| # | Host | Year | Activities | 
|---|
| 1st |  Paris, France | 1894 | Athens selected as the host for the 1896 Summer Olympics. Paris selected as the host for the 1900 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 2nd | .svg.png) Athens, Greece | 1896 | Pierre de Coubertin elected President of the IOC. | 
| 3rd |  Le Havre, France | 1897 |  | 
| 4th |  Paris, France | 1901 | St.Louis selected as the host for the 1904 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 5th[2] |  Paris, France | 1903 |  | 
| 6th[2] |  London, United Kingdom | 1904 | London selected as the host for the 1908 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 7th | .svg.png) Brussels, Belgium | 1905 |  | 
| 8th | .svg.png) Athens, Greece | 1906 |  | 
| 9th |  The Hague, Netherlands | 1907 |  | 
| 10th |  Berlin, Germany[2] | 1909 | Stockholm selected as the host for the 1912 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 11th |  Luxembourg City, Luxembourg | 1910 |  | 
| 12th | .svg.png) Budapest, Austria-Hungary | 1911 |  | 
| 13th |  Basel, Switzerland | 1912 |  | 
| 14th |  Stockholm, Sweden | 1912 | Berlin selected to host the 1916 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 15th |  Lausanne, Switzerland | 1913 |  | 
| 16th |  Paris, France | 1914 |  | 
| All international Olympic business was suspended from 1915 to 1918 due to World War I. | 
| 17th |  Lausanne, Switzerland | 1919 | Antwerp selected to host the 1920 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 18th | .svg.png) Antwerp, Belgium | 1920 |  | 
| 19th |  Lausanne, Switzerland | 1921 | Chamonix selected to host the 1924 Winter Olympics. Paris selected to host the 1924 Summer Olympics. Amsterdam selected to host the 1928 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 20th |  Paris, France | 1922 |  | 
| 21st | .svg.png) Rome, Italy | 1923 | Los Angeles selected to host the 1932 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 22nd |  Paris, France | 1924 |  | 
| 23rd |  Prague, Czechoslovakia | 1925 | Henri de Baillet-Latour elected President of the IOC. | 
| 24th |  Lisbon, Portugal | 1926 | St. Moritz selected to host the 1928 Winter Olympics.[1] | 
| 25th |  Monaco | 1927 |  | 
| 26th |  Amsterdam, Netherlands | 1928 |  | 
| 27th |  Lausanne, Switzerland | 1929 | Lake Placid selected to host the 1932 Winter Olympics.[1] | 
| 28th | .svg.png) Berlin, Germany | 1930 |  | 
| 29th | .svg.png) Barcelona, Spain | 1931 | Berlin selected to host the 1936 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 30th |  Los Angeles, United States | 1932 |  | 
| 31st |  Vienna, Austria | 1933 | Garmisch-Partenkirchen selected to host the 1936 Winter Olympics.[1] | 
| 32nd | .svg.png) Athens, Greece | 1934 |  | 
| 33rd |  Oslo, Norway | 1935 |  | 
| 34th | .svg.png) Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany | 1936 |  | 
| 35th | .svg.png) Berlin, Germany | 1936 | Tokyo selected to host the 1940 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 36th |  Warsaw, Poland | 1937 | Sapporo selected to host the 1940 Winter Olympics.[1] | 
| 37th | .svg.png) Cairo, Egypt | 1938 |  | 
| 38th |  London, United Kingdom | 1939 | Garmisch-Partenkirchen selected to host the 1940 Winter Olympics. Cortina d'Ampezzo selected to host the 1944 Winter Olympics. London selected to host the 1944 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| All international Olympic business was suspended from 1940 to 1945 due to World War II. | 
| 39th |  Lausanne, Switzerland | 1946 | St. Moritz selected to host the 1948 Winter Olympics. London selected to host the 1948 Summer Olympics.[1] J. Sigfrid Edström elected President of the IOC. | 
| 40th |  Stockholm, Sweden | 1947 | Oslo selected to host the 1952 Winter Olympics. Helsinki selected to host the 1952 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 41st |  St. Moritz, Switzerland | 1948 |  | 
| 42nd |  London, United Kingdom | 1948 |  | 
| 43rd |  Rome, Italy | 1949 | Cortina d'Ampezzo selected to host the 1956 Winter Olympics. Melbourne selected to host the 1956 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 44th |  Copenhagen, Denmark | 1950 |  | 
| 45th[2] |  Vienna, Austria | 1951 |  | 
| 46th |  Oslo, Norway | 1952 |  | 
| 47th |  Helsinki, Finland | 1952 | Avery Brundage elected President of the IOC.[3] | 
| 48th | .svg.png) Mexico City, Mexico | 1953 |  | 
| 49th | .svg.png) Athens, Greece | 1954 |  | 
| 50th |  Paris, France | 1955 | Squaw Valley selected to host the 1960 Winter Olympics. Rome selected to host the 1960 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 51st |  Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy | 1956 |  | 
| 52nd |  Melbourne, Australia | 1956 |  | 
| 53rd | .svg.png) Sofia, Bulgaria | 1957 |  | 
| 54th |  Tokyo, Japan | 1958 |  | 
| 55th |  Munich, West Germany | 1959 | Innsbruck selected to host the 1964 Winter Olympics. Tokyo selected to host the 1964 Summer Olympics.[1] Luge added to the program in 1964.[4] | 
| 56th |  San Francisco, United States | 1960 |  | 
| 57th |  Rome, Italy | 1960 |  | 
| 58th | .svg.png) Athens, Greece | 1961 |  | 
| 59th | .svg.png) Moscow, Soviet Union | 1962 |  | 
| 60th |  Baden-Baden, West Germany | 1963 | Mexico City selected to host the 1968 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 61st |  Innsbruck, Austria | 1964 | Grenoble selected to host the 1968 Winter Olympics.[1] | 
| 62nd |  Tokyo, Japan | 1964 |  | 
| 63rd | .svg.png) Madrid, Spain | 1965 |  | 
| 64th |  Rome, Italy | 1966 | Sapporo selected to host the 1972 Winter Olympics. Munich selected to host the 1972 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 65th | .svg.png) Tehran, Iran | 1967 |  | 
| 66th |  Grenoble, France | 1968 |  | 
| 67th |  Mexico City, Mexico | 1968 |  | 
| 68th |  Warsaw, People's Republic of Poland | 1969 |  | 
| 69th[5] |  Amsterdam, Netherlands | 1970 | Denver selected to host the 1976 Winter Olympics. Montreal selected to host the 1976 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 70th |  Amsterdam, Netherlands | 1970 |  | 
| 71st[5] |  Luxembourg City, Luxembourg | 1971 |  | 
| 72nd |  Sapporo, Japan | 1972 |  | 
| 73rd |  Munich, West Germany | 1972 | Lord Killanin elected President of the IOC.[6] | 
| 74th | .svg.png) Varna, Bulgaria | 1973 |  | 
| 75th |  Vienna, Austria | 1974 | Lake Placid selected to host the 1980 Winter Olympics. Moscow selected to host the 1980 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 76th |  Lausanne, Switzerland | 1975 |  | 
| 77th |  Innsbruck, Austria | 1976 |  | 
| 78th |  Montreal, Canada | 1976 |  | 
| 79th |  Prague, Czechoslovakia | 1977 |  | 
| 80th | .svg.png) Athens, Greece | 1978 | Sarajevo selected to host the 1984 Winter Olympics. Los Angeles selected to host the 1984 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 81st |  Montevideo, Uruguay | 1979 |  | 
| 82nd |  Lake Placid, United States | 1980 |  | 
| 83rd | .svg.png) Moscow, Soviet Union | 1980 | Juan Antonio Samaranch elected President of the IOC.[7] | 
| 84th |  Baden-Baden, West Germany | 1981 | Calgary selected to host the 1988 Winter Olympics. Seoul selected to host the 1988 Summer Olympics.[1] | 
| 85th |  Rome, Italy | 1982 |  | 
| 86th |  New Delhi, India | 1983 |  | 
| 87th |  Sarajevo, Yugoslavia | 1984 |  | 
| 88th |  Los Angeles, United States | 1984 |  | 
| 89th |  Lausanne, Switzerland | 1984 |  | 
| 90th |  East Berlin, East Germany | 1985 |  | 
| 91st |  Lausanne, Switzerland | 1986 | Barcelona selected to host the 1992 Summer Olympics.[8] Albertville selected to host the 1992 Winter Olympics.[1] Changed on separating Summer and Winter games in alternating even-years beginning from 1994. | 
| 92nd |  Istanbul, Turkey | 1987 |  | 
| 93rd |  Calgary, Canada | 1988 |  | 
| 94th |  Seoul, South Korea | 1988 | Lillehammer selected to host the 1994 Winter Olympics[8] | 
| 95th | .svg.png) San Juan, Puerto Rico | 1989 | Demonstration sports were removed from the Olympic program beginning from 1994.[4] | 
| 96th |  Tokyo, Japan | 1990 | Atlanta selected to host the 1996 Summer Olympics.[8] | 
| 97th |  Birmingham, United Kingdom | 1991 | Nagano selected to host the 1998 Winter Olympics.[8] Curling and snowboarding added to the Olympic program in 1998.[4] | 
| 98th |  Albertville, France | 1992 |  | 
| 99th |  Barcelona, Spain | 1992 |  | 
| 100th |  Lausanne, Switzerland | 1993 |  | 
| 101st |  Monte Carlo, Monaco | 1993 | Sydney selected to host the 2000 Summer Olympics.[8] Beach Volleyball added to the Olympic program in 1996.[9] | 
| 102nd |  Lillehammer, Norway | 1994 |  | 
| 103rd |  Paris, France | 1994 |  | 
| 104th |  Budapest, Hungary | 1995 | Salt Lake City selected to host the 2002 Winter Olympics.[8] | 
| 105th |  Atlanta, United States | 1996 |  | 
| 106th |  Lausanne, Switzerland | 1997 | Athens selected to host the 2004 Summer Olympics.[8] | 
| 107th |  Nagano, Japan | 1998 |  | 
| 108th |  Lausanne, Switzerland | 1999 |  | 
| 109th |  Seoul, South Korea | 1999 | Turin selected to host the 2006 Winter Olympics.[8] | 
| 110th |  Lausanne, Switzerland | 1999 |  | 
| 111th |  Sydney, Australia | 2000 |  | 
| 112th |  Moscow, Russia | 2001 | Beijing selected to host the 2008 Summer Olympics.[8] Jacques Rogge elected President of the IOC.[10] | 
| 113th |  Salt Lake City, United States | 2002 |  | 
| 114th |  Mexico City, Mexico | 2002 |  | 
| 115th |  Prague, Czech Republic | 2003 | Vancouver selected to host the 2010 Winter Olympics.[8] | 
| 116th |  Athens, Greece | 2004 |  | 
| 117th |  Singapore | 2005 | London selected to host the 2012 Summer Olympics. Baseball and softball removed from the Olympic program in 2012. | 
| 118th |  Turin, Italy | 2006 |  | 
| 119th |  Guatemala City, Guatemala | 2007 | Sochi selected to host the 2014 Winter Olympics. Creation of the Youth Olympics.
Singapore selected to host the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics. | 
| 120th |  Beijing, China | 2008 |  | 
| 121st |  Copenhagen, Denmark | 2009 | Rio de Janeiro selected to host the 2016 Summer Olympics. Golf and rugby readmitted to the Olympic program in 2016. | 
| 122nd |  Vancouver, Canada | 2010 | Nanjing selected to host the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics. | 
| 123rd |  Durban, South Africa | 2011 | Pyeongchang selected to host the 2018 Winter Olympics. | 
| 124th |  London, United Kingdom | 2012 |  | 
| 125th |  Buenos Aires, Argentina | 2013 | Tokyo selected to host the 2020 Summer Olympics. Wrestling selected for Olympic program for 2020 and 2024. Thomas Bach elected to succeed Jacques Rogge as IOC President. | 
|
| 126th |  Sochi, Russia | 2014 | Discussions on ideas that will eventually form a strategic roadmap for the future of the Olympic Movement, the so-called Olympic Agenda 2020 initiated by IOC President Thomas Bach last year.[11] | 
| 127th |  Monte Carlo, Monaco | 2014 | Extraordinary session to be hosted by IOC member Albert II, Prince of Monaco. The IOC will discuss IOC President Thomas Bach's "Olympic Agenda 2020."[12] | 
| 128th |  Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | 2015 | Beijing selected to host the 2022 Winter Olympics. Lausanne selected to host the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics. | 
| Future sessions | 
| 129th |  Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | 2016 |  | 
| 130th |  Lima, Peru | 2017 | 2024 Summer Olympics and 2023 Summer Youth Olympics host to be announced. | 
| 131st |  Pyeongchang, South Korea | 2018 |  | 
| 132nd |  | 2019 | 2026 Winter Olympics host to be announced. | 
| 133rd |  Tokyo, Japan | 2020 |  | 
| 134th |  | 2021 | 2028 Summer Olympics host to be announced. | 
| 135th |  Beijing, China | 2022 |  |