (gold, women's freeski big air)
The native of Parry Sound, Ont., captured gold in the women's freestyle skiing big air. The event was delayed by about 75 minutes because of a fierce storm. It marks Oldham's second medal of the Games after she won bronze in the slopestyle.
Courtney Sarault (silver, women's short-track speedskating 1,000m)
The Moncton, N.B., speedskater picked up her third medal of the Olympics by matching her result in this event from last year's world championships.
Day 9, Feb. 15
Mikael Kingsbury (gold, men's dual moguls)
The most dominant moguls skier of all-time likely put a cap on his Winter Games career with a win in a new Olympic event. Kingsbury gave Canada a long-awaited first gold medal at Milano Cortina 2026.
Day 8, Feb. 14
Laurent Dubreuil (bronze, men's 500m speedskating)
The 33-year-old from Levis, Que., surprised with a podium appearance in the men's sprint event four years after finishing a disappointing fourth. Dubreuil set an Olympic record with his time before it was broken by champion Jordan Stolz and silver medallist Jenning de Boo, who skated in the same heat.
Day 6, Feb. 12
Courtney Sarault (bronze, women's short-track speedskating 500m)
Sarault made a big comeback on the final lap to edge out a Dutch skater for bronze. It marked Sarault's second medal of the Olympics after she picked up a silver in the mixed relay
Eliot Grondin (silver, men's snowboard cross)
Grondin came three one-hundredths of a second away from winning gold in a nail-biting final, but instead takes his second straight Olympic silver medal behind Austria's Alessandro Haemmerle.
Mikael Kingsbury (silver, men's moguls)
Kingsbury couldn't have come any closer to Canada's first gold at the Olympics. He finished with the same score as Cooper Woods, but the Australian got gold by virtue of a better turns score.
Day 5, Feb. 11
Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier (bronze, ice dance)
Gilles and Poirier won their first medal in their third Olympics with an emotional performance in the free skate final. It is Canada's first ice-dance medal since Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir won gold in 2018.
Day 4, Feb. 10
Canadian short-track speedskating team (silver, mixed relay)
William Dandjinou, Felix Roussel, Courtney Sarault and Kim Boutin climbed from fourth to second during the course of the four-team final. Earlier, Sarault did an outstanding job avoiding a collision in the semifinal.
Day 3, Feb. 9
Megan Oldham (bronze, women's freeski slopestyle)
After winning three medals in this event at the world championship, Oldham reached the Olympic podium. Oldham finished fourth in big air at the 2022 Olympics before taking one step up in another event at Milano Cortina 2026.
Day 1, Feb. 7
Valérie Maltais (bronze, women's 3,000m speedskating)
Competing in her fifth Olympics, Maltais earned her third career medal to put Canada on the podium for the first time at Milano Cortina 2026. She started her career in short track before going to long track in 2022.





