Milano Cortina 2026 women’s free skate: Official start time, start order, and live results
Max Global: The Milano Cortina 2026 women’s free skate is the medal-deciding program in Olympic women’s singles figure skating, with final placements determined by the combined total from the short program and the free skate. For anyone following along live, three things matter most: the official start time, the start order (by warm-up group), and a trustworthy live-results page that updates as scores post. The ISU’s official “Start List with Times” provides the schedule and skating order, while the ISU results service is the real-time reference if anything shifts during competition.
Milano Cortina 2026 women’s free skate
Official start time and venue
The Milano Cortina 2026 women’s free skate is scheduled for Thursday, February 19, 2026, with an official start time of 19:00 local time at the Milano Ice Skating Arena (also known as the Unipol Forum) in Assago, part of the Milan metropolitan area.
For viewers in other time zones, 19:00 CET (UTC+1) corresponds to 18:00 UTC, 20:00 Jerusalem/Palestine time (UTC+2), and 1:00 p.m. ET (UTC-5).
The ISU notes that the published timetable is subject to change, which is why the ISU live results feed is the best real-time reference once the event is underway.
Milano Cortina 2026 women’s free skate start order and warm-up groups
The ISU “Start List with Times” divides the Milano Cortina 2026 women’s free skate into four warm-up groups, with an ice resurfacing break scheduled between Groups 2 and 3.
Warm-Up Group 1 (warm-up 19:00; first skate 19:08)
• 19:08 — Lorine Schild (FRA)
• 19:15 — Livia Kaiser (SUI)
• 19:23 — Mariia Seniuk (ISR)
• 19:31 — Kimmy Repond (SUI)
• 19:39 — Ruiyang Zhang (CHN)
• 19:47 — Ekaterina Kurakova (POL)
Warm-Up Group 2 (warm-up 19:55; first skate 20:03)
• 20:03 — Lara Naki Gutmann (ITA)
• 20:10 — Olga Mikutina (AUT)
• 20:18 — Julia Sauter (ROU)
• 20:26 — Iida Karhunen (FIN)
• 20:34 — Jia Shin (KOR)
• 20:42 — Amber Glenn (USA)
Ice resurfacing: 20:50–21:05
Warm-Up Group 3 (warm-up 21:05; first skate 21:13)
• 21:13 — Sofia Samodelkina (KAZ)
• 21:20 — Nina Pinzarrone (BEL)
• 21:28 — Niina Petrokina (EST)
• 21:36 — Haein Lee (KOR)
• 21:44 — Isabeau Levito (USA)
• 21:52 — Loena Hendrickx (BEL)
Warm-Up Group 4 (medal group; warm-up 22:00; first skate 22:08)
• 22:08 — Anastasiia Gubanova (GEO)
• 22:16 — Adeliia Petrosian (AIN)
• 22:24 — Mone Chiba (JPN)
• 22:32 — Alysa Liu (USA)
• 22:40 — Kaori Sakamoto (JPN)
• 22:48 — Ami Nakai (JPN)
Photo: Getty Images
Short program standings heading into the free skate
Because the Milano Cortina 2026 women’s free skate uses short program standings to set the final warm-up group, the top six entered the night separated by slim margins. The ISU start list’s “Current Score” column shows the leaders after the short program as: Ami Nakai (78.71), Kaori Sakamoto (77.23), Alysa Liu (76.59), Mone Chiba (74.00), Adeliia Petrosian (72.89), and Anastasiia Gubanova (71.77).
An Associated Press preview also framed the finale as a tight battle near the top, noting how higher-difficulty content can become a major variable once the free skate begins.
Live results snapshot from the ISU scoreboard
During the Milano Cortina 2026 women’s free skate, the official ISU live-results page posts scores and updates combined totals as skaters finish. As of the page’s “Last Update: 19.02.2026 20:50 (UTC +01:00),” Amber Glenn was listed as the last scored skater, the event status was Ice Resurfacing, and Sofia Samodelkina was shown as next to skate when competition resumed.
At that same update, the current overall standing (combined totals for skaters who had already completed their free skates at that point) showed: Amber Glenn — 214.91, Jia Shin — 206.68, and Lara Naki Gutmann — 195.75. With the final two warm-up groups still to come at that timestamp, the leaderboard remained fluid—exactly why the ISU results service is the most reliable place to track the live medal picture.
How medals are decided in Olympic women’s singles
Final Olympic placements are determined by the combined total score: short program + free skate. Within each segment, the total score is built from the Technical Elements Score (TES) and the Program Component Score (PCS), with technical elements evaluated against base values and adjusted by Grade of Execution (GOE). PCS evaluates overall skating across Composition, Presentation, and Skating Skills.
That structure is why results can swing late: skaters can gain (or lose) significant points through difficulty and execution in the technical score, while the component score rewards complete performances that sustain speed, control, and clarity from start to finish.
Meta Description: Milano Cortina 2026 women’s free skate start time, start order by warm-up group, and the official ISU live results feed—plus short program leaders and how combined scoring decides medals.