Luge relay is a mixed team event where several sleds from the same country race one after another on a single, continuous clock to get the fastest total time.

What luge relay is

  • It’s a team event that combines individual luge runs into one relay-style race.
  • Teams are made up of one woman (singles), one man (singles), and one doubles sled.
  • The event has been part of the Winter Olympics since Sochi 2014 and is now a regular feature heading into the 2026 Games.

Basic format: how a run works

  1. The woman’s singles sled starts first from the women’s start.
  1. When she reaches the finish, she reaches up and hits a big overhead touchpad.
  1. That touchpad instantly opens the start gate at the top of the track for the man’s singles sled, which then starts.
  1. The man finishes, hits the touchpad, and that releases the doubles team.
  1. The doubles sled goes last; when they cross the finish and hit the pad, the clock finally stops.

The key idea: one continuous timer runs from the moment the first sled starts until the doubles sled completes the course, with no break in the timing between legs.

Timing, scoring, and winning

  • The relay is usually decided in a single heat: one clean run per team.
  • Time starts when the first sled breaks the start beam, and it only stops when the doubles sled hits the final pad.
  • The team’s result is its total time across all legs; the lowest total time wins.
  • Timing in luge is extremely precise, measured to thousandths of a second, so even a tiny mistake or late touch on the pad can change medal positions.

Important rules and DQs

  • Each athlete must cross the finish line in proper control of their sled; losing contact or running/pushing the sled over the finish can bring disqualification in luge events.
  • The touchpad is crucial:
    • If a slider misses the touchpad, the gate at the top doesn’t open and the next sled can’t start.
* Touching or trying to force the start gate before it opens is grounds for disqualification.
  • All the usual luge rules apply: correct start procedure, staying in the prone position, and not using hands to steer, or the team can be penalized or disqualified.

Why it looks different from normal luge

  • Instead of isolated runs, the relay feels like a true team race: three sleds linked by those dramatic pad smacks.
  • The start order (woman → man → doubles) is fixed and adds strategy around who can handle pressure in each role.
  • Because the clock never stops, every transition matters—smooth finishes, accurate hits on the pad, and fast reaction at the start gate can decide the race.

One way to picture it: imagine a 4×100 relay in track, but instead of passing a baton, each runner hits a touchpad that fires the next teammate out of the blocks—except they’re on sleds going over 120 km/h on ice.

TL;DR: In a luge relay, a women’s sled, a men’s sled, and a doubles sled from the same nation race one after another on a single running clock, “passing the baton” by hitting a touchpad that opens the gate for the next sled; the fastest combined time wins.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.