Our Olympic champions will be richer by HUF 55 million, silver medalists by HUF 39 million 270 thousand, bronze medalists by HUF 31 million 350 million, but even the eighth place winners will receive HUF 3 million 80 thousand – writes hvg.hu.
Based on all this, 444 Summarize the awards received by the most successful Hungarian athletes:
Tamara's tweezers. / Single Silver, Double Silver, Four Bronze / 110.89 million Hungarian forint
-Christophe Milhac / 100 gold butterflies, 200 silver butterflies / 94.27 million Hungarian forint
– Dora Alida Gazo / Kayak two silvers and four bronzes individual sixth place / 84.16 million Hungarian forint
– Tibor Andraszy /Men's Team Fencing Gold, 4th Place Individual/ 78.65 million Hungarian forint
– Noemi Pope and Sarah Vogt / Bronze double kayak, bronze four kayak / 64.7 million Hungarian forint
“Hubert the Sheep.” / Gold 200 Backstroke, 4 x 100 Relay 8th Place / 58.8 million Hungarian forint
– Bethlehem of David / Bronze in open water swimming 10 km, 4th place in 1500 m sprint / 56 million Hungarian forint
– Marton Viviana / Taekwondo 67 kg gold / 55 million Hungarian forint
-Michel Goulash /Five golds/ 55 million Hungarian forint
-Christophe Rasowski / 10 km open water swimming gold / 55 million Hungarian forint
– Gergely Sieklósi, Matti Koch, David Nagy /Gold Team Duel/ 55 million Hungarian forint
-Bence Nadas, Sandor Totka /Kayaks Silver, Quad 7th Place/ 45.54 million Hungarian forint
– Adam Varga / 1000m Single Kayak Silver / 39.27 million Hungarian forint
-Bence Halasz /silver hammer throw/ 39.27 million Hungarian forint
– Aaron Szilagyi, Andras Szatmari, Sianad Gemisi, Christian Rapp /Silver Sword Team/ 39.27 million Hungarian forint
– Major Veronica /Sports Pistol Bronze Air Pistol 8th Place/ 35.43 million Hungarian forint
The list is not complete, as Davide Losonzi, for example, donated his Olympic prize to charity, and Luka Hamori's fifth-place award was replaced by the Boxing Federation (from 15.73 million to 32.35 million).
The newspaper points out that in addition, Olympic medalists receive an annual salary for life after the age of 35, which is adjusted according to the average annual salary determined by the Central Statistical Office and is paid after each Olympic medal. Champions receive 100% of this amount, silver medalists receive 70%, and bronze medalists receive 50%.