FISR finalizes 2026 Italian artistic skating championship in Rimini
Rimini’s fixed June 24-July 12 window gives skaters and clubs a firm target for tapering, travel, and entries across libero, pairs, solo dance, and dance pairs.

The calendar is now locked, and that matters immediately for every artistic skating program trying to peak at the right time. FISR’s June 15 bulletin set Rimini as the center of the 2026 Italian championship from June 24 through July 12, giving skaters, coaches, clubs and families a fixed runway for training taper, qualification planning, hotel bookings and travel budgets.
CU 120 gives the meet its full scope: the Campionato Italiano will cover Libero, Coppie Artistico, Solo Dance and Coppia Danza. That makes the Rimini event more than a single-title weekend. It is the federation’s national showcase for the sport’s most technical and presentation-heavy disciplines, all folded into one championship cycle in Rimini (RN).
The program’s publication also ended the last big uncertainty for the domestic season. With the championship dates fixed, athletes know exactly when the pressure point arrives, while clubs can now line up training blocks around a nearly three-week title window. A separate June notice already tied the final phase of Solo Dance for Cadetti, Jeunesse, Junior and Senior to Rimini in the same June 24-July 12 span, showing how the federation is clustering age groups and disciplines around the same stage.
The official communications page around CU 120 underlines how much of the 2026 artistic season is being organized off this Rimini hub. The same run of notices includes final-phase access, Solo Dance admissions, the Allievi definitive program and the artistic inline championship in Rimini from June 29 to July 1. That sequencing tells clubs what they still need from organizers now: the detailed phase-by-phase admissions, category lists, start orders, practice allocations and the utility information that turns a date line into an actual competition week.
Rimini’s role is not accidental. The city hosted artistic skating at the 2024 World Skate Games, and FISR has also used its 2026 event messaging to link skating with urban economy and regeneration. The federation has clearly chosen a venue with recent international-event experience, and it is treating Rimini as the staging base for a summer that stretches well beyond a single contest.
The long format also fits FISR’s recent precedent. The 2025 Italian artistic championship in Novara ran from June 23 to July 13, another extended national schedule that reflected the number of categories, rounds and practice sessions required. Rimini now inherits that same model, and with the program definitive, the season’s biggest domestic target is no longer moving.
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