Zenaida Yanowsky won the fifth contest for Spain in . The
European Broadcasting Union (EBU) holds two biennial youth competitions in alternate years, with Eurovision Young Dancers taking place in odd-numbered years and
Eurovision Young Musicians in even-numbered years. The inaugural Eurovision Young Dancers contest –then known as Eurovision Competition for Young Dancers–, took place in
Reggio Emilia, Italy, on 16 June 1985. EBU member broadcasters from twelve countries competed in the first contest. Spain won that
first edition, with Arantxa Argüelles. Norway with Arne Fagerholt, and Sweden with Mia Stagh and Göran Svalberg, came second and third respectively. Broadcasters from a total of thirty-seven countries have competed at least once since 1985. Canada is the only non-European country that has been represented in the contest (as well as the only country in the Americas to have ever participated in a Eurovision event), however their broadcaster,
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), is an
associate member of the EBU. Eurovision Young Dancers is also the only Eurovision event to feature a country whose broadcaster is neither a full nor associate member of the EBU, as
Radio Television of Kosovo (RTK) made their sole appearance in 2011 representing Kosovo (although it has broadcast other Eurovision events for many years). Bulgaria's debut and only appearance in 1991 also marked the first participation of a former
Warsaw Pact country in a Eurovision event, as well as the longest gap between a country's debut at another Eurovision event prior to appearing at the
Eurovision Song Contest (with fourteen years separating their Young Dancers debut and their Song Contest debut). In the entire history of the event, only three contests (2007, 2009 and 2019) have never occurred. Eurovision Young Dancers 2007 would have taken place at the
Palais de Beaulieu in
Lausanne, Switzerland on 4 February 2007 in collaboration with the
Prix de Lausanne, a similar event organised by Swiss broadcaster
SRG SSR idée suisse that is held annually at the same venue. The decision to cancel the contest was mutually agreed between the host broadcaster and the EBU. The contest would eventually be held again in 2011 when the format was revived as a
prime time show. On 23 January 2017, the EBU announced that Maltese broadcaster
Public Broadcasting Services (PBS), who agreed to host the event in July 2015, had been forced to cancel their staging of the competition. The EBU also stated it was looking for another host broadcaster but should one not be found in time the competition would not take place this year and is expected to return in 2019. On 18 May 2017, Czech broadcaster
Česká televize (ČT) confirmed that they would host the contest for a second time. On 20 December 2018, the contest was cancelled due to the absence of a broadcaster willing to host the competition. As of that time, Malta and Poland were the only eligible countries to have confirmed their intention to participate in the contest. In October 2020, the EBU ruled out bringing the contest back until further notice; this was reaffirmed in January 2026. ==Format==