A Canadian Marketer’s Guide to Participating in the Olympics
The Olympic Games are one of the few cultural moments that still break through the usual noise. For people in Canada, they are about more than medals and results. They are about shared pride in athletes representing the country, and they spark conversations from the start of the first event to the final performance.
With the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milano-Cortina approaching, a question many Canadian marketers are asking is simple: how can our brand take part in this moment in a way that feels authentic and meaningful?
The good news is that meaningful participation does not require being an official sponsor.
How Official Canadian Partnerships Look
Some Canadian brands participate at the official level, working directly with Canadian Olympic Committee and Canadian Paralympic Committee. Tim Hortons recently announced a new partnership that focuses on supporting athletes and engaging Canadians in everyday ways. Canadian Tire, Lululemon, Bell, and Petro-Canada also play a role through athlete programs, fan experiences, and national activations.
These partnerships take years of planning and serious investment. They are built for scale, and they are not realistic for most brands. That is okay. Official status is only one way to be part of the moment.
A few Canadian brands have official relationships that help bring Team Canada’s story to life. This year Tim Hortons announced a new partnership with the Canadian Olympic Committee and Canadian Paralympic Committee to support athletes and engage Canadians with a range of initiatives, from special packaging to fan events. Alongside Tim Hortons, Canadian Tire, Lululemon, Bell, and Petro-Canada are among the brands involved with Team Canada through activations and support that connect sport to communities across the country. These partnerships often come from long planning cycles and significant investment, which makes them hard to replicate for many smaller brands.
That does not mean brands outside this group are left out.
Why the Olympics Matter for Canadian Brands
The Winter Olympics hit differently in Canada. Winter sport is part of our identity. From hockey rinks and ski hills to frozen ponds and early morning practices, many Canadians see themselves in these athletes long before the Games begin.
The Olympics arrive at a time of year when people are craving energy and connection. Days are short, routines feel heavy, and the weather keeps many of us indoors. Then suddenly there is something to rally around. Early mornings, late nights, group chats buzzing, and a reason to feel proud of what Canadians can do on the world stage.
Canada consistently shows up as a winter sport powerhouse, and that success fuels a shared sense of confidence and optimism. Watching Canadian athletes compete reminds people of resilience, preparation, and teamwork, values that feel especially meaningful given the uncertainty many are feeling right now.
For brands, this moment is not about chasing attention. It is about standing alongside an audience that is already emotionally invested. When brands acknowledge the excitement, the pride, and the collective experience of cheering for Canada, their presence feels natural. The most effective Olympic marketing does not interrupt the moment. It becomes part of it.
How Canadian Brands Can Participate Without Official Sponsorship
Lean into support for Canada, not Olympic branding.
You do not need official language or logos to show support. Celebrating Canadian athletes, winter sport culture, or moments of national pride is often more relatable and more effective than trying to reference the Games directly.
Create spaces for people to watch and connect.
This can be as simple as a team watch party, an in-store screen, or a community viewing event. These moments turn the Olympics into something shared, not just watched.
Support athletes closer to home.
Many Olympic and Paralympic athletes rely on local sponsorships and community support. Highlighting their journeys, especially athletes from your region, creates stories people actually want to follow.
Run timely offers that feel thoughtful, not forced.
Limited-time promotions tied to big competition days or Canadian winter themes work best when they are subtle. The goal is to be part of the moment, not to cash in on it.
Collaborate with other Canadian brands.
Shared giveaways, co-hosted events, or joint content feel aligned with the spirit of the Games. Collaboration often lands better than a single brand trying to own the spotlight.
A Short Note on Legal Considerations
Olympic trademarks, symbols, and event names are tightly protected. Brands should avoid using official logos, host city references, or language that suggests an official partnership. Athlete partnerships are allowed but must follow Rule 40 guidelines during the Games period. A legal check is always worth it before launching anything tied to the Olympics.
Final Thought
For Canadian brands, participating in the Olympics is not about claiming space in the spotlight. It is about showing up in a way that reflects how Canadians actually experience the Games.
The brands that resonate are the ones that cheer alongside their audience, support athletes and communities, and understand that during moments like this, being present and genuine matters more than being official.