International Ski and Snowboard Federation
| Fédération Internationale de Ski et de Snowboard | |
| .svg.png) | |
| Sport | Skiing[1] and Snowboarding[2] | 
|---|---|
| Jurisdiction | International | 
| Membership | 137 members[1] | 
| Abbreviation | FIS | 
| Founded | 2 February 1924[1] in Chamonix, France | 
| Affiliation | IOC[3] | 
| Headquarters | Marc Hodler House Blochstrasse 2 Oberhofen am Thunersee, Switzerland | 
| President |  Johan Eliasch | 
| Vice president(s) | |
| Secretary |  Michel Vion | 
| Operating income |  CHF 14.6 million (2018)[8] | 
| Official website | |
| www | |
| 
 | |
The International Ski and Snowboard Federation, also known as FIS (French: Fédération Internationale de Ski et de Snowboard), is the highest international governing body for skiing and snowboarding. It was previously known as the International Ski Federation (Fédération Internationale de Ski) until 26 May 2022 when the name was changed to include snowboard.[9][2][10][11]
Founded on 2 February 1924 in Chamonix, France during the inaugural Winter Olympic Games, FIS is responsible for the Olympic skiing disciplines, namely Alpine skiing, cross-country skiing, ski jumping, Nordic combined, freestyle skiing, and snowboarding. The FIS is also responsible for setting the international competition rules. The organization has a membership of 132 national ski associations, and is based in Oberhofen am Thunersee, Switzerland.[9]
Most World Cup wins
At least 50 World Cup wins in all disciplines run by the International Ski and Snowboard Federation for men and women:
| Rank | Wins | Discipline | Code | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | .svg.png) Amélie Wenger-Reymond | 164 | Telemark skiing | TM | 
| 2 |  Marit Bjørgen | 114 | Cross-country skiing | CC | 
| 3 | .svg.png) Conny Kissling | 106 | Freestyle skiing | FS | 
| 4 |  Mikaela Shiffrin | 100 | Alpine skiing | AL | 
| 5 | .svg.png) Mikaël Kingsbury | 87 | Freestyle skiing | FS | 
| 6 |  Ingemar Stenmark | 86 | Alpine skiing | AL | 
| 7 |  Lindsey Vonn | 82 | Alpine skiing | AL | 
|  Therese Johaug | 82 | Cross-country skiing | CC | |
| 9 |  Johannes Høsflot Klæbo | 74 | Cross-country skiing | CC | 
| 10 |  Karine Ruby | 67 | Snowboarding | SB | 
|  Marcel Hirscher | 67 | Alpine skiing | AL | |
|  Jarl Magnus Riiber | 67 | Nordic combined | NK | |
| 13 |  Sara Takanashi | 63 | Ski jumping | JP | 
| 14 |  Annemarie Moser-Pröll | 62 | Alpine skiing | AL | 
| 15 |  Phillipe Lau | 58 | Telemark skiing | TM | 
|  Simone Origone | 58 | Speed skiing | SS | |
| 17 |  Jan Bucher | 57 | Freestyle skiing | FS | 
|  Jan Němec | 57 | Grass skiing | GS | |
| 19 | .svg.png) Vreni Schneider | 55 | Alpine skiing | AL | 
| 20 |  Hermann Maier | 54 | Alpine skiing | AL | 
| 21 |  Gregor Schlierenzauer | 53 | Ski jumping | JP | 
|  Edoardo Frau | 53 | Grass skiing | GS | |
| 23 |  Alberto Tomba | 50 | Alpine skiing | AL | 
|  Justyna Kowalczyk | 50 | Cross-country skiing | CC | 
Updated as of 3 February 2024
Ski disciplines
The federation organises the following ski sport disciplines, for which it oversees the FIS Games as well as World Cup competitions and World Championships:
| Disciplines | World Championships | 
|---|---|
| Alpine combined | FIS Alpine World Ski Championships | 
| Downhill | |
| Super-G | |
| Giant slalom | |
| Slalom | |
| Parallel | 
| Disciplines | World Championships | 
|---|---|
| Cross-country skiing | FIS Nordic World Ski Championships | 
| Ski jumping | |
| Nordic combined | |
| Ski flying | FIS Ski Flying World Championships | 
| Disciplines | World Championships | 
|---|---|
| Moguls | FIS Freestyle World Ski Championships | 
| Aerials | |
| Skicross | |
| Half-pipe | |
| Big air | |
| Ski Ballet/Acro Ski | (defunct with FIS) | 
| Disciplines | World Championships | 
|---|---|
| Parallel giant slalom | FIS Snowboarding World Championships | 
| Parallel slalom | |
| Big air | |
| Slopestyle | |
| Snowboard cross | |
| Half-pipe | 
| Disciplines | World Championships | 
|---|---|
| Para alpine skiing | FIS Para Alpine World Championships | 
| Para cross-country skiing | FIS Para Cross-Country World Championships | 
| Para snowboard | FIS Para Snowboard World Championships | 
| Disciplines | World Championships | 
|---|---|
| Freeride skiing | Freeride World Tour | 
| Grass skiing | FIS sprint slalom, giant slalom, super combined, super-G, parallel slalom – World Cup (s) | 
| Speed skiing | FIS speed skiing championships | 
| Telemark skiing | Sprint, classic, parallel sprint, team parallel sprint – World Cup (s) | 
| Masters | FIS World Criterium Masters (amateur, senior) | 
| Roller skiing | (amateur, senior) | 
FIS Congress history
Founding and the first years
After ski club federations and national associations were created in Norway (1883 and 1908), Russia (1896), Bohemia and Great Britain (1903), Switzerland (1904), United States, Austria and Germany (all in 1905) and Sweden, Finland and Italy (all in 1908), and competitions had begun such as the Nordic Games,[12] early international cross-country races (Adelboden, 1903), international participation at Holmenkollen (1903)[13] and Club Alpin Français (CAF) International Winter Sports Weeks, an international Ski Congress was convened to develop standard rules for international competitive skiing.
The founding of a predecessor association, the International Ski Commission (CIS), was decided on February 18, 1910, in Christiania, Norway by delegates from ten countries to the first International Ski Congress.[14] This Congress then met every year or so to hear from the CIS and refine and adopt rule changes. The commission was to consist of two members - a representative of Scandinavia and Central Europe. Ultimately, two Scandinavians sat on the commission. A year later, in March 1911, the first internationally valid set of rules was approved. At that time, the commission was enlarged to five members, and Oslo was elected as headquarters.
In 1913, the number of members of the commission was increased to seven: two Norwegians, two Swedes, a Swiss, a German and an Austrian.
On February 2, 1924, in Chamonix as part of the "International Winter Sports Week", which was later to be recognized as the first Olympic Winter Games, 36 delegates from 14 countries (Great Britain, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Finland, France, Yugoslavia, Norway, Poland, Romania, US, Switzerland, Sweden, Hungary and Italy) decided to found the FIS, which replaced the CIS.
Initially, the FIS was only responsible for Nordic skiing. FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 1925 in Janské Lázně, Czechoslovakia, were given status as the first official World Championships. After the Scandinavian countries had relented, it was decided at the 11th FIS Congress (February 24–26, 1930 in Oslo) to also include alpine skiing (downhill, slalom and alpine combined) in the rules. This was upon a proposal by Great Britain, in which the British ski pioneer Arnold Lunn played a major role as co-founder of the Arlberg-Kandahar races. The simple sentence "Downhill and slalom races may be organized" was written into the rules - a sentence that was to change skiing in the long term.[15] The first FIS Alpine World Ski Championships were held 19–23 February 1931 in Mürren, Switzerland.
Ski flying, a variation of ski jumping, was recognized as a discipline in 1938, but rules were not finalized until after World War II.
List of Ski Congresses
- 1910 – Christiania (I)[16]
- 1911 – Stockholm (II)
- 1912 – Munich (III)
- 1913 – Bern/Interlaken (IV)
- 1914 – Christiania (V)
- 1922 – Stockholm (VI)
- 1923 – Prague (VII)
- 1924 – Chamonix (VIII)
- 1926 – Lahti (IX)
- 1928 – St. Moritz (X)
- 1930 – Oslo (XI)
- 1932 – Paris (XII)
- 1934 – Sollefteå (XIII)
- 1936 – Garmisch-Partenkirchen (XIV)
- 1938 – Helsinki (XV)
- 1946 – Pau (XVI)
- 1949 – Oslo (XVII)
- 1951 – Venice (XVIII)
- 1953 – Igls (XIX)
- 1955 – Montreux (XX)
- 1957 – Dubrovnik (XXI)
- 1959 – Stockholm (XXII)
- 1961 – Madrid (XXIII)
- 1963 – Athens (XXIV)
- 1965 – Mamaia (XXV)
- 1967 – Beirut (XVI)
- 1968 – Barcelona (XVII)
- 1971 – Opatija (XVIII)
- 1973 – Nicosie (XIX)
- 1975 – San Francisco (XXX)
- 1977 – Bariloche (XXXI)
- 1979 – Nice (XXXII)
- 1981 – Puerto de la Cruz (XXXIII)
- 1983 – Sydney (XXXIV)
- 1985 – Vancouver (XXXV)
- 1988 – Istanbul (XXXVI)
- 1990 – Montreux (XXXVII)
- 1992 – Budapest (XXXVIII)
- 1994 – Rio de Janeiro (XXXIX)
- 1996 – Christchurch (XL)
- 1998 – Prague (XLI)
- 2000 – Melbourne (XLII)
- 2002 – Portorož (XLIII)
- 2004 – Miami (XLIV)
- 2006 – Vilamoura (XLV)
- 2008 – Cape Town (XLVI)
- 2010 – Antalya (XLVII)
- 2012 – Kangwonland (XLVIII)
- 2014 – Barcelona (XLIX)
- 2016 – Cancún (L)
- 2018 – Costa Navarino (LI)
- 2021 – Online (LII)
- 2022 – Vilamoura (LIII)
Presidents

| # | Name | Nationality | Term | 
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Ivar Holmquist |  Sweden | 1924–1934 | 
| 2. | Nicolai Ramm Østgaard |  Norway | 1934–1951 | 
| 3. | Marc Hodler | .svg.png) Switzerland | 1951–1998 | 
| 4. | Gian-Franco Kasper | .svg.png) Switzerland | 1998–2021[17][18] | 
| 5. | Johan Eliasch |  Great Britain  Sweden | 2021–present | 
Members
 Albania Albania
 Algeria Algeria
 American Samoa American Samoa
 Andorra Andorra
 Argentina Argentina
 Armenia Armenia
.svg.png) Australia Australia
 Austria Austria
 Azerbaijan Azerbaijan
 Bahamas Bahamas
 Barbados Barbados
 Belarus Belarus
.svg.png) Belgium Belgium
 Benin Benin
 Bhutan Bhutan
 Bermuda Bermuda
 Bolivia Bolivia
 Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Brazil Brazil
 British Virgin Islands British Virgin Islands
 Bulgaria Bulgaria
 Cameroon Cameroon
.svg.png) Canada Canada
 Cayman Islands Cayman Islands
 Chile Chile
 People's Republic of China People's Republic of China
 Colombia Colombia
 Costa Rica Costa Rica
 Croatia Croatia
 Cyprus Cyprus
 Czech Republic Czech Republic
 Democratic People's Republic of Korea Democratic People's Republic of Korea
 Denmark Denmark
 Dominica Dominica
 Ecuador Ecuador
 Egypt Egypt
 El Salvador El Salvador
 Eritrea Eritrea
 Estonia Estonia
 Eswatini Eswatini
 Ethiopia Ethiopia
 Fiji Fiji
 Finland Finland
 France France
 Georgia Georgia
 Germany Germany
 Ghana Ghana
 Great Britain Great Britain
 Guinea-Bissau Guinea-Bissau
 Greece Greece
 Grenada Grenada
 Guatemala Guatemala
 Guyana Guyana
 Haiti Haiti
.svg.png) Honduras Honduras
 Hong Kong Hong Kong
 Hungary Hungary
 Iceland Iceland
 Indonesia Indonesia
 India India
 Iran Iran
 Ireland Ireland
 Israel Israel
 Italy Italy
 Jamaica Jamaica
 Japan Japan
 Kazakhstan Kazakhstan
 Kenya Kenya
 Republic of Korea Republic of Korea
 Kosovo Kosovo
 Kuwait Kuwait
 Kyrgyzstan Kyrgyzstan
 Latvia Latvia
 Lebanon Lebanon
 Lesotho Lesotho
 Liechtenstein Liechtenstein
 Lithuania Lithuania
 Luxembourg Luxembourg
 Macau Macau
 North Macedonia North Macedonia
 Madagascar Madagascar
 Malaysia Malaysia
 Malta Malta
 Morocco Morocco
 Mexico Mexico
 Moldova Moldova
 Monaco Monaco
 Mongolia Mongolia
 Montenegro Montenegro
 Nepal Nepal
 Netherlands Netherlands
 New Zealand New Zealand
 Norway Norway
 Pakistan Pakistan
 Panama Panama
 Palestine Palestine
 Paraguay Paraguay
 Peru Peru
 Philippines Philippines
 Poland Poland
.svg.png) Portugal Portugal
 Puerto Rico Puerto Rico
 Qatar Qatar
 Romania Romania
 Russia Russia
 San Marino San Marino
 Senegal Senegal
 Serbia Serbia
 Slovakia Slovakia
 Slovenia Slovenia
 South Africa South Africa
 Spain Spain
 Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
 Sudan Sudan
 Sweden Sweden
.svg.png) Switzerland Switzerland
 Chinese Taipei Chinese Taipei
 Tajikistan Tajikistan
 Thailand Thailand
 Timor-Leste Timor-Leste
.svg.png) Togo Togo
 Tonga Tonga
 Trinidad and Tobago Trinidad and Tobago
 Turkey Turkey
 Ukraine Ukraine
.png) United States United States
 Vanuatu Vanuatu
 United States Virgin Islands United States Virgin Islands
 United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates
 Uruguay Uruguay
 Uzbekistan Uzbekistan
 Venezuela Venezuela
 Zimbabwe Zimbabwe
Official FIS ski museums
_Katrin_Preuss_-_Vorarlberg_Tourismus.jpg)
As of 2017, there are 31 official FIS Ski Museums worldwide in 13 countries which are devoted to the history of skiing, taking into account the region's own history of skiing and tourism.[19]
List of FIS ski museums
- FIS Skimuseum Damüls, Vorarlberg (Austria)[20]
- FIS-Winter!Sport!Museum! Mürzzuschlag (Austria)[21]
- FIS-Landes-Skimuseum Werfenweng (Austria)[22]
- FIS-Ski-Museum Vaduz (Liechtenstein)[23]
See also
- Alpine Skiing Europa Cup
- FIS Alpine Ski World Cup
- FIS Cross-Country World Cup
- FIS Freestyle Ski World Cup
- FIS Nordic Combined World Cup
- FIS Ski Jumping World Cup
- FIS Snowboard World Cup
- International Snowboard Federation
References
- ^ a b c "Facts & Figures". FIS-ski.com. 17 September 2018. Archived from the original on 29 October 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
- ^ a b "Decisions of the 53rd International Ski Congress". FIS-ski.com. 26 May 2022. Archived from the original on 27 June 2022. Retrieved 15 April 2023. The new name of the organisation is the International Ski and Snowboard Federation. The acronym of the organisation will remain FIS. 
- ^ a b "General Regulations". FIS-ski.com. June 2018. Archived from the original on 29 October 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
- ^ "Roman Kumpost". FIS-ski.com. Archived from the original on 17 July 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
- ^ "Dexter Paine". FIS-ski.com. Archived from the original on 17 July 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
- ^ "Aki Murasato". FIS-ski.com. Archived from the original on 17 July 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
- ^ "Peter Schroecksnadel". FIS-ski.com. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
- ^ "Accounts. Comptes. Rechnung 01.01.2018 – 31.12.2018" (PDF). FIS-ski.com. 25 February 2019. Archived (PDF) from the original on 17 July 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
- ^ a b "History of FIS". FIS-ski.com. 17 September 2018. Archived from the original on 17 July 2019. Retrieved 15 April 2023. The International Ski Federation - Fédération Internationale de Ski, Internationaler Ski Verband - is abbreviated in all languages as FIS. 
- ^ "Behind the decision: It's all in a name". FIS-ski.com. 1 June 2022. Archived from the original on 6 January 2023. Retrieved 6 January 2023. the General Assembly voted to formally change the name of the International Ski Federation to be the International Ski and Snowboard Federation ... Since the acronym FIS is widely recognised in the world of international sports, the Organization will remain FIS, but now with "Snowboard" as an official part of the long-form name. 
- ^ Roepke, Michele (8 June 2022). "FIS gets a new name, hint: snowboard starts with "S" too". TownLift.com. Park City News. Archived from the original on 29 September 2022. Retrieved 15 April 2023.
- ^ Edgeworth, Ron (1994) “The Nordic Games and the Origins of the Olympic Winter Games” Archived 18 August 2021 at the Wayback Machine Citius, Altius, Fortius
- ^ Vaage, Jakob (1968) The Holmenkollen Ski Jumping Hill and the Ski Museum Archived 16 April 2023 at the Wayback Machine Oslo: Tanum OCLC 492547534 Page 19
- ^ FIS Congress History Archived 4 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine at FIS
- ^ Ski-ing and Olympism Archived 3 August 2022 at the Wayback Machine Olympic Review
- ^ List of past Congress summaries at fis-ski.com Archived 14 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "FIS President". FIS-ski.com. Archived from the original on 17 July 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
- ^ "Ski: FIS-Präsident Gian Franco Kasper tritt zurück". Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in German). 23 November 2019. Archived from the original on 27 November 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2020.
- ^ "FIS Official Ski Museums". FIS-ski.com. Archived from the original on 17 July 2019. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
- ^ "Kulisse Pfarrhof Ski Museum | Culture | REGION". damuels.travel. Archived from the original on 22 August 2019. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
- ^ "Home- Winter!Sport!Museum!". WinterSportMuseum.com. Archived from the original on 3 February 2011. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
- ^ "Skimuseum Werfenweng" (in German). Archived from the original on 22 August 2019. Retrieved 22 August 2019.
- ^ "Skimuseum ist Geschichte". Vaterland online. Archived from the original on 22 August 2019. Retrieved 22 August 2019.

