The postponement of the 2020 Tokyo Games means the International Olympic Committee (IOC) will have to shoulder "several hundred million dollars" of costs, its president Thomas Bach has admitted.
An open letter from Bach to the Olympic movement outlined the impact of the coronavirus pandemic on sport and wider society.
The leaders of the Tokyo organising committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games have warned the costs of delaying the Games until the summer of 2021 will be massive, with media reports in Japan putting the additional cost somewhere between two and six billion US dollars.
Bach said: "Although it is too early to give an exact figure, we already know that we have to shoulder several hundred million US dollars of postponement costs.
"This is why we also need to look into and review all the services that we provide for these postponed Games."
Bach acknowledged the impact of the postponement at National Olympic Committee (NOC) level as well.
"With regard to supporting the Olympic community that is affected by this crisis, we are already in fruitful discussions with the athletes, the NOCs and the international federations, as well as our commercial partners and sponsors," he wrote.
"As immediate measures, we have already extended all Olympic grants to the NOCs to cover their preparations for the Games."
Bach admitted the crisis had forced the IOC to review its budget and priorities. He said the review would be presented shortly to the IOC's executive board.
"At this moment, nobody knows what the realities of the post-coronavirus world will look like," he said.
"What is clear, however, is that probably none of us will be able to sustain every single initiative or event that we were planning before this crisis hit.
"We will all need to take a close look at the scope of some of our activities and make the necessary adjustments to the new realities."