Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Find Special Olympics Near Me
We are helping to make the world a better, healthier and more joyful place—one athlete, one volunteer, one family member at a time.
Your Program
Based on your location, your local program is %location%.
Your location could not be automatically determined. Choose a program below:
Your Special Olympics Local Program:
Looking for a different local program? Choose a program from the list below:
Community Impact

Women at the Heart of Special Olympics: Celebrating Women’s History Month

Graphic: Women at the Heart of Special Olympics. Female Participation: Turin 2025 45.6%; Berlin 2023 48.1%; Abu Dhabi 2019 41%; Austria 2017 31.2%. Goal is 50:50. Special Olympics has been steadily moving toward achieving a 50:50 gender balance among participating athletes in the World Games.

Women’s History Month is a time to celebrate the remarkable achievements of women throughout  history who have shaped our past and are shaping our future.

For decades, women with and without intellectual disabilities were too often left on the sidelines. Today that reality is changing. Since Eunice Kennedy Shriver founded Special Olympics, women have been at the heart of the movement, and expanding equal access to sport has remained a priority. The increased visibility of female athletes on the world stage means that girls and women with intellectual disabilities do not have to look far to see someone like themselves competing and leading.

Special Olympics has been steadily moving toward achieving a 50:50 gender balance among competing athletes in the World Games. Exactly one year ago, in March 2025, the world came together in Turin, Italy for the Special Olympics World Winter Games where 45.61 percent of athletes and Unified partners were female. This represented a 14 percentage point increase in female participation compared to the 2017 World Winter Games in Austria.

With each World Games, Special Olympics moves closer to equal gender representation across all sports. The 2023 World Games in Berlin celebrated 48 percent female athletes, and the organizing committee for the 2027 World Games in Santiago, Chile, is working to reach 50:50 participation for the first time.

This progress is not limited to competition. Across the movement, women lead as coaches, officials, volunteers, board members, and staff. Female athlete leaders speak on global stages. Unified partners advocate for inclusion in their schools and communities. Mothers, sisters, and mentors strengthen our movement that reaches more than 200 countries around the world.

Join us this Women’s History Month in celebrating their stories and recognizing both how far we have come and the responsibility we carry forward.

Recommended Content

Amplifying Athlete Voices During Capitol Hill Day

Special Olympics athletes, staff and supporters from across the United States gather each year in Washington, DC to meet with members of Congress in order to advocate for critical federal support of the organization’s work.
5 Min Read

Women Who Inspire Change

This Women’s History Month, Special Olympics is celebrating the remarkable women who lead, inspire and make a difference in our organization—an organization founded on the visionary leadership of one woman, Eunice Kennedy Shriver.
2 Min Read

Play Like a Girl

Coinciding with Women’s History Month, these Games sent a powerful message to the world: everyone has a place in sport.
2 Min Read