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All-time Paralympic Games medal table
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Below is an all-time medal table for all Paralympic Games from 1960 to 2024. The International Paralympic Committee does not publish all-time tables, and publishes unofficial tables only per single Games. This table was thus compiled by collating single entries from the IPC database.[1] This medal table also includes medals won at the 1992 Summer Paralympics for Intellectually Disabled, held in Madrid, which also organized by the International Coordination Committee (ICC) and same Organizing Committee (COOB'92) that directed the 1992 Summer Paralympics held in Barcelona, however the results are not included in the International Paralympic Committee's (IPC) database.[2]
The results are attributed to the IPC country code as currently displayed by the IPC database. Usually, a single code corresponds to a single National Paralympic Committee (NPC). When different codes are displayed for different years, medal counts are combined in the case of a simple change of IPC code (such as from RHO to ZIM for Zimbabwe) or simple change of country name (such as from Ceylon to Sri Lanka). As the medals are attributed to each NPC, not all totals include medals won by athletes from that country for another NPC, such as before independence of that country (see individual footnotes for special cases such as combined teams). Countries in italic are national entities that no longer exist.
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Medal table
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The table is pre-sorted by the name of each Paralympic Committee, but can be displayed as sorted by any other column, such as the total number of gold medals or total number of overall medals. To sort by gold, silver, and then bronze (as used unofficially by the IPC and by most broadcasters outside the US) sort first by the bronze column, then the silver, and then the gold. Medal totals in this table are current as of the 2024 Summer Paralympics in Paris.
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Countries without medals
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After the 2024 Summer Paralympics in Paris, 66 of the current 186 National Paralympic Committees have yet to win a Paralympic medal. Two historic National Paralympic Committees are also included in this list.
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Complete ranked medals
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Combined total (1960–2024)
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See also
Notes
- Does not include totals of Chinese Taipei (TPE) or Hong Kong (HKG).
- Competed 1960–1992. Does not include medals won by the Czech Republic (CZE) or Slovakia (SVK) (1994–current).
- Recognized as separate NPC from 1960–1988. Totals not combined with those of Germany (GER).
- This does not include West Germany (FRG) or East Germany (GDR).
- Recognized as separate NPC from 1968–1988, first entry in 1984. Totals not combined with those of Germany (GER).
- Includes all medals won by athletes representing the Hong Kong National Olympic Committee, designated as
Hong Kong from 1960–1996 and
Hong Kong, China since 2000.
- Individual Yugoslav athletes taking part in the 1992 Summer Paralympics because Yugoslavia was under UN sanctions. Totals not combined with those of Yugoslavia (YUG).
- Competed 1960–1972. Totals not combined with those of the Zimbabwe (ZIM).
- Competed 1994–2014. Totals not combined with those of the Soviet Union (URS).
- Does not include medals won by athletes from the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (YUG, 1996–2000).
- Competed 1960–1988. Does not include the totals from the Unified Team (EUN, 1992), nor the totals from pre- and post-Soviet republics (RUS, UKR, etc.).
- Team of several Commonwealth of Independent States nations that competed together in 1992 after the breakup of the Soviet Union. Totals not combined with those of the Soviet Union (URS).
- Includes medals won by athletes from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1960–1992 Winter) and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1996–2000), all of which used the name "Yugoslavia" and the country code YUG. Does not include medals won by Serbia and Montenegro (SCG, 2002–2006) or of any other ex-SFRY nation that have won medals since 1992 (CRO, SLO, BIH, MKD). Also does not include medals won by Yugoslav athletes competing as Independent Olympic Participants at the 1992 Summer Olympics (IOP).
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References
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