Canadian and Spanish ice dancer Olivia Smart is doing important work at the 2026 Winter Olympics — letting fans and fellow athletes know where to find the free condoms.
“So, for anybody wondering about the Olympic condoms, I found them,” Smart, a two-time Winter Olympian, shared via a video uploaded to TikTok on Friday, February 6. “You can find them in the space where the air weave beds are and you can rent appliances — I rented a hair dryer because mine blew up.”
Smart continued, “Eh, you can take tampons. They have everything — everything you need — at the Olympic Village.”
In the video, the ice dancer could be seen shopping around the Olympic Village in Milan, Italy, when she panned to two plastic bins holding the Milan Winter Olympics branded condoms. (From the looks of the video, the bins have been sufficiently raided.)
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“Yes, there are OLYMPIC condoms,” Smart captioned the video.
Olympic-branded condoms were all the rage in Paris during the 2025 Summer Olympics. Laurent Dalard, the individual who coordinated first aid and health services for the 2024 Summer Games, told Olympics.com that the organization “provided enough prophylactics to cover 10,500 athletes staying at the Olympic Village and for those staying further afield.”
@oliviasmartxox Yes, there are OLYMPIC condoms. #olympics #milanocortina2026 #winterolympics
According to Dalard, over 200,000 male condoms, 20,000 female condoms and 10,000 oral dams were made available for the athletes during the 2024 Paris games, adding that “safe sex is paramount in a notoriously febrile environment, akin to students at college, but sweatier.”
Athletes were also subjected to so-called “anti-sex” beds at both the 2020 Tokyo and 2024 Paris Olympic Games — though plenty of athletes debunked the myth that the cardboard beds were created specifically to deter athletes from getting busy between the sheets.
“In today’s episode of fake news at the Olympic Games, the beds are meant to be anti-sex,” Gymnast Rhys McClenaghan said in a then-viral video in 2020 while appearing at the Tokyo Olympics. “They are made out of cardboard, yes, and apparently, they are meant to break at any sudden movements… But it’s fake, fake news!”
To demonstrate the durability of the cardboard beds (according to Forbes, the beds can withstand 440 pounds and were created as part of a recycling initiative that existed prior to the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic) McClenaghan jumped up and down on the bed.
McClenaghan tested the “anti-sex” beds again at the 2024 Paris Olympics, reminding fans that despite the beds’ material they are durable.
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“I’m at the Paris Olympic Games once again, they have these cardboard anti-sex beds,” he said in another video shared at the time. “When I tested them last time, they withstood my testing. Maybe I wasn’t rigorous enough though.”
McClenaghan then jumped up and down on another cardboard bed to showcase its durability.
“No, it has passed the test,” he concluded. “It’s fake, fake news.”
Olympic diver Tom Daley and Team USA rugby sevens player Ilona Maher also tested their cardboard beds at the 2024 Paris Olympics — some even enlisting the help of their teammates in order to prove the cardboard beds’ sturdy frames.
“(The beds) will be recycled into paper products after the Games, with the mattress components recycled into new plastic products,” a news release read, per Inside The Games. “This will be the first time in Olympic and Paralympic history that all beds and bedding are made almost entirely from renewable materials.”


