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From left, Mayor Eric Garcetti of Los Angeles; the International Olympic Committee president, Thomas Bach; and Mayor Anne Hidalgo of Paris were pictured on July 11 after the Olympic committee’s executive board effectively guaranteed the two cities would each host an Olympics in the next decade. Credit Fabrice Coffrini/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles officials announced a deal Monday with the International Olympic Committee to play host to the 2028 Summer Olympics, giving up a bid for the 2024 Games to Paris and bringing the Olympics back to the United States for the first time since 2002.

At a news conference Monday evening at StubHub Center south of Los Angeles, the city’s mayor, Eric Garcetti, set high expectations. “We know we will return the Olympic legacy to what it’s all about,” he said, adding later, “We’re a city that has always been a Games-changer and again will be in 2028.”

Olympic officials had paved the way for an unusual dual announcement in the fall for the 2024 and the 2028 Games. Both Los Angeles and Paris were bidding for the 2024 Games, with Paris favored.

Olympic officials, however, saw an opportunity that they considered a win for all by awarding Paris 2024 and giving 2028 to Los Angeles, whose Games in 1984 are still held up as a financial and emotional success. It would also help the Olympic committee resolve its difficulty in finding host cities for the Games, which have become financial headaches for many places.

Los Angeles officials put a positive spin on receiving the later Games, noting that the extra four years would allow for more expansion of the city’s subway system.

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“This opportunity is unprecedented,” said Casey Wasserman, the chairman of the city’s bid committee. “Never has an organizing committee had 11 years to prepare.”

Los Angeles would have the Games for the third time, after 1932 and 1984. The Summer Olympics were last in the United States in 1996, in Atlanta. Salt Lake City played host to the last Games in the country, the Winter Olympics in 2002.

The I.O.C. is expected to formally announce the hosts for the Games at a meeting in Lima, Peru, on Sept. 13.

From the start, Los Angeles had made it clear that while it preferred to have the Olympics in 2024, it would be willing to accommodate the 2028 Games.

Under the agreement, the I.O.C. said it would give at least $1.8 billion to the Los Angeles organizing committee and would make advance payments of $180 million to compensate the local committee for the extra four years it must work and $160 million for youth sports programs, a payout that typically comes after the Games.

Thomas Bach, the president of the I.O.C., had previously balked at such a perk, saying the Games themselves were a gift, but apparently came around to it.

As part of the deal, the I.O.C. also agreed to forfeit its usual 20 percent share of any potential surplus revenue from the event to the local organizing committee, according to the bid’s spokesman, Jeff Millman.

The Los Angeles City Council and the United States Olympic Committee will consider the agreement in August and, if it is approved, send it on to the I.O.C. for its vote in September.

The agreement is not without risks for Los Angeles.

The cost and logistical estimates that Los Angeles prepared in making its bid for the Games — and selling the idea to local officials and voters — were based on the event taking place in seven years. As officials here began contemplating the probability that Los Angeles would get the Games in 2028, they expressed concern about the entailing uncertainties; costs are likely to be higher than they would be in 2024.

Los Angeles’s plan depended on its sprawling system of stadiums and arenas — some left over from the 1984 Olympics, others belonging to major sports teams and university campuses — that in theory would keep construction costs low. The estimated cost is $5.3 billion, though city officials expected the funding to come from private sources and ticket sales.

The United States Olympic Committee withdrew Boston as its official bid city in July 2015 because of intense local opposition, clearing the way for Los Angeles.

There has been minimal opposition in Los Angeles to the Olympics coming — at least as compared with other cities — reflecting, in part, the successful experience in 1984. Yet there was some opposition from a late-emerging group called NOlympics LA. The group denounced the decision.

“This is a complete miscarriage of anything remotely resembling democracy,” the group said. “We insist that the local media acknowledge the lack of transparency and accountability there is in this last-minute, hastily thrown together ‘plan.’ The council, mayor, bid committee, Donald Trump and I.O.C. are all colluding to thrust an unvetted plan onto the second-largest city in America.”

President Trump had said on Twitter in July he was “working hard” to bring the Games to Los Angeles, and he met in the Oval Office with Mr. Bach to pledge his “full support,’’ the White House said in a statement then.

Getting the Games will be a triumph for Paris, which failed in bids for the 1992, 2008 and 2012 Olympics. This time, it presented a streamlined bid and emphasized staging events at postcard venues, such as open-water swimming in the Seine and beach volleyball at the foot of the Eiffel Tower.

“Paris and Los Angeles are two amazing global cities that are united in their support of the Olympic cause and we stand together now to help the Games thrive in 2024 and 2028,” Mayor Anne Hidalgo of Paris said in a statement.

The dual award to Paris and Los Angeles is seen as a chance to stabilize an Olympic movement besieged by staggering costs and declining interest in hosting by cities in democratic nations. Aside from Boston, the cities of Rome, Budapest and Hamburg, Germany, withdrew their candidacies for the 2024 Games. By naming two host cities at once, the I.O.C. will not have to worry about cities losing bids for the Summer Olympics and declining to bid again.

In getting the 2024 Olympics, Paris can celebrate the centennial anniversary of the last time it hosted the Summer Games. By bestowing the Games, the I.O.C. can also pat itself on the back for helping Paris recover from recent terrorist attacks.

Paris, like Los Angeles, carries some risk in its bid.

An athletes’ village must still be built, at an estimated cost of $2 billion. If there are severe cost overruns in Paris, they could further discourage other cities from bidding on Games.

On the other hand, Los Angeles had sold itself as better prepared than competitors. Instead of building an athletes’ village, it plans to use existing dorm rooms at U.C.L.A. And, at this point, no permanent arenas need to be built.

The 2028 Games in Los Angeles will inspire a generation of American athletes and bring an infusion of cash to the United States Olympic Committee, and they could motivate more American companies to become global corporate sponsors for the Olympics in the wake of McDonald’s withdrawal, said Rick Burton, a professor of sports management at Syracuse and a former chief marketing officer of the United States Olympic Committee.

“The biggest pro is, L.A. is a winner again,” Mr. Burton said in a telephone interview.

At the same time, he said, there could be a change in the city’s political and Olympic leadership by 2028. Arenas may need updating for the latest technology. And it is possible that new construction will be needed if additional sports are added to the Games. In addition, Mr. Burton said, there is no way to predict what the city’s economy or social mood will be in 2028 or whether a severe natural disaster like an earthquake will occur.

By waiting four additional years, “you’re rolling the dice a few more times,” Mr. Burton said. “All of that has to be planned for. My guess is, it will be.”

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