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Buy tickets for Ski jumping - 29.03.2026., Gorišek Brothers Flying Hill, Rateče Planica, Slovenia Buy tickets for Ski jumping - 29.03.2026., Gorišek Brothers Flying Hill, Rateče Planica, Slovenia

Ski jumping

Gorišek Brothers Flying Hill, Rateče Planica, SI
29. March 2026. 08:00h
2026
29
March
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tickets for Ski jumping in Planica, ski flying season finale and a spectacular day beneath the Ponce range

Buy tickets for Ski jumping in Planica and experience the final day of the ski jumping season in the valley beneath the Ponce mountains. Expect elite ski flying on the HS240 hill, a powerful crowd atmosphere and a memorable sporting event in Ratece Planica for fans of major winter competitions

Planica once again becomes the stage of flying limits and fan euphoria

Planica is once again this season one of those sporting places that is not experienced only through the result, but through the feeling that something greater than an ordinary competition is happening before the spectators. On Sunday 29/03/2026 in RateÄŤe Planica in Slovenia, the final day of ski jumping is on the schedule, and the ticket is valid for 1 day and refers to that final festival rhythm under the Ponce mountains, in an atmosphere that has symbolised flight, record and fan passion for decades. In the event data, the start is listed as 08:00, which is important for planning arrival, and the current Planica programme further shows that on that very day a trial round is expected from the morning, followed by the men's final on the HS240 flying hill and the closing ceremonies that traditionally give a special tone to the end of the season. Planica is not just another stop on the calendar, but a place where the World Cup finale regularly takes on the characteristics of a major sporting spectacle, so tickets for this event are particularly interesting to the audience that wants to be there when the season is decided in the final few jumps. Anyone who loves sporting tension, the feeling of height and scenes in which the limits of human courage are measured in metres and style gets the full experience here, and not just a short trip to the stands. Secure your tickets for this event now, because Planica is not a destination that the audience chooses by chance, but a carefully planned sports journey that is remembered for years.

The final competition day carries special weight in the World Cup schedule

The Sunday programme in Planica traditionally carries different weight than the previous days because not only an individual competition is followed, but also the broader picture of the entire outcome of the season. According to the published programme for the finale from 26 to 29 March 2026, Planica brings four major competition days, including men's individual flights, a team competition and a historically important women's competition on the flying hill, while Sunday 29 March is reserved for the men's final on the Flying Hill HS240, along with a trial round and closing ceremonies. This means that the audience with a one-day ticket for 29/03/2026 is not coming only to watch another series of jumps, but is entering the atmosphere of a day when one chapter of the season closes and when every jumper on the inrun carries an additional psychological burden. That is exactly why ticket sales for the final day have a special appeal: fans love to feel that level of tension when points, standings, the overall impression of the season and the emotional farewell to winter merge into the same frame. In Planica this is especially pronounced because from early morning the audience follows how the valley fills with flags, song and anticipation, and then every flight gains additional dramaturgy because of the knowledge that afterwards there is no correction. Tickets for this event are therefore not just entry to a sports venue, but access to the final act of one of the most striking weekends in ski jumping, with a clear awareness that the final day often brings the most lasting memories.

Ski jumping in Planica means more than the discipline itself

Although the performer is simply listed in the event data as Ski jumping, in Planica that term has a much broader meaning for the audience than the formal name of the sports discipline. People do not come here only because of the technical fascination with the inrun, landing and telemark, but because of the unique combination of the flying hill, natural amphitheatre and tradition according to which Planica has long since become an almost obligatory stop for everyone who wants to feel live what ski flying means at full intensity. The difference between watching a broadcast and standing or sitting under the Ponce mountains is enormous precisely because live you can see the speed of approaching the edge, feel the silence immediately before take-off and hear the crowd's reaction when the jumper hits the ideal line. For visitors thinking about buying tickets, it is especially important that Planica offers both a sporting and a fan experience: some come to follow technique, points and aerodynamic precision, others come for the atmosphere, flags and the shared rhythm of the crowd, and most get both. In that sense, tickets for Planica attract both passionate World Cup followers and an audience that may not follow every weekend, but knows that the valley under the Ponce mountains is exactly the place where this sport is experienced most fully. Buy tickets via the button below if you want a day in which sporting performance, mountain ambience and the grand season finale act as one whole, and not as a series of separate contents.

The history of Planica is written with records that changed the sport

There are few sports locations in Europe that have such a strong and real historical authority as Planica, because here the myth does not rest on a marketing impression but on facts that changed the boundaries of the discipline. As early as 1936, it was in Planica that Sepp Bradl became the first man to jump over 100 metres, and later this area continued to build the status of a place where not only form is confirmed, but the history of flight is written. For decades Planica was synonymous with pioneering in ski flying, and the development from Bloudek's giant hill to the Gorišek brothers' flying hill shaped the entire understanding of how far a person can go on skis. In the modern era Planica has remained a place of world records, and the fact that it was right here in 2025 that Domen Prevc set the record of 254.5 metres further confirms that the valley is not just a nostalgic backdrop, but still a living centre of top achievements. For the reader thinking about going, that history is not an unimportant ornament of the article, but the key argument why tickets are in demand: a spectator in Planica does not enter an ordinary sports zone, but a space that for years has been a laboratory of courage, aerodynamics and sporting imagination. When the final competition day is held in such a place, buying tickets gains additional logic because one is not travelling only to an event, but to a location that has long been part of the very core of this sport.

The Gorišek brothers' flying hill and the ambience under the Ponce mountains create an experience that cannot be conveyed through a screen

The venue, Planica in Rateče, is important not only as a geographical point but as an integral part of the experience without which this event would be significantly different. The Gorišek brothers' flying hill, located in the Planica Nordic Centre, is one of the most recognisable stages of ski flying in the world, with an HS240 profile that both technically and symbolically says that the audience can expect the very top of the discipline. The valley under the Ponce mountains acts like a natural stadium in which the mountains do not serve only as decoration, but as a powerful visual frame that gives every flight additional grandeur and a feeling of exposure to space. For a visitor coming for the first time, that is often the biggest surprise: how much in Planica the sound of cheering, the height of the flight and the openness of the landscape together intensify the whole day. Tickets for this event are therefore worthwhile also because of the place itself, because the audience is not buying only the right of entry but the possibility to spend several hours in a unique sporting landscape, among stands, standing zones, catering facilities and entertainment programme that makes the finale an all-day experience. Tickets for Planica often quickly attract interest precisely because part of the audience does not come only to the competition, but also to the experience of the valley that has for decades been a kind of temple of ski flying.

RateÄŤe, Kranjska Gora and the wider Alpine context give the event additional value

Planica is naturally experienced together with RateÄŤe and Kranjska Gora, so going to the competition is not merely going to one location, but entering a wider Alpine context that strongly shapes the entire weekend. RateÄŤe is a small border village with a long winter tradition, known for cold winters and historical traces, while Kranjska Gora is one of Slovenia's most important mountain and sports centres, which is why the whole area is accustomed to a large international audience. It is precisely that combination of sport, mountain everyday life and tourist infrastructure that makes Planica especially attractive both to those who want a one-day trip and to those who turn the weekend into a broader stay. The valley also leads towards Tamar, one of the visually most striking areas of the Julian Alps, and the Planica Nordic Centre itself offers additional contents throughout the year such as museum-interactive exhibitions, guided tours and other sports activities, which shows that the place lives beyond the competition calendar as well. For the audience thinking about tickets, this means that buying tickets also has added value because the sporting event can be combined with a fuller experience of the destination, a walk, a stay in the mountain landscape and the feeling that the whole day is not reduced only to entering and leaving the stands. Secure your tickets for this event if you want a combination of competitive tension and one of the most recognisable Alpine backdrops in this part of Europe.

The historic novelty of the women's programme further strengthens the significance of the Planica weekend

Although the ticket from this event is tied to Sunday 29/03/2026, the broader context of the whole weekend is important for understanding why Planica 2026 has a special place in the calendar. The organisers and Slovenian tourism sources emphasise that between 26 and 29 March, Planica will write a new chapter because for the first time the programme also includes a women's competition on the Gorišek brothers' flying hill, which represents a historic step forward for this sport and further increases public interest in the whole weekend. This means that the final day does not come after a routine series of competitions, but after several days during which Planica was simultaneously both the traditional finale of the season and the place of an important shift in the development of the discipline. For the audience this intensifies the feeling that tickets for the finale are part of a bigger sporting moment, and not just access to one slot on the calendar. Such a context usually also increases the visibility of the event, the number of spectators, media attention and general interest, so it is not unusual that buying tickets becomes a topic even among those who might otherwise not travel regularly to ski jumping. When sporting tradition is combined with the feeling that something new and historically important is happening as well, Planica gains additional weight, and the audience an additional reason to plan their arrival in time.

The atmosphere at the finale is not a secondary detail but one of the main reasons for coming

Anyone who has followed Planica at least once knows that this event is not spoken about only through results and standings, but also through the atmosphere that is created from morning until the closing ceremonies. The audience in Planica is not passive, but constantly participates in the rhythm of the event, from arriving by buses and on foot towards the valley, through taking places in the stands and standing zones, to long waves of cheering that follow every good flight. Alongside the competition, the organisers also connect an additional entertainment programme, and the Sunday schedule includes award ceremonies and the final festival feeling of the end of the season, which is why the whole day acts as a full-format sports-fan event. It is precisely here that tickets gain their full value, because the spectator is not buying only a few minutes per jumper, but access to an all-day experience in which sport, music, audience and the ritual of the finale create an atmosphere that a television frame cannot faithfully convey. Tickets for this event quickly attract interest also because the audience knows that the final day is emotionally the most intense: the last flights of winter, the celebration of the best, the farewell to the season and the feeling of togetherness among thousands of people who came precisely for that moment. Buy tickets via the button below if you want to be there where the jumps end, and the experience actually reaches its peak.

Practical information for arrival, movement and planning the day under the Ponce mountains

When planning a trip to Planica, practical information is almost as important as the sports programme itself, especially for an audience that wants to avoid crowds and spend the day without unnecessary stress. The organisational instructions for 2026 state that free bus transport is provided for visitors from Kranjska Gora and the surrounding area towards Planica, with a clear recommendation not to go by car all the way to the valley unless it is necessary, because buses have priority on arrival and departure. For those arriving by their own vehicle, directions to designated parking areas are provided, while a walking route from RateÄŤe to the event is also organised, and circular shuttle lines are additionally available. It is important to take into account that the Planica Nordic Centre is reached from the village of RateÄŤe several kilometres further on, which means that arriving earlier makes sense, especially when the start of the event is listed in the data as 08:00 and when the visitor wants to enter the rhythm of the morning programme calmly. Tickets for this event are therefore best viewed together with the travel plan, departure time, layered winter clothing and readiness for staying outdoors in mountain conditions. Tickets are valid for one day, but that one day can be filled from early morning until the ceremonies and departure, so it is reasonable to organise everything in advance and approach the purchase of tickets with the same seriousness as the trip itself.

Why the finale in Planica is an ideal choice both for experienced fans and for those coming for the first time

Planica has the rare ability to satisfy at the same time two completely different audiences: those who have followed ski jumping for years and know every nuance of scoring, and those who come for the first time drawn by the word that it is a unique sporting spectacle. Experienced followers get here a top sporting stage, a flying hill that still carries record authority, the final day of the World Cup and an audience that understands the weight of every attempt. Those coming for the first time get something perhaps even more valuable: the opportunity to get to know one sport immediately on its most impressive scene, without the need to gradually build interest through smaller events. That is why tickets for this event have broader appeal than the narrow sports niche itself, because Planica is not closed only to connoisseurs, but very quickly wins over anyone who loves a big open event, mountain ambience and the clear dramaturgy of a sporting outcome. In a world in which many events are interchangeable, Planica stands out because it has a recognisable identity, real history and an atmosphere that cannot be moved to another location without losing meaning. Tickets for the final day therefore have both emotional and substantive value, and anyone who wants to use the full potential of this sporting weekend should arrange the purchase of tickets in time and plan the day as a true little sports journey under the Ponce mountains.

Sources:
- FIS Ski, competition details for Planica 2026 and the final day schedule on the HS240 flying hill
- Planica.si, main event overview, programme, transport and visitor information
- Slovenia.info, overview of Planica 2026 and confirmation of the four-day programme with the historic novelty of the women's competition
- NC Planica, history of Planica, development of the centre and significance of the Gorišek brothers' flying hill
- Kranjska Gora Tourism, local context of RateÄŤe, Planica and access to the valley
- Planica results and records, overview of historical achievements and the current world record in Planica

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2 hours ago, Author: Sports desk

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