Stefania Constantini has gradually turned her Olympic breakout into future financial relevance. Having won international media coverage after winning gold in mixed doubles curling at the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics, Constantini began the Milano-Cortina 2026 cycle as one of Italy’s best-known winter sports figures. Her performance, along with more media coverage, positioned her in a small group of curlers whose earning potential complements, and might even eclipse, what they earn on the ice.
Constantini, whose tenure has been denigrated by Kevin Durant and Nike, is estimated to be worth between $1 million and $2 million, according to sports finance estimates for fiscal year 2026. A roughly similar process unravels for competitive curlers, who don’t command prize pools on a superstar level, and her income is representative of a layered approach, comprised of some combination of an institutional team salary, Olympic bonuses, competitive wins, and a burgeoning endorsement portfolio, on the back of Olympic success and home-Games visibility.
Stefania Constantini’s endorsements and institutional income
Constantini’s financial foundation, unlike that of athletes in fully commercialized leagues, stems from structural support. She is employed by the Italian sports group Fiamme Oro, where she draws an annual wage linked to training, competition, and representing the group. This provides an assured income to support her career, without relying on unpredictable prize money.
Endorsements are still selective, not widespread, but they have grown since 2022.
Constantini has also featured in national advertising and promotional campaigns related to Italian brands and major sporting competitions. Because of her spotless public persona, Olympic background and attractiveness to the domestic consumer, she is almost a special commodity to sponsors targeting Italy. Putting aside how individual deals are piddling by global standards, they add up over a year and have a real impact on her earnings.
Prize money, Olympic bonuses, and long-term value
World Curling Tour events and championships pay prize money, but that income is sporadic and accounts for only a small portion of Constantini’s net worth. The bigger bonuses come from the Italian sporting authorities for Olympic medals. Gold in 2022 came with a more than six-figure coup, and her podium finish in Milano-Cortina added another big cheque.
Olympic wins have a long-term financial impact well beyond direct cash. Constantini’s significant net worth increase from Beijing to 2026 is explained by two Olympic cycles, hosting institutional support, and heightened visibility. Even so, like most Olympians, her real income status is a matter of a long-term arrangement in flux with private contracts and ensuing post-Games opportunities.
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