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Guanajuato headquarters of the ON 2026

Guanajuato, Gto. as of December 16, 2025.- After 10 years, the National Olympics returns to Guanajuato and it will be in the 2026 edition when the entity receives the maximum amateur competition in four sports disciplines.

During the second session of the National Sports System (SINADE), held in the state of Puebla, the venues for the contest were announced, including Guanajuato, the host state in swimming, artistic swimming, fronton and diving.

Before representatives of the highest sports entities in our country, national and state authorities, presidents of sports federations and directors of sports institutes, including the General Director of CODE, Yendy Cortinas, who was happy at the announcement by Rommel Pacheco, director of CONADE, who announced Guanajuato as one of the 7 states that will receive another edition of the ON. The main venue was announced at the end of this day as the “surprise” of this edition: Puebla with 16 sports disciplines.

There will be 7 states that will receive the ON 2026 in 51 sports disciplines:

Puebla main headquarters: rugby 7, table tennis, basketball, 3×3 basketball, karate, volleyball, tennis, soccer, sport climbing, associated wrestling, beach volleyball, breaking, softball, golf, inline hockey and fencing

Jalisco: bowling, cycling, field hockey, skateboarding, modern pentathlon, shooting sports, water polo and athletics

Tlaxcala: badminton, women’s artistic gymnastics, men’s artistic gymnastics, rhythmic gymnastics, trampoline gymnastics, roller skates (artistic and speed), tae kwon do and archery

San Luis Potosi: chess, charrería, handball, racquetball, squash and rodeo

Nayarit: open water, baseball 5, baseball, boxing, weightlifting, surfing and triathlon

Guanajuato: swimming, artistic swimming, fronton, and diving.

Yucatan: canoeing, judo, rowing and sailing

Aiko Tanaka

Aiko Tanaka is a combat sports journalist and general sports reporter at Archysport. A former competitive judoka who represented Japan at the Asian Games, Aiko brings firsthand athletic experience to her coverage of judo, martial arts, and Olympic sports. Beyond combat sports, Aiko covers breaking sports news, major international events, and the stories that cut across disciplines — from doping scandals to governance issues to the business side of global sport. She is passionate about elevating the profile of underrepresented sports and athletes.

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