The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee has updated its rules to bar transgender women from competing in women’s sports, aligning itself with President Trump’s executive order 14201, “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports.”
The policy, quietly revised on July 21 on the USOPC website and confirmed via a letter to national governing bodies, states that as a “federally chartered organization,” USOPC is mandated to comply with federal directives aimed at promoting fair and safe competition environments for women.
Signed in February, Trump’s executive order threatens to withdraw federal funding from educational and sports organizations that allow transgender women to participate in women’s sports teams, as part of a broader initiative defining female eligibility under Title IX as “sex assigned at birth.” The order led the NCAA to adopt a similar policy just one day later.
Under the new USOPC policy, all national federations governing Olympic and Paralympic sports—including swimming, athletics, and others—are required to revise their eligibility rules to bar transgender women, defined as individuals who underwent male puberty, from competing in women’s divisions. This changes prior practice where federations set their own guidelines.
USOPC CEO Sarah Hirshland and President Gene Sykes emphasized in their communication that compliance is not optional: as a federally chartered body, USOPC has an “obligation to comply” with federal expectations.
They framed the update as necessary to ensure fairness and safety in women’s sports, and encouraged ongoing coordination with the IOC, IPC, and national governing bodies.
This decision places USOPC at the forefront of a national trend: more than two dozen states have enacted similar bans at the scholastic and collegiate levels, though some have been legally challenged as discriminatory.
Internationally, certain sports like swimming, cycling, and track and field have already prohibited transgender women who experienced male puberty; soccer is still formulating its policy.
Critics argue the policy excludes a small group of athletes and contradicts diversity goals, while supporters insist it protects fair play for cisgender women. Ahead of the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, the USOPC’s action may influence international standards, applying pressure on the IOC to adopt unified rules on transgender athlete eligibility.
