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What Do You Get When You Win an Olympic Medal in Indonesia? 5 Cows and a Meatball Restaurant

The Olympic Games are one of, if not the, biggest sporting spectacles in the world, but the majority of Olympic medalists will not be coming home with any extra cash lining their pockets.

The International Olympic Committee does not award athletes any prize money for winning medals at the Games, although some sports federations and national governments can still opt to pay their Olympians based on their performances.

Earlier this year, track and field became the first Olympic sport to offer prize money to Olympic medalists when World Athletics announced its intentions to pay $50,000 to each individual gold medalist.

A number of nations are also going the monetary route this summer, including Italy, Hungary, Morocco, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore and Saudi Arabia, to name a few.

However, there are many countries that offer non-monetary rewards and incentives to their athletes who earn Olympic medals, ranging from property to livestock. Here is a (non-exhaustive) round-up of some of the non-monetary rewards offered to Olympic medalists by their home countries.

  • Indonesia
    Indonesia has been known to offer livestock and real estate to its Olympic medalists. In 2021, badminton gold medalists Greysia Polii and Apriyani Rahayu were promised five cows, a new house and a meatball restaurant, in addition to a cash prize totaling approximately $350,000 USD.
  • Malaysia
    According to Malay Mail, Malaysian athletes who earn medals at the Games will be awarded with a foreign-made car; the arrangement came about after an unnamed car company approached the Road to Gold Committee.
  • Republic of Kazakhstan
    Kazakhstan’s Ministry of Culture and Sports will reward athletes who podium in Paris with a new apartment. Gold medalists will be awarded a three-room apartment, while silver medalists will receive a two-room apartment and bronze medalists receive a one-room apartment.
  • China
    China has offered a variety of non-monetary awards to its Olympians in the past. After winning gold in the air rifle in 2012, Yi Siling received a cash award totaling over $1 million USD, a car worth $30,000 and custom-made alcohol. Other athletes have been gifted expensive new homes by real estate companies.
  • Austria
    Straying from the theme of cars and real estate, Austria has one of more unique awards on the list. In the past, the nation’s Olympic gold medalists have received over $18,000 USD worth of Philharmonic coins, a popular bullion coin named after the Vienna Philharmonic orchestra.
  • Iraq
    Iraq has awarded its Olympic athletes with significant prizes just for qualifying for the Games. The Iraqi soccer team and weightlifter Ali Ammar Yasser all received plots of land, monthly stipends and a reward of over $7,000 USD after punching their tickets to Paris.
  • South Korea
    Offering a very different kind of reward, South Korea grants military exemption to its Olympic medalists. The nation’s law requires all able-bodied men to serve in the military for 18 months, beginning before they turn 28, but a full waiver is permitted for athletes who win any medal at the Olympics or a gold medal at the Asian Games.

Other non-monetary rewards over the years have included rice (Japan), free flights and railway passes (India), free houses and fuel (Philippines) and luxury cars (Russia).

Some nations prefer not to reward their Olympians at all, maintaining that it is unnecessary and that the profound value of the gold medal itself is worth more than a monetary prize.

Great Britain, along with countries like Norway and Sweden among others, does not offer any kind of reward to its Olympic medalists aside from the pride and prestige that comes with the achievement.

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swim mom
3 months ago

I live in Indonesia, am a big swim fan and am just excited to see Indonesia headlining on a Swimswam article!

Last edited 3 months ago by swim mom
Eric Williams
3 months ago

My wife is Indonesian and says that this is 100% crap at least as it pertains to her country.

swimapologist
Reply to  Eric Williams
3 months ago

Glad to know that Indonesia has “once every four years” Olympic experts just like America.

My wife doesn’t know anything about gymnastics either.

Bob
3 months ago

Suriname put Nesty on money a few times 🤣 I’m talking paper money and coins. Phelps can’t even get a commemorative quarter.

NotHimAgain
3 months ago

Great article which answers that age-old question: how many cows do you need to start a meatball restaurant?

Swimpop
Reply to  NotHimAgain
3 months ago

That won SwimSwam today, well done.

AAA
3 months ago

That’s not including Province that you represent for and the city as well. National Games which held every 4 year, each athlete got stipend money up to 2000 a month for 4 years and thats not including each gold 20K. imagine average income in indonesia per month is 400 dollar. This is why indonesia has no athlete to go to school in USA for long time. once they reach national level status money is pouring in left and right. The national athlete usually has competition every 3-4 month everywhere with so much perk and bonuses

Khachaturian
3 months ago

What a novel idea

Yaboi
3 months ago

Proud to announce I’ve decided to represent Indonesia at the upcoming Olympics

Thomas The Tank Engine
Reply to  Yaboi
3 months ago

Count me in.

“five cows, a new house and a meatball restaurant, in addition to a cash prize totaling approximately $350,000 USD” is more than what American athletes get

Olympunks & Gamester Bullies
Reply to  Thomas The Tank Engine
3 months ago

I wonder if the Indonesian media reports the American woeful plight with an implicitly down putting headline such as the headline of this story…yes, it’s kinda obvious guys:-0

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder/co-owner of SwimSwam.com. He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming. Aside from his life on the InterWet, …

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