Toyota has a contract through the 2024 Paris Games, which was reported to be valued at 835 million USD when it was announced in 2015. It included four Olympics beginning with the Pyeongchang 2018 Winter Games in South Korea and running through Paris.
It has been widely reported to be the IOC's largest sponsorship deal.
Citing ‘sources close to the matter’, Japanese news agency Kyodo said Toyota was unhappy the way sponsorship money was used by the IOC. The news agency, quoting the sources, said the money was "not used effectively to support athletes and promote sports.”
Toyota pulled its Olympic advertising in Japan during the pandemic-delayed Tokyo Games in 2021. It said it was responding to strong public sentiment in the country against staging the Olympics and the IOC's push to hold them.
Toyota is supplying 3,000 fuel-cell vehicles for the Paris Games to show off its green technology.
The IOC generates 91 per cent of its income from selling broadcast rights (61 per cent) and sponsorships (30 per cent).
The IOC had an income of 7.6 billion USD in the last four-year cycle ending with the Tokyo Games. The IOC's top 15 sponsors paid over 2 billion USD in that period.
In addition to Toyota, the sponsors are ABInBev, Airbnb, Alibaba, Allianz, Atos, Bridgestone, Coca-Cola, Deloitte, Intel, Omega, Panasonic, P&G, Samsung and Visa.
Japan officially spent 13 billion USD on the Tokyo Olympics, at least half of which was public money. A government audit suggested the real cost was twice that. The IOC contribution was about 1.8 billion USD.