2026 in prospect: artistic swimming
Building on the momentum of a landmark 2025, Europe’s artistic swimmers enter the 2026 season with confidence, depth and growing global influence across both the men’s and women’s disciplines. The past year delivered breakthrough performances, historic medals and the emergence of new stars, and the coming season now provides the stage for those athletes to consolidate their progress as the road toward the next Olympic cycle gathers pace.
In the men’s events in particular, the rapid evolution of the discipline continues to be one of artistic swimming’s most compelling storylines. European athletes have been central to that progress. Spain’s Dennis Gonzalez underlined his status among the sport’s elite with a landmark mixed duet free world title alongside Iris Tió Casas (who took individual gold herself), while Italy’s Filippo Pelati emerged as another key figure after securing his first world medal in the men’s solo free. Continental competition was just as competitive: at the European Aquatics Artistic Swimming Championships, Great Britain’s Ranjuo Tomblin captured the men’s solo technical crown while Spain’s Jordi Cárceres topped the solo free podium. The results highlighted a widening competitive field, with Spain, Italy, Great Britain and France all featuring regularly among the medals.
That momentum has already carried into the new season. At the opening leg of the World Aquatics Artistic Swimming World Cup in Medellin, Colombia, Tomblin began his campaign with a pair of gold medals, including victory in the men’s solo technical and a mixed duet success alongside Isabelle Thorpe. The early result reinforced Great Britain’s growing influence in the discipline and suggested that the competitive landscape in 2026 may be even broader than in previous years. Alongside established names such as Gonzalez and Pelati, a new generation is also beginning to emerge, with promising junior performers across Europe hinting that the depth of the men’s field will continue to grow.
On the women’s side, Europe’s leading programmes arrive in 2026 with a similarly strong blend of established champions and rising challengers. Spain’s Iris Tio Casas was one of the defining athletes of the previous season, leading her nation’s medal haul at the world championships and establishing herself as one of the most versatile performers in the sport. Austria’s celebrated Alexandri sisters, Anna-Maria Alexandri and Eirini-Marina Alexandri. also reaffirmed their place among the discipline’s leading duets, continuing a remarkable partnership that has delivered titles at both world and European level.
Yet the competitive picture has broadened considerably. Germany’s Klara Bleyer has rapidly established herself as one of Europe’s most exciting soloists, claiming major titles at continental level and opening the new season with a trio of medals in Medellín. Italy’s partnership of Lucrezia Ruggiero and Enrica Piccoli has also become a major force after delivering a historic European duet free title for their country, while France and Great Britain continue to develop ambitious new routines capable of challenging the established hierarchy. The result is a women’s field that is deeper and more unpredictable than at any point in recent years.
The structure of the 2026 season provides multiple stages on which those rivalries will play out. The World Cup series forms the backbone of the international calendar in the early months, continuing with a European stop in Paris from 27–29 March before moving to Xi’an in early May and Pontevedra later that month. The series concludes with the Super Final in Toronto in June, offering athletes a high-level competitive platform to test new choreography and refine routines ahead of the major championships.
Europe’s own championship pathway then takes centre stage during the summer. The European Aquatics Youth Artistic Swimming Championships in Luxembourg in early June will provide the first glimpse of the continent’s next generation, before Munich’s European Aquatics Junior Artistic Swimming Championships later that month showcase the leading under-18 athletes. Both events have increasingly become important markers for emerging talent, with many of today’s senior stars first making their mark at these levels.
The season’s main continental showpiece arrives with the European Aquatics Championships, where the sport’s leading nations will gather in the French capital from 31 July to 5 August. With solo, duet, mixed and team events all on the programme, the championships promise to be one of the most significant artistic swimming competitions of the year, offering athletes the opportunity to establish continental supremacy in the absence of a world championships in the senior calendar.
The focus on youth development continues into August with the World Aquatics Junior Artistic Swimming Championships in Budapest, which will bring together the best junior swimmers from across the globe. For many of Europe’s rising talents, it will represent a final international test before the transition to the senior ranks.
Taken together, the calendar offers a clear narrative for the season ahead: early-year experimentation through the World Cup circuit, followed by the progressive build-up through youth and junior championships before the senior elite converge on Paris.
If the momentum of 2025 is any indication, the year ahead could mark another significant step forward for European artistic swimming.
Stephen Stanley for European Aquatics
The post 2026 in prospect: artistic swimming first appeared on European Aquatics®.