The Paris 2024 Summer Olympic Games were held from July 26 until August 11, 2024. Australia sent one of its largest ever team, with 460 athletes heading to Paris. The only sports without any Aussie presence were fencing, handball and volleyball.

The Australian flag bearers were canoeist Jess Fox and hockey player Eddie Ockenden.

Paris 2024 Results

Australia's Gold Medal Winners

  1. Grace Brown — Women’s cycling time trial
  2. Ariarne Titmus — Women's 400m freestyle Swimming
  3. Women's 4x100m freestyle relay Swimming — Mollie O’Callaghan, Shayna Jack, Emma McKeon, Meg Harris.
  4. Jess Fox — Women's single Kayak Slalom (K1)
  5. Mollie O'Callaghan — Women's 200m freestyle Swimming
  6. Kaylee McKeown — Women's 100m backstroke Swimming
  7. Jess Fox — Women's single Canoe Slalom (C1)
  8. Women's 4x200m freestyle relay Swimming — Mollie O'Callaghan, Lani Pallister,  Brianna Throssell, Ariarne Titmus.
  9. Kaylee McKeown — Women's 200m backstroke Swimming
  10. Cameron McEvoy — Men's 50m freestyle Swimming
  11. Saya Sakakibara — Women's Cycling BMX Racing
  12. Matthew Ebden & John Peers — Tennis Men's doubles
  13. Noemie Fox — Women's kayak cross
  14. Arisa Trew — Women's Skateboarding park
  15. Keegan Palmer — Men's Skateboarding park
  16. Matt Wearn — Men's dinghy Sailing
  17. Team Australia — Men's team pursuit Track Cycling
  18. Nina Kennedy — Women's pole vault

Trivia

  • Melissa Wu was the first diver to ever represent Australia at five Olympics
  • Emma McKeon won her sixth Olympic gold medal to become the most successful Australian Olympic athlete (in terms of gold medals won).
  • Australia won its fourth-straight women's 4x100m freestyle title.
  • Caitlin Parker secured Australia’s first-ever women’s boxing medal.
  • The Fox sisters had a clean sweep of all the women's canoe slalom events, Jessica winning the K1 and C1 slalom, and Noemie winning the new event kayak cross.
  • In 2024 Arisa Trew won the women's skateboarding park event, becoming Australia's youngest Olympic gold medallist at 14 years and 86 days. The previous youngest gold medalist was Sandra Morgan in swimming, who was 14 years 6 months when she won gold as part of the 4x100m freestyle relay in Melbourne 1956.