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Buy tickets for Ski jumping - 26.03.2026., Gorišek Brothers Flying Hill, Rateče Planica, Slovenia Buy tickets for Ski jumping - 26.03.2026., Gorišek Brothers Flying Hill, Rateče Planica, Slovenia

Ski jumping

Gorišek Brothers Flying Hill, Rateče Planica, SI
26. March 2026. 09:00h
2026
26
March
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tickets for Ski jumping in Planica, season finale of ski jumping and ski flying at the legendary hill

Planica on March 26 brings morning training sessions and qualifications on Letalnica bratov Gorišek, with the unique atmosphere of the season finale. This page is focused on ticket sales for Ski jumping in Planica and a clear overview of the schedule, venue and arrival details

Planica once again becomes the centre of the ski flying season

Planica will once again open the finale of one of the most striking weeks in the world of ski jumping on 26 March, and a one-day ticket for Thursday gives access to a day in which the true warm-up for the grand finale of the season can already be felt. For visitors planning to arrive at 09:00, it is important to know that the sporting programme is already taking place that morning in the valley beneath the Ponce mountains, because training sessions on the ski flying hill are scheduled before the qualifications, which means that from the early hours the audience can feel the rhythm of the competition, the sound of skis on the inrun, and the specific tension that accompanies every jumper's appearance at the top of the hill. That very Thursday often carries a special charm, because it is not only the formal start of the big weekend, but a day on which the form of the competitors can be seen, the conditions on the ski flying hill can be assessed, and the atmosphere that will grow into a sporting spectacle in the following days is gradually built. For decades, Planica has been synonymous with the climax of the Men's World Cup season in ski jumping, and the 2026 edition is entering history even more because the entire final programme from 26 to 29 March includes four competitions, among them two men's individual events, one women's individual event, and one men's team competition. Tickets for this event are therefore not merely entry to a sporting venue, but access to an experience that combines competitive prestige, an Alpine setting, and the feeling of witnessing live the place where limits very often cease to be firm. Secure your tickets for this event right away, because Planica, even when it comes to the qualification day, offers an experience that the audience remembers long after the last landing.

What Thursday on the ski flying hill brings and why that day matters

According to the official programme for 26 March, the day begins with the first training at 08:00, the second training at 09:00, and the qualifications at 10:00, so arriving around 09:00 is especially interesting for spectators who want to catch the transition from the morning testing of conditions to the day's first competitive filter. In ski jumping, and especially on a ski flying hill such as Letalnica bratov Gorišek, training is not merely a formality, but a valuable insight into the competitors' mood, their adaptation to the wind, their speed on the inrun, and their feeling for the landing on the enormous slope that requires perfect coordination of technique and courage. The qualifications then give additional weight to a one-day ticket, because the audience is not watching only attractive distances, but also the battle for the right to compete in the main event, which gives every jump a clear competitive dimension. Such a schedule means that Thursday in Planica is not a passing day between the official highlights, but the real beginning of the event for spectators who want to understand how a weekend full of great results, surprises, and possible records is built. Buying tickets for Thursday therefore makes sense both for experienced followers of ski jumping and for spectators coming to Planica for the first time, because it is precisely then that they can most calmly follow the dynamics of the venue, better observe the work of the organisers, and feel how enormous energy is slowly gathering around every flight. Tickets for this event quickly attract the attention of fans from the region and beyond, so buying tickets in time presents itself as a sensible move for anyone who wants to plan their arrival securely.

Planica as a place where ski jumping grows beyond sporting routine

There are few sporting locations in Europe that enjoy the status that Planica has among ski jumping enthusiasts, because here the competition is not separated from tradition, but tradition is built into every view of the inrun, the landing slope, and the stands. The official Planica pages remind us that as early as 1934 the national championship was held there on an 80-metre hill, and in the same year the Norwegian ace Birger Ruud set a new world record of 92 metres, through which Planica very early gained international importance that has been preserved to this day. Later, it was precisely the development of the Gorišek brothers' ski flying hill that turned Planica into a place where great stages of the history of ski flying were created, and official record overviews point out that over the decades a series of world records were set there that shaped the development of this discipline. Such a history is not only an interesting fact for sporting chronicles, but also an important reason why the audience still feels today that by buying a ticket they are not coming to just any competition, but to a place where the sport has changed its own limits more than once. When this is combined with the fact that the World Cup finale traditionally returns precisely here, it is clear why ticket sales are observed every year as an indicator of how much interest exists in the very climax of the season. In Planica, the spectator does not follow only rankings and points, but enters an environment in which courage, precision, and sporting history are constantly present in the same frame.

Records, flights, and the weight of the name Letalnica bratov Gorišek

A special place in Planica's identity belongs to Letalnica bratov Gorišek, one of the best-known ski flying hills in the world and a venue that is described in official Planica materials as the home of record moments and top-level finales. The current official record overview states that the world record in Planica is 254.5 metres, set by Domen Prevc in 2025, through which the record returned to Planica and additionally strengthened the feeling that the audience there can always witness something historic. For the reader considering a visit, this means that tickets do not open only a view onto a standard World Cup competition, but onto a stage where distances that enter global sports news are still possible today. The hill also carries strong symbolism for Slovenian sport, because generations of fans are tied to it, as are the design vision of the Gorišek brothers and the entire culture of following ski jumping in which Planica is not merely the final stop of the calendar, but almost a ritual climax of winter. That is why even Thursday, when the focus is on training sessions and qualifications, can be an exceptionally attractive day for everyone who wants to see up close how jumpers test their form on one of the most famous ski flying hills in the world. Buy tickets via the button below if you want to be there where every serious distance immediately receives a historical context, and every successful flight reminds us why Planica has remained synonymous with the pinnacle of ski flying culture.

A historic novelty that sets apart the 2026 edition

The 2026 World Cup finale in Planica carries additional weight because the organiser and the FIS highlight a historic moment, the first appearance of women on the famous Gorišek ski flying hill within the programme from 26 to 29 March. In this way, Planica does not remain only a guardian of tradition, but also becomes a place of sporting development, because it shows that the ski flying discipline is entering a new phase of visibility and expansion of the competitive framework. Although Thursday, 26 March, which is in the focus of the one-day ticket, is above all connected to that day's men's programme, the audience arriving then is in fact entering an event that during the same weekend will mark one of the more important moments in the recent history of ski jumping. This also increases both media and fan attention, so it is understandable that interest in tickets is growing not only among regular followers of the finale, but also among those who want to be part of a broader sporting story. In practice, this means that buying tickets for Planica 2026 carries added value, because one comes to an edition that will not be remembered only for its results, but also for the fact that it changes the framework of what is considered historic on that stage. When an event simultaneously rests on enormous tradition and brings a step toward a new chapter of the sport, then even a one-day visit gains weight greater than that of an ordinary one-day visit.

The valley beneath the Ponce mountains, RateÄŤe, and the broader context of arrival

Planica is not an isolated sporting venue, but part of an exceptionally recognisable Alpine landscape in the immediate vicinity of RateÄŤe and Kranjska Gora, which gives the entire event a broader tourist and experiential framework. Local tourism sources describe Planica as a valley of glacial origin, a place that is interesting even outside the competition itself, and they offer visitors additional content at Nordic Centre Planica, including an interactive museum dedicated to the history of ski jumping, records, and the development of equipment. This is important information for everyone who wants to turn a one-day ticket into a full-day trip, because arriving for the competition can be combined with a walk from the direction of RateÄŤe, time spent in the Alpine setting, and getting to know a place deeply connected with the identity of Slovenian winter sport. In local descriptions, Planica Nordic Centre is presented as a place that continues the tradition of ski jumping and flying, but also as a modern complex that attracts visitors throughout the year, so a stay there makes sense both for spectators following sport and for families looking for broader content. In such a context, ticket sales for this event are naturally linked with the idea of a one-day journey that does not end with the last jump, but includes the entire atmosphere of the valley beneath the Ponce mountains. For a reader from Croatia, it is especially interesting that this is a location relatively accessible by car and one that has attracted audiences from neighbouring countries for decades, so Planica regularly has an international fan atmosphere without losing its local character.

The atmosphere in the stands and why Planica has a different rhythm from other venues

Anyone who has followed the finale of the season in Planica at least once knows that here the audience does not behave like a passive observer, but as an integral part of the event, from early morning until the moment when the last jumper finishes the performance. Official promotional materials of Planica emphasise that this is a place where cheering becomes an experience, and this is seen best precisely in the mood of the stands, the sense of togetherness, and the fact that the sports programme builds upon the broader festival atmosphere of the place. Thursday is special in this regard because it enables a somewhat clearer and more focused stay than the peak weekend days, so with tickets spectators can more easily follow the technical side of the event, changes in conditions, and the very rhythm of the jumpers without the complete crowding that the final battles for trophies often bring. For many fans, this is precisely the most authentic way to see Planica, at a moment when the energy is already high, but has not yet fully exploded, so it is easier to absorb details that are often lost on television. Tickets for this event therefore have special value both for an audience seeking top-level sporting content and for those looking for the atmosphere of a great winter gathering under the open sky. Tickets for Planica traditionally spark great interest because people do not come only to watch ski jumping, but to be part of a place where the whole valley pulses to the rhythm of the inrun, the flight, and the landing.

Practical information for visitors with a one-day ticket

For a one-day visit on 26 March, the most important thing is to plan sufficiently early, especially if you want to catch events from the morning hours, because the official schedule for that day starts before 09:00 and therefore it is worth arriving prepared for a longer stay outdoors. Since this is a mountainous area and late-March conditions, it is useful to count on layered clothing, suitable footwear, and enough time to access the location, and an additional advantage is that the wider Planica complex offers more content than the stand itself. The organiser's official questions and answers also state that watching the official test of the ski flying hill on Wednesday is free of charge, which additionally confirms that Thursday is the first full day for spectators who want competitive seriousness as part of their ticket. It is important here to distinguish the sports schedule from the time of personal arrival, because the user's time of 09:00 is an excellent reference for planning entry into the day, but the official programme is already underway by then, and therefore an earlier arrival can mean a more complete experience. Buying tickets in advance makes organising the journey easier, avoids unnecessary uncertainty, and allows the focus to remain on the event itself rather than on last-minute logistics. Secure your tickets in time and buy tickets via the button below, because when Planica approaches the finale of the season, audience interest regularly grows together with the expectation that it is precisely there that a frame for the sporting chronicles could once again be created.

Sources:
- FIS Ski Jumping World Cup Planica, official calendar and competition timetable for 26 to 29 March 2026.
- Planica.si, 2026 event homepage and description of the historic programme with four competitions.
- Planica.si, event programme and description of the atmosphere of the finale in Planica.
- Planica.si, About us page with an overview of the history of Planica from 1934 onwards.
- Planica.si, overview of world records in Planica and confirmation of Domen Prevc's 254.5-metre record from 2025.
- Planica.si, frequently asked questions for visitors, including information on free Wednesday attendance and organisational details.
- Kranjska Gora Tourism, Nordic Center Planica and a description of the complex and its significance for sport and visitors.
- Kranjska Gora Tourism, Planica Valley and Tamar and a description of the natural and local context of the valley.
- Kranjska Gora Tourism, the route from RateÄŤe to Planica and information about the museum and additional facilities.

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3 hours ago, Author: Sports desk

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