Three-time gold medalist Max Whitlock says Paris 2024 will be his last Olympics.
With 32 major international medals under his belt, the 31-year-old is Britain's most successful gymnast.
If Whitlock wins two golds and one bronze on pommel horse at this summer's Olympics, she could become the first gymnast in history to win four Olympic medals on the same apparatus.
“This decision now feels right and it feels right to me,” Whitlock said.
In an interview on BBC Breakfast, he said: “In the run up to my last Olympics, it feels very, very strange to talk about it and it's almost hard to articulate what it's like.
“It’s a really great mindset to want to give it everything you have.”
Whitlock's Olympic journey began at the 2012 London Games, where he won bronze on the pommel horse and helped Great Britain finish third in the team event.
In Rio 2016, she won Britain's first bronze medal in the individual all-around event in 108 years, and won the floor and pommel horse events, becoming the country's first Olympic individual gold medalist in gymnastics.
After retaining his pommel horse title at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, Whitlock took an 18-month hiatus from competition to deal with mental health issues.
His other honors include three World Championship gold medals, four European Championship wins and four Commonwealth Games gold medals.