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How do Olympians like Eileen Gu earn $23 million? Here are all the ways

Eileen Gu celebrates her silver medal for China at the Women's Slopestyle Final during the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games in Livigno, Italy.
Hannah Peters
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Getty Images Europe
Eileen Gu celebrates her silver medal for China at the Women's Slopestyle Final during the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games in Livigno, Italy.

Some Winter Olympics athletes not only win big in the ski slopes or in the skating rink — they also win a different kind of gold.

Freestyle skier Eileen Gu and snowboarder Chloe Kim are part of a handful of elite athletes who have parlayed their Olympic fame into millions of dollars in sponsorships. Gu, for example, earned $23 million over the past 12 months, according to Forbes — the most of any Winter Olympics athlete.

So what makes some Olympians so bankable? From telegenic looks to savvy social media, here are the traits that can turn athletes into millionaires.

Winning!! Good looks help

Achieving great Olympic glory is the first, obvious requirement.

Gu won two golds and one silver medal at the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics — and then added two more silvers this year in Milan-Cortina. Likewise, Kim won two successive gold medals in halfpipe snowboarding in PyeongChang, South Korea, in 2018 and in Beijing, adding another silver to her count this year.

Yet beyond incredible sporting achievement, both athletes also boast a common trait. It's what marketers describe as "telegenic" looks. Gu, for example, has modeled for Victoria Secret and been in the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue.

Gu has been able to become the most bankable winter Olympian despite attracting a lot of controversy after she chose to represent China despite being born and raised in San Francisco.

Fans crowd around Eileen Gu at the Women's Freeski Big Air competition during the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games in Livigno, Italy, on Feb. 16.
Patrick Smith / Getty Images Europe
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Getty Images Europe
Fans crowd around Eileen Gu at the Women's Freeski Big Air competition during the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games in Livigno, Italy, on Feb. 16.

The 22-year-old has been coy about whether she has kept her U.S. citizenship given that China does not allow dual citizenship. But from a financial point of view, having a foot in the two biggest consumer economies of the world has earned her marketing gold.

Gu has a slew of sponsorships, from global brands such as Porsche to Chinese companies such as Anta Sports that are less well known outside of China.

Having that "it factor"

It doesn't boil down to looks alone, however.

Sometimes it's about sporting a distinctive look. Like snowboarder Shaun White's red mane when winning a gold medal at the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics. But mostly, it's about having what Rick Burton, the former head of marketing for the U.S. Olympics Committee, calls the "it factor."

"We love that they're winners, and we celebrate winners in our culture. And I think they look good doing it," says Burton, who's now a professor at Syracuse University.

"But they also have an outward vibrancy," he adds. "It's not necessarily that they're extroverted, but it's that they are comfortable in that moment."

Snowboarder Chloe Kim for example gained fame because of her athletic prowess, but her bubbly and sunny personality proved to be marketing gold, earning her $4 million over the last year, according to Forbes.

Being savvy on social media

Athletes who are able to leverage their medals into marketing riches also often share another thing in common: a savvy social media presence.

Eileen Gu, for example, has plenty of glamor shots across her Instagram account, but she also posts about regular moments, like the rice cooker she brought to the Milan-Cortina Olympics, or brushing her teeth as she gets ready for another day of training. Gu also posts regularly in Chinese social media platform Weibo, where she has nearly 8 million followers.

Meanwhile, Kim recently posted a video on Instagram about trying on a new pair of denim shorts.

In other words, both are able pull off another characteristic that marketers and sponsors value immensely: Looking relatable.

Chloe Kim of Team United States reacts after competing at the Women's Snowboard Halfpipe Qualification during the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games in Livigno, Italy, on Feb. 11.
Cameron Spencer / Getty Images Europe
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Getty Images Europe
Chloe Kim of Team United States reacts after competing at the Women's Snowboard Halfpipe Qualification during the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games in Livigno, Italy, on Feb. 11.

Most Olympians, though, don't win millions

To be sure, athletes such as Gu and Kim or skier Lindsey Vonn or figure skater Ilia Malinin are outliers in many ways.

Many athletes compete in the Olympics — yet many never end up with a lucrative sponsorship contract (though winning a medal can lead to great financial rewards).

In fact, even getting to the Olympics for many athletes involves great financial sacrifice. Affording equipment, paying for coaches and insurance all adds up. And it can mean having to take up part-time jobs, sometimes even launching crowdfunding campaigns like the one launched by a partner of the Jamaican bobsleigh team (portrayed in the Hollywood film Cool Runnings).

Sustaining fame beyond the Olympics is hard work

The hardest part for many athletes is how to stay relevant beyond the global attention that comes only once every four years.

It often requires hard work — and thinking hard about how to stay relevant, marketing experts say.

Shaun White, for example, started a new competition for snowboarding called The Snow League as a way to bring in more attention — and money — into the sport beyond the Olympics or the regular international competitions.

Other Olympians go a different route. For example, former speed skater Apolo Ohno and figure skater Kristi Yamaguchi appeared on — and won — different seasons of Dancing with the Stars.

Meanwhile, gold medalist Tara Lipinski and Olympian figure skater Johnny Weir are now Olympics analysts with broadcaster NBC and also happen to be on the latest season of reality TV show The Traitors, which airs on the Peacock network as well.

The next stars from Milan Cortina

There are a few emerging Olympic stars who could potentially become tomorrow's millionaires outside the ski slopes.

One name is already gaining a lot of buzz: alpine skier Breezy Johnson who won a gold in downhill skiing in Milan-Cortina.

Not only did she win gold, she also starred in one of the most discussed moments of the 2026 Winter Olympics when her boyfriend proposed to her near the finish line of her super-G race.

Gold medalist Breezy Johnson celebrates on the podium during the medal ceremony for the Women's Downhill competition at the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, on Feb. 8.
Al Bello / Getty Images Europe
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Getty Images Europe
Gold medalist Breezy Johnson celebrates on the podium during the medal ceremony for the Women's Downhill competition at the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, on Feb. 8.

But in an era where Name Image and Likeness (NIL) sponsorships are becoming critical for many athletes, marketing experts are also eyeing how NIL could change the economics of Olympian fame.

"The athletes that maybe we're going to be talking about over the course of the next month may not be photogenic," Burton says. "They may not have won an event or medaled, but they may actually be people who are really good at using platforms that are available to them in this creator economy."

Burton adds it could be something like creating a viral moment or putting out a video that captures widespread attention.

"If they can keep that audience coming back for more of their content and if they can monetize their content, all of a sudden you've got a really interesting premise," Burton adds.

NIL may not earn an athlete the $23 million that Eileen Gu received over the past year — but for a winter Olympian it could be a way to turn great athletic sacrifice into something far more enduring: a good, comfortable living.

Copyright 2026 NPR

Rafael Nam
Rafael Nam is NPR's senior business editor.
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