UK Edition Change

  • UK Politics
  • News Videos
  • Paris 2024 Olympics
  • Rugby Union
  • Sport Videos
  • John Rentoul
  • Mary Dejevsky
  • Andrew Grice
  • Sean O’Grady
  • Photography
  • Theatre & Dance
  • Culture Videos
  • Food & Drink
  • Health & Families
  • Royal Family
  • Electric Vehicles
  • Lifestyle Videos
  • UK Hotel Reviews
  • News & Advice
  • Simon Calder
  • Australia & New Zealand
  • South America
  • C. America & Caribbean
  • Middle East
  • Politics Explained
  • News Analysis
  • Today’s Edition
  • Home & Garden
  • Fashion & Beauty
  • Travel & Outdoors
  • Sports & Fitness
  • Sustainable Living
  • Climate Videos
  • Behind The Headlines
  • On The Ground
  • Decomplicated
  • You Ask The Questions
  • Binge Watch
  • Travel Smart
  • Watch on your TV
  • Crosswords & Puzzles
  • Most Commented
  • Newsletters
  • Ask Me Anything
  • Virtual Events
  • Betting Sites
  • Online Casinos
  • Wine Offers

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged in Please refresh your browser to be logged in

Tour de France 2024 route revealed as race finishes outside Paris for first time in 120-year history

The race will begin in italy for the first time and end in nice rather than paris as the capital turns its attention to the olympic games, article bookmarked.

Find your bookmarks in your Independent Premium section, under my profile

Sport

Sign up to our free sport newsletter for all the latest news on everything from cycling to boxing

Sign up to our free sport email for all the latest news, thanks for signing up to the sport email.

The unique 2024 Tour de France will begin in Florence and end with a potentially dramatic time-trail in Nice, as the race finishes outside Paris for the first time in its 120-year history while the capital focuses on the Olympic Games.

In another first, Italy will host the Grand Depart and the first three stages of the race, before an early climb into the Alps on stage four, from the Italian town of Pinerolo to Valloire in France. The race will then head to the vineyards around Dijon, the Massif Central and over the Pyrenees, before returning to the French Alps and down to the Riviera for a finale against the clock, from Monaco to Nice .

The final section in the Alps is set for a stage 20 showdown on the Col de la Couillole (15.7km at 7.1 per cent average gradient), ahead of the first competitive 21st stage since 1989, as a time-trial replaces the traditional Parisian parade before a sprint on the Champs-Elysees.

“It’s difficult to replace Paris, so what better scenery could we give than than a dazzling Monaco to Nice time-trial,” said race director Christian Prudhomme, at the route’s unveiling. Of the stage-four ascent in the Alps, he added: “The Tour has never climbed so high, so early.”

The Tour de France Femmes will also break new ground when it begins abroad for the first time, with the first three stages to be held in the Netherlands. And the women’s race is set for an eye-catching finish atop the iconic Alpe d’Huez.

Route of the 2024 Tour de France Femmes

“We went to the Tourmalet last year, we wanted to go to iconic places and L’Alpe d’Huez is part of cycling’s history,” women’s Tour director Marion Rousse said. “It’s the toughest stage in Tour de France Femmes history with 4,000m of altitude gain. The stage also features the Col du Glandon, which I think is the hardest in France. Women have proved they have the level for that.”

Eight of the men’s 21 stages are categorised as ‘flat’ days but in reality there are few clear-cut opportunities for the sprinters, something noted by Mark Cavendish after the Manxman, who will be 39 when the race rolls around, reversed his decision to retire earlier this month.

“It’s so hard,” Cavendish told reporters after assessing the route. “I am actually in a bit of shock. It might be the hardest route I’ve ever seen at the Tour de France.”

Geraint Thomas, a year younger than Cavendish, has signed a new two-year contract with Ineos Grenadiers, which he says is likely to be his last, and the 2018 yellow-jersey winner could feature in the race, although Ineos’s focus will be on younger riders like Tom Pidcock, who continues to balance his love of mountain biking with grand tour racing.

After a mixed performance at this summer’s Tour de France, Ineos will hope for a yellow-jersey challenge from one of their riders, most likely the young Spaniard Carlos Rodriguez, who finished fifth and has just signed a four-year contract extension, quashing rumours of a transfer away.

But he will face a difficult challenge once more, with reigning champion Jonas Vingegaard set to return as the man to beat. Two-time winner Tadej Pogacar will among the favourites should he be fit and ready on the startline, while Belgian multiple world champion Remco Evenepoel is likely to make his Tour debut and four-time grand-tour winner Primoz Roglic is looking for a new team to lead.

“Could this herald a duel playing out between two, three, or – let’s dream a little here – even four contenders?” Prudhomme said.

The men’s race will run from 29 June to 21 July. The Olympics will begin five days after the Tour de France ends, and authorities did not want to stretch police resources in Paris, prompting the decision to finish on the south coast.

The women’s race will begin the day after the Games close, on 12 August, culminating in the Alps on 18 August.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this article

Want to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today.

New to The Independent?

Or if you would prefer:

Want an ad-free experience?

Hi {{indy.fullName}}

  • My Independent Premium
  • Account details
  • Help centre

Tour de France 2024: Route and stages

Tour de France 2024

Read about the route of the 2024 Tour de France.

Another interesting read: records & winners Tour de France.

Please click on the links in underneath scheme for in-depth information on the stages.

Tour de France 2024 – stages

Tour de france 2024: route, profiles, more.

Click on the images to zoom

Tour de France 2024: entire route - source:letour.fr

More about the Tour de France

Tour de france 2024: the route.

Tour de France 2024

Tour de France 2024 Route stage 1: Florence - Rimini

Tour de france 2024 route stage 20: nice - col de la couillole, tour de france 2024 route stage 21: monaco - nice, tour de france 2024 route stage 2: cesenatico - bologna.

Summit finish and final day time-trial for 2024 Tour de France finale in Nice

Stage 20 will finish atop the Col de la Couillole before final day race against the clock in Nice

  • Sign up to our newsletter Newsletter

Jonas Vingegaard

A challenging final two stages, including a summit finish and a final day time trial will cap the 2024 Tour de France in Nice, it was unveiled this afternoon.

Due to a clash with the 2024 Paris Olympics, the French Grand Tour will be finishing in Nice, the first time in the races history that it has finished outside Paris. 

Stage 20 will be a summit finish on the Col de la Couillole - where Tadej Pogačar took a Paris-Nice stage victory last weekend - and the final stage 21 will be a hilly 35 kilometre individual time-trial from Monaco to Nice. 

Finishing the race with two tough stages could mean that the race in the general classification comes right down to the wire on the final day. 

The penultimate stage follows a route which race organisers ASO says has a “Paris-Nice feel to it”. 

Starting out in Nice, the riders will take on four categorised climbs including the Col de Braus, Col de Turini and Col de la Colmiane, where Primož Roglič triumphed in the 2021 edition of the race to the sun, before the summit finish on the Col de la Couillole. 

On the final day, whoever is wearing the leader's yellow jersey could face a nervous 35 kilometre dash from Monaco to Nice if they haven’t already built a solid enough gap in the general classification. The route for the time trial features more regular climbs associated with Paris-Nice, La Turbie and the Col d’Eze, before concluding in the city’s Place Massena. 

Despite the parcours potentially making for gripping and exciting racing, the feeling amongst some members of the peloton is that moving the final day from Paris is taking away some of the Tour de France’s charm. Prior to the reveal of the full route, Ineos Grenadiers’ Pavel Sivakov told Cycling Weekly that he would “always prefer” to finish in Paris. 

“It's taking away some of the charm of the Tour to be honest. You always finish on the Champs Élysées, and it's so special. It's such an iconic, nice finish. It's going to be something different. We haven't seen it ever. I would always prefer to finish in Paris, but I think it's going to be interesting,” Sivakov said. 

“The race will be more open until the end. It would be pretty cool to race that year, and then say I’ve done that. A bit like racing the Covid Tour.”

Larry Warbasse of AG2R Citroen echoed Sivakov and said he felt it was “sad” that the race would not conclude in Paris. However, the American rider said that finishing in a town he lives in was also an exciting prospect. 

Warbasse said: “I do think it would be sad not to be in Paris, but to finish at home is even cooler. I guess then I would just have to do it the year after so I can finish in Paris one time too. It's always nice to finish in the biggest city of a country, like when the Vuelta [a España] finishes in Madrid, it's a really nice ambience, a good closing to the race. 

“I think this year the Giro [d'Italia] finishes in Rome too, I think that's really cool. That's way cooler than in some random mid-tier city somewhere else.” The final day time-trial will be the first time the final day has been a race against the clock since the famous 1989 edition, in which American Greg Lemond dramatically beat Frenchman Laurent Fignon to the yellow jersey on the Champs-Élysées.

Italian Grand Départ

In December last year, it was announced that the 111th edition of the Tour will get underway in Italy , also for the first time in the race's history. On 29 June 2024, the race will begin with a difficult 205 kilometre stage stacked with climbing between Florence and Rimini. Stage two will make for another tough say in the saddle, between Cesenatico and Bologna before the final day in Italy between Piacenza and Turin. It will mark 100 years since the first Italian winner of the Tour, Ottavio Bottecchia. "Exactly a century after Ottavio Bottecchia became the first cyclist from the other side of the Alps to win the Tour, the peloton will go from the birthplace of Gino Bartali, a champion Righteous Among the Nations, to that of Marco Pantani, the unforgettable  Il Pirata , worshipped without measure, before paying tribute to the  campionissimo , Fausto Coppi," race director Christian Prudhomme said. "These three stages will take us through majestic landscapes in which the leaders will be forced to take matters into their own hands from the opening weekend. It is going to be magical."

☀ On July 20. and 21. 2024, dream finale on the French Riviera☀ Les 20 et 21 juillet 2024, un week-end d'apothéose sur la Riviera !#TDF2024 pic.twitter.com/FB8cTAD4WT March 13, 2023

Thank you for reading 20 articles this month* Join now for unlimited access

Enjoy your first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

*Read 5 free articles per month without a subscription

Join now for unlimited access

Try first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

Get The Leadout Newsletter

The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!

Tom is a News and Features Writer at Cycling Weekly. Since joining the team he has reported from races and events across the world including the Tour de France and World Championships.

Remco Evenepoel wins eighth and final stage in rain-soaked 'Race to the Sun'

By Tom Davidson Published 10 March 24

From simple home-made gadgets to budget-busting titanium, we delve into the world of 3D printing in cycling

By James Shrubsall Published 10 March 24

US star grabbed his first ever Grand Tour win at last year’s Giro d’Italia

By Tom Thewlis Published 8 March 24

The American could step into the leaders yellow jersey on Tuesday evening after stage three’s team time trial in Auxerre

By Tom Thewlis Published 5 March 24

Colombian snapped up key bonus seconds in the general classification battle on run in to Les Mureaux

By Tom Thewlis Published 3 March 24

'He can still surprise us all the time’ João Almeida on Pogačar's performance in Tuscany

Roglič up against Remco Evenepoel for the first time in 2024 as he gets set for a return to the Tour de France

Evenepoel starts season in fine form ahead of Tour de France debut this summer

By Tom Thewlis Published 19 February 24

British rider set to make racing comeback at Volta ao Algarve on Wednesday, nine months after serious crash

By Tom Thewlis Published 13 February 24

Colombian announces at Tour Colombia that he will call time on his career at end of year after 19 years in pro peloton

By Tom Thewlis Published 12 February 24

Useful links

  • Tour de France
  • Giro d'Italia
  • Vuelta a España

Buyer's Guides

  • Best road bikes
  • Best gravel bikes
  • Best smart turbo trainers
  • Best cycling computers
  • Editor's Choice
  • Bike Reviews
  • Component Reviews
  • Clothing Reviews
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us

Cycling Weekly is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site . © Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury, Bath BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.

tour de france route nice

Wednesday, March 13, 2024 9:42 am (Paris)

  • Tour de France

Tour de France: 2024 Florence-Nice route announced

The new route is set to include 3,492 km of road, two Alpine crossings, a time trial finish from Monaco, and the highest starting altitude of any Tour de France.

Le Monde with AFP

Time to 2 min.

  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Messenger
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share by email
  • Share on Linkedin

This photo provided by the Tour de France organizer ASO (Amaury Sport Organisation) shows the roadmap of the men's 2024 Tour de France cycling race.

High altitude, an Italian debut in Florence and a finale on the French Riviera are on the itinerary of the 3,492-kilometer route for the 2024 Tour de France unveiled on Wednesday, October 25.

The route embarks from Florence on June 29 and features four high-altitude finishes as the race crosses the Alps twice and squeezes in two time trials, including a potential high drama final day run from Monaco to Nice on July 21. It is the first time the race does not finish in Paris which is off-limits as it prepares to host the Olympic Games.

As spectacular as it is atypical, the route was revealed at a Gala overseen by Christian Prudhomme, president of Amaury Sport Organisation (ASO, the organizers of the Tour), before almost 4000 guests and many of the expected competitors, mayors from along the route and a large press pack at a conference center in Paris.

The Florence start and Nice finish were already known, prompting much excitement about not only the first-ever Grand Depart in Italy, but the race's first-ever finale outside Paris. "It's difficult to replace Paris, so what better scenery could we give than a dazzling Monaco to Nice time trial," said Prudhomme.

Instead of the traditional last-day parade along the Champs-Elysées, fans can instead anticipate a potentially decisive individual time trial down the Riviera coastline and in the hills between Monaco and Nice. The stage brings to mind the 1989 edition when American rider Greg LeMond beat Laurent Fignon by eight seconds on a last-day dash.

After the Florence start, the race takes in Rimini on the Adriatic coast before cutting across Italy via Bologna and Turin and into France via the Alps on stage four. "The Tour has never climbed so high, so early," said Prudhomme. "The panoramas in the high Alps are just splendid." Stage six will catch the eye of wine lovers as it takes in the "Route des Grands Crus" between Macon and Dijon while stage seven goes through the vineyards of Nuits-Saint-Georges in Bourgogne.

There are a series of stages for the one-day specialists and for the sprinters, but the southern Alps will likely mark the start of the final battle for the yellow jersey. "Could this herald a duel playing out between two, three, or – let's dream a little here 0 even four contenders," Prudhomme said after the 2023 Tour was marked by the two-way duel between Jonas Vingegaard and Tadej Pogacar.

A more generous than usual 60km total over the two time trials will please faster racers such as Remco Evenepoel or Primoz Roglic. The seven mountain stages, meanwhile, and four high altitude finales with the highest at 2802m on stage 19, will be very much to the liking of defending champion Vingegaard.

After Troyes in the Champagne region, the race swoops southeast toward Pau and the Pyrenees, then heads west through Nimes back to the Alps and the mouthwatering finale on the Riviera.

Lecture du Monde en cours sur un autre appareil.

Vous pouvez lire Le Monde sur un seul appareil à la fois

Ce message s’affichera sur l’autre appareil.

Parce qu’une autre personne (ou vous) est en train de lire Le Monde avec ce compte sur un autre appareil.

Vous ne pouvez lire Le Monde que sur un seul appareil à la fois (ordinateur, téléphone ou tablette).

Comment ne plus voir ce message ?

En cliquant sur «  Continuer à lire ici  » et en vous assurant que vous êtes la seule personne à consulter Le Monde avec ce compte.

Que se passera-t-il si vous continuez à lire ici ?

Ce message s’affichera sur l’autre appareil. Ce dernier restera connecté avec ce compte.

Y a-t-il d’autres limites ?

Non. Vous pouvez vous connecter avec votre compte sur autant d’appareils que vous le souhaitez, mais en les utilisant à des moments différents.

Vous ignorez qui est l’autre personne ?

Nous vous conseillons de modifier votre mot de passe .

Lecture restreinte

Votre abonnement n’autorise pas la lecture de cet article

Pour plus d’informations, merci de contacter notre service commercial.

CyclingUpToDate.com

Official: Tour de France reveals 2024's brutal finale in Nice

Paris-Nice has just concluded but taking the momentum from the spectacle in Nice, the Tour de France organizers have revealed how stages 20 and 21 of the 2024 Tour de France will look like, and there is a serious amount of climbing.

The start will be in Florence on this year, and it's finale will be in Nice, as Paris hosts the Olympic Games almost simultaneously in 2024. This has allowed the race organizers to play a bit differently when it comes to the route design, and the final two days of racing are a prime example.

Stage 20 will be the final day in the mountains for the Grand Boucle, short in distance however it'll be in the Alpes Maritimes that it'll take place, a rough day with four categorized climbs including the Col de Turini, Col de la Colmiane and the Col de la Couillole - all frequent appearances as the queen stages at Paris-Nice.

Official: Tour de France reveals 2024's brutal finale in Nice

Route Analysis | Profiles & Route Tour de France 2023

Stage 21 will then be the final day of the race, and for the first time in decades the race concludes with an individual time-trial. The riders will depart from Monaco and end in the Promenade des Anglais where Paris-Nice also frequently finishes.

The 35-kilometer route will include the ascents to La Turbie and a short hilltop to the Col d'Èze before descending down to the coastal city which will receive the Tour de France peloton's podium.

Official: Tour de France reveals 2024's brutal finale in Nice

Profiles & Route Tour de France 2024 | Hilly start in Italy, race finale with Monaco-Nice time-trial

Read more about:, place comments.

You are currently seeing only the comments you are notified about, if you want to see all comments from this post, click the button below.

Confirmation

Are you sure you want to report this comment?

UNDER_ARTICLE

Tue 12 Mar 2024

“I hope to find a team where I can get the best out of myself" - Jasper Philipsen opens door to possible Alpecin-Deceuninck exit

Wed 13 Mar 2024

PREVIEW | Milano-Torino 2024 - Vernon, Kristoff and Démare among favourites for new design of cycling's oldest race

NBA: Houston Rockets at Portland Trail Blazers

  • OlympicTalk ,

WM Phoenix Open

Trending Teams

How to watch paris-nice 2024: schedule and stages for cycling race.

  • NBC Sports ,

Paris-Nice, the famed eight-day cycling stage race, airs live on Peacock starting Sunday.

The field includes 2022 champion Primoz Roglic of Slovenia, who changed teams from Jumbo-Visma to Bora-Hansgrohe after last season.

The 34-year-old Roglic is a three-time Vuelta a Espana winner, the reigning Giro d’Italia champion and the 2020 Tour de France runner-up. Watch for him to be a factor in the Grand Tours later this year.

The other headliner is 24-year-old Belgian Remco Evenepoel, who owns a Grand Tour title (2022 Vuelta), plus world titles in the time trial (2023) and road race (2022).

He is the youngest man to win a world title in the time trial and the second to win both the road race and time trial in a career.

Notable Americans entered include Brandon McNulty of UAE Team Emirates and Matteo Jorgenson of Visma.

2024 Paris-Nice Live Broadcast Schedule

  • International edition
  • Australia edition
  • Europe edition

The pack of riders cycles through the French Alps in July.

Nice finish to tough Tour de France 2024 route as race misses Paris for first time

  • ‘It’s so hard’ says Mark Cavendish of challenge to sprinters
  • Women’s race begins in Netherlands, ends at Alpe d’Huez

The margins of success in the men’s Tour de France grow slimmer every year and the defending champion, Jonas Vingegaard, knows he will have to be at his very best to take a third win in 2024, given that Tadej Pogacar, Primoz Roglic and Remco Evenepoel – all Grand Tour winners in their own right – will also be targeting final victory on the French Riviera on 21 July.

The 2024 men’s Tour starts earlier than usual, on 29 June, to allow a week between the end of the race in Nice, for the first time in history outside the capital, and the Olympic Games opening ceremony in Paris. The Grand Départ in Florence heralds three stages in Italy, before the convoy heads across the Alps into France, racing from Piedmont to the climbs of the Haute Savoie.

With two long time trials, a handful of flatter stages, 32 kilometres of gravel roads and summit finishes in the French Alps, Massif Central and Pyrenees, there is something for everyone, including Mark Cavendish, who has postponed his retirement for one more year, in pursuit of a record-breaking 35th Tour stage win.

But to beat Eddy Merckx’s longstanding record, Cavendish will have to be quick out of the blocks. The 38-year-old admitted he was alarmed by the severity of the 2024 route, and particularly by the early scheduling of the French Alps.

“There’s a few [sprint stages] but you’ve got to get to them – that’s the problem,” Cavendish said after the Tour presentation, referring to the unusually early Alpine challenge, of stage four from Pinerolo to Valloire.

“It’s so hard,” Cavendish said of the Tour route, before admitting that he saw only a limited number of genuine sprint opportunities. “I’m in a bit of shock, actually.”

Mark Cavendish of Astana Qazaqstan Team descends the Col du Tourmalet in the 2023 Tour de France

The grand designs of the 2024 men’s route suggest an epic race. After leaving the Haute Savoie, the race exits the Alps with stages to Dijon, Colombey-les-Deux-Églises and then, over 14 sections of gravel tracks, to Troyes, preceding the first rest day.

From Orleans, the peloton heads south into the Massif Central, with a brutal stage in the Cantal to Le Lioran, followed by three stages leading to the Pyrenees and two high altitude finishes at Pla d’Adet and Plateau de Beille.

After another rest day, the peloton races into the southern French Alps for a grand finale that includes three summit finishes and a closing individual time trial, from Monaco to Nice, along the corniche roads of the Côte d’Azur.

The defending champion Vingegaard, of the Jumbo-Visma team, remained as focused as ever, despite a turbulent autumn in which his mentor, Primoz Roglic, has jumped ship to the Bora-Hansgrohe team.

after newsletter promotion

With Roglic now turned rival, Vingegaard will also have to contend with the world time trial champion, Evenepoel, of Soudal-Quickstep, and longstanding sparring partner and former Tour winner Pogacar, racing for UAE Emirates.

But like others, the Dane gave a lukewarm reception to the inclusion of so many gravel sections in the stage to Troyes. “I think it’s a nice element, but it’s also one day in which you can lose the Tour,” Vingegaard said. “If one of the favourites loses five minutes there, that would be a shame. You just have to be focused and be ready for everything.”

The Tour de France Femmes starts in Rotterdam on 12 August, the morning after the Olympics close. After three stages centred on the Dutch city, the women’s peloton heads into the Belgian Ardennes for a classic-style fourth stage from Valkenburg to Liège.

But the Alps loom large once more on the final weekend, with a penultimate stage to Le Grand Bornand and a show-stopping finale on the steep hairpins of Alpe d’Huez on the final stage. On a climb that has always been kind to Dutch riders, the defending champion, Demi Vollering, winner last July on the Col du Tourmalet, will be the rider to beat.

  • Tour de France
  • Paris Olympic Games 2024
  • Tour de France Femmes

Most viewed

  • Tour de France
  • Stages - Results
  • Previous winners
  • Football Home
  • Fixtures - Results
  • Premier League
  • Champions League
  • Europa League
  • All Competitions
  • All leagues
  • Snooker Home
  • World Championship
  • UK Championship
  • Major events
  • Tennis Home
  • Calendar - Results
  • Australian Open
  • Roland-Garros
  • Mountain Bike Home
  • UCI Track CL Home
  • Men's standings
  • Women's standings
  • Cycling Home
  • Race calendar
  • Vuelta a España
  • Giro d'Italia
  • Dare to Dream
  • Alpine Skiing Home
  • Athletics Home
  • Diamond League
  • World Championships
  • World Athletics Indoor Championships
  • Biathlon Home
  • Cross-Country Skiing Home
  • Cycling - Track
  • Equestrian Home
  • Figure Skating Home
  • Formula E Home
  • Calendar - results
  • DP World Tour
  • MotoGP Home
  • Motorsports Home
  • Speedway GP
  • Clips and Highlights
  • Olympics Home
  • Olympic Channel
  • Rugby World Cup predictor
  • Premiership
  • Champions Cup
  • Challenge Cup
  • All Leagues
  • Ski Jumping Home
  • Speedway GP Home
  • Superbikes Home
  • The Ocean Race Home
  • Triathlon Home
  • Hours of Le Mans
  • Winter Sports Home

Tour de France 2024 route revealed: No Paris finish for first time as race ends with time trial from Monaco to Nice

James Hilsum

Updated 25/10/2023 at 19:57 GMT

The 2024 Tour de France route has been revealed, with the Grand Depart set to take place in Florence on June 29 and ending in Nice on July 21. The first two stages finish with uphill climbs, with Stage 3 set to be the first one where sprinters will come into their own. Meanwhile, there promises to be an exciting finish to Stage 21 in an individual time trial that ends in Nice on July 21.

'I’m in a bit of shock' – Cavendish on what might be the most difficult Tour de France yet

Exclusive: Van Hooydonck pinpoints 'where Vingegaard makes the difference' over rivals

02/03/2024 at 08:59

  • 'I've always felt at home here' - Ineos tie down 'world class' Rodriguez to four-year deal
  • Thomas signs two-year contract extension with Ineos Grenadiers

'I had no option!' - The men hoping to guide Cavendish to record 35th Tour de France win

27/02/2024 at 11:33

Exclusive: Evenepoel will have 'less pressure' at Tour due to Vingegaard presence - Contador

23/02/2024 at 09:11

Vingegaard says Tour de France 'harder than ever' as four-way showdown looms

22/02/2024 at 11:18

Official games

PRO CYCLING MANAGER 2023 (PC)

2023 Edition

  • Stage winners
  • All the videos

Tour Culture

  • Commitments
  • key figures
  • Sporting Stakes
  • "Maillot Jaune" Collection
  • The jerseys

UCI Logo

Stage 20 Nice > Col de la Couillole

Length 133 km

Type Mountain

Stage 21 Monaco > Nice

Length 34 km

Type Individual time-trial

Prepare for the stage

Watch the videos from the stage

A few words from C.Prudhomme

The stage of the day in video

Come to the Tour

Ride like the pros

  • Mountain passes & hill

tour de france route nice

Col d'Eze

tour de france route nice

On the route of the stage

Find the best route, come on your bike, come by car-sharing, follow the tour, watch the stage on tv, follow the caravane du tour, play the video games, discover the towns of the day.

Receive exclusive news about the Tour

app uk

Accreditations

Privacy policy, your gdpr rights.

  • accéder au contenu
  • accéder au menu principal
  • contactez-nous
  • direct radio
  • Gouvernement de Gabriel Attal
  • Assemblée nationale
  • Emmanuel Macron
  • Réforme des retraites 2023
  • Les Républicains
  • Renaissance
  • Rassemblement national
  • Parti socialiste
  • La France insoumise
  • Les Ecologistes - EELV
  • Election présidentielle
  • Toutes les élections
  • Élections européennes 2024
  • Egalité femmes-hommes
  • Immigration
  • Maltraitance dans les Ehpad
  • Droits des femmes
  • Violences sexuelles
  • Féminicides
  • Prostitution
  • Calendrier des vacances scolaires
  • Résultats Bac
  • Résultats Brevet
  • Résultats Bts
  • Résultats Cap
  • Harcèlement scolaire
  • Enlèvements
  • Justice – Procès
  • Incendies de forêt
  • Mort de Nahel à Nanterre
  • Disparition de Delphine Jubillar
  • Attaque au couteau à Annecy
  • Procès de l’attentat de Magnanville
  • Disparition du petit Emile
  • Incendie meurtrier à Wintzenheim
  • Vaccin contre le Covid-19
  • La crise de l’hôpital public
  • Biologie - Génétique
  • Alimentation
  • Lutte contre le tabagisme
  • Politique de santé
  • Psycho - Bien-être
  • Sport et santé
  • Professions médicales
  • Le tabou de la santé mentale
  • Pouvoir d'achat
  • Impôts - Fiscalité
  • Entreprises
  • Auto-entrepreneurs
  • Aéronautique
  • Budget de la France
  • Soldes d'hiver 2024
  • Asie-Pacifique
  • Etats Unis d'Amérique
  • Proche-orient
  • Guerre en Ukraine
  • Sommet de l'UE
  • Royaume-Uni
  • Story Killers
  • Conflit dans le Haut-Karabakh
  • Guerre entre Israël et le Hamas
  • Inondations meurtrières en Libye
  • Séisme au Maroc
  • Festival de Cannes 2023
  • Oscars 2024
  • Victoires de la musique 2024
  • Festival du livre de Paris 2024
  • Les Molières
  • Fête de la musique 2024
  • Rock en Seine 2024
  • Festivals d'été
  • Roland-Garros
  • Tour de France
  • Coupe du monde de foot
  • Mondiaux d'athlétisme
  • Coupe du monde de rugby
  • Crise climatique
  • Convention citoyenne sur le climat
  • Biodiversité
  • Pollution de l'air
  • Le tableau de bord du réchauffement climatique
  • Nos réponses à vos questions sur le climat
  • Empreinte carbone
  • Montée des eaux
  • Greta Thunberg
  • Carte des restrictions d'eau
  • Tableau de bord des nappes phréatiques
  • Calculez votre empreinte carbone
  • Calculez l'impact carbone de vos déplacements
  • Trouvez des fruits et légumes de saison
  • Triez mieux vos déchets
  • Intempéries
  • Météo France
  • Météo Paris
  • Météo Marseille
  • Actualités météo

CARTE. Paris-Nice 2024 : horaires et parcours de la 8e et dernière étape à Nice

Dernière journée de course pour les cyclistes avec une boucle de 109,5 km au programme, dimanche. Une étape de montagne à regarder en direct et en vidéo sur France 3 Paca.

Un final en apothéose. L’ultime étape du Paris-Nice 2024 , dimanche 10 mars, est une boucle de 109,5 km avec plusieurs cols au programme. Au cours de ce parcours dont Nice en est le départ et l’arrivée, les équipes devront s’atteler à accompagner leur leader pour espérer décrocher la 82e édition de la Course au soleil. Une fin de week-end qui s’annonce mouvementée.

Les grimpeurs auront le droit à une étape riche en ascensions avec cinq difficultés répertoriées dans l’arrière-pays niçois. En effet, trois cols de 2e catégorie et deux cols de 1ère catégorie les attendront. La journée déterminera le gagnant de Paris-Nice. Pour rappel, en 2023, c'est le Slovène Tadej Pogacar qui avait remporté cette compétition, devant le Français David Gaudu . Voici tout ce qu’il faut savoir sur cette 8e étape de Paris-Nice 2024, diffusée en direct sur France 3 Paca.

  • le départ à Nice à 12h05
  • le premier col Côte de Levens (col de 2e catégorie) vers 12h35
  • le deuxième col Côte de Châteauneuf (col de 2e catégorie) vers 12h55
  • le troisième col Côte de Berre-les-Alpes (col de 2e catégorie) vers 13h15
  • le quatrième col Côte de Peille (col de 1ère catégorie) vers 13h40
  • le seul sprint au col d’Eze vers 14h05
  • le cinquième col des Quatre-Chemins (col de 1ère catégorie) vers 14h25
  • l’arrivée à Nice vers 14h40

Un enchaînement de cols à affronter pour parvenir à décrocher la victoire

Cette dernière étape de Paris-Nice vit une succession de cols en moins de 100 km. De ce fait, les cyclistes devront surmonter trois cols de 2e catégorie d’à peu près 6 km compris entre 4,6 et 6 % au kilomètre 21, 37 et 51. Ensuite, ils devront enchaîner sur deux cols de 1ère catégorie de 6,5 et 3,6 km à 6,9 et 8,8 % au kilomètre 68 et 100. Tout retard accumulé à ce dernier sommet sera difficile à combler. Les grimpeurs auront donc toutes leurs chances d’arriver en tête sur la Promenade des Anglais.

*article écrit en collaboration avec Paolo Dufour

Pour aller plus loin :

  • copier le lien https://france3-regions.francetvinfo.fr/provence-alpes-cote-d-azur/alpes-maritimes/nice/carte-paris-nice-2024-horaires-et-parcours-de-la-8e-et-derniere-etape-a-nice-2935428.html
  • Bourg-en-Bresse
  • Clermont-Ferrand
  • Le Puy-En-Velay
  • Saint-Etienne
  • Haute-Loire
  • Haute-Savoie
  • Puy-de-Dôme
  • Toute la région
  • Chalon-sur-Saône
  • Lons le Saunier
  • Luxeuil Les Bains
  • Montbéliard
  • Côte-d'Or
  • Haute-Saône
  • Saône-et-Loire
  • Territoire de Belfort
  • Saint-Brieuc
  • Côtes-d'Armor
  • Ille-et-Vilaine
  • Châteauroux
  • Eure-et-Loir
  • Indre-et-Loire
  • Loir-et-Cher
  • Corse-du-Sud
  • Haute-Corse
  • Châlons-en-Champagne
  • Charleville-Mézières
  • Saint-Dizier
  • Haute-Marne
  • Meurthe-et-Moselle
  • Boulogne-sur-Mer
  • Saint-Quentin
  • Valenciennes
  • Pas-de-Calais
  • Cherbourg-En-Cotentin
  • Seine-Maritime
  • Châtellerault
  • La Rochelle
  • Mont-de-Marsan
  • Sarlat-la-Canéda
  • Charente-Maritime
  • Deux-Sèvres
  • Haute-Vienne
  • Lot-et-Garonne
  • Pyrénées-Atlantiques
  • Montpellier
  • Haute-Garonne
  • Hautes-Pyrénées
  • Pyrénées-Orientales
  • Tarn-et-Garonne
  • Grand Paris
  • Saint-Denis
  • Hauts-de-Seine
  • Seine-et-Marne
  • Seine-Saint-Denis
  • Val-de-Marne
  • Val-d'Oise
  • La Roche-sur-Yon
  • Les Sables-d'Olonne
  • Saint-Nazaire
  • Loire-Atlantique
  • Maine-et-Loire
  • Aix-en-Provence
  • Digne-les-Bains
  • Fréjus Et Saint-Raphaël
  • Saint-Tropez
  • Alpes-de-Haute-Provence
  • Alpes-Maritimes
  • Bouches-du-Rhône
  • Hautes-Alpes
  • Toute la France

tour de france route nice

Résultat et résumé : Paris-Nice 2024, 8ème étape

Dimanche 10 mars 2024 départ à 12h06 nice - nice, 109.5 kms.

  • afficher uniquement les temps forts (23)

À la semaine prochaine !

Merci d'avoir suivi la 8e et dernière étape de Paris-Nice qui a vu la victoire d'étape de Remco Evenepoel et la confirmation de Matteo Jorgenson. À la semaine prochaine pour de nouvelles aventures avec le premier Monument de la saison : Milan-San Remo.

Les meilleurs coureurs français au classement général

Trois coureurs français terminent dans le Top 20 de ce Paris-Nice : Aurélien Paret-Peintre (13e à 9'52"), Ewen Costiou (16e à 16'25") et Quentin Pacher (19e à 21'14").

Paris-Nice 2024, un premier succès d'envergure pour Matteo Jorgenson

Avant de remporter la 82e édition de Paris-Nice, l'Américain n'avait remporté qu'une seule course par étapes dans sa carrière : le Tour d'Oman 2023. La même année, il avait pris la 2e place du Tour de Romandie. Sur Paris-Nice, son meilleur résultat était une 8e place (2021 et 2023).

Remco Evenepoel meilleur grimpeur de Paris-Nice

Mais Remco Evenepoel ne va pas repartir uniquement avec maillot vert de meilleur sprinteur puisqu'il est aussi le vainqueur du classement de la montagne. En passant en tête de la dernière ascension, il a marqué 20 points, ce lui permet de devancer Mathieu Burgaudeau de trois points.

Remco Evenepoel meilleur sprinteur de Paris-Nice

Grâce aux points acquis lors du sprint intermédiaire et à l'arrivée, Remco Evenepoel a marqué suffisamment de points pour dépasser Mads Pedersen au classement du meilleur sprinteur. Le champion de Belgique va repartir de Nice avec le maillot vert.

Matteo Jorgenson, meilleur jeune de Paris-Nice

En remportant le classement général de Paris-Nice à l'âge de 24 ans, l'Américain est logiquement sacré meilleur jeune de la Course au soleil. Avec Remco Evenepoel, ils se partagent les quatre maillots distinctifs.

Matteo Jorgenson est le 3e vainqueur américain de Paris-Nice

Après Bobby Julich en 2005 et Floyd Landis en 2006, Matteo Jorgenson est le 3e Américain à gagner Paris-Nice.

Le Top 5 du classement général

1. Matteo Jorgenson (Team Visma | Lease a Bike) 2. Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-Quick Step) à 30" 3. Brandon McNulty (UAE Team Emirates) à 1'47" 4. Mattias Skjelmose (Lidl-Trek) à 2'22" 5. Aleksandr Vlasov (BORA - hansgrohe) à 2'57"

Le Top 5 de cette étape

1. Remco Evenepoel 2. Matteo Jorgenson 3. Aleksandr Vlasov à 50" 4. Mattias Skjelmose à 1'39" 5. Brandon McNulty à 1'39"

Revivez le dernier kilomètre de l'étape

Remco evenepoel remporte la dernière étape de paris-nice.

Le champion de Belgique remporte la dernière étape de Paris-Nice. Il devance au sprint Matteo Jorgenson. L'Américain est le grand vainqueur de cette 82e édition de la Course au soleil. Distancé dans la dernière ascension de l'étape, Aleksandr Vlasov complète le podium de cette 8e et dernière étape.

photo de R. Evenepoel

Matteo Jorgenson, 3e Americain vainqueur de Paris-Nice

Après Floyd Landis et Bobby Julich, Matteo Jorgenson va devenir le 3e Americain à remporter Paris-Nice. Les deux coureurs sont bientôt arrivés à la fin de la partie descendante qui mène jusqu'à la ligne d'arrivée. L'Américain fait des grands sourires aux caméras, il sait qu'il va remporter le premier grand succès de sa carrière.

Jorgenson et Evenepoel collaborent

La collaboration entre les deux coureurs est excellente. Matteo Jorgenson ne se réfugie par dans la roue du Belge et prend sa part de responsabilité lorsque le Belge lui demande de rouler. Les deux coureurs vont très certainement se jouer la gagne au sprint. Le Belge ne semble pas être en capacité de décrocher Matteo Jorgenson. Depuis le début de la semaine, l'Américain est impérial. Hormis le temps perdu lors du contre-la-montre par équipes, il n'a jamais perdu de temps sur ses adversaires.

Remco Evenepoel va être meilleur grimpeur de Paris-Nice

En passant en tête au sommet de la dernière ascension de la journée, Remco Evenepoel a marqué 20 points au classement de la montagne. Il va finir meilleur grimpeur de ce 82e Paris-Nice. Avant le passage au sommet du col des Quatre-Chemins (3.8 km à 8.1%), il avait 17 points de retard sur Mathieu Burgaudeau et Christian Scaroni, maintenant il a trois points d'avance.

Remco Evenepoel, combatif du jour

Le champion de Belgique a été distingué par le jury du prix de la combativité. Rien de surprenant puisque c'est lui qui a attaqué à trois reprises dans la côte de Peille pour distancer définitivement Brandon McNulty et Mattias Skjelmose.

Un point sur la situation

Remco Evenepoel et Matteo Jorgenson ont 34" d'avance sur Aleksandr Vlasov et 2'14" d'avance sur le groupe maillot jaune.

Evenepoel n'attaque pas

Le Belge n'attaque pas alors qu'il doit reprendre plus de 30" à Matteo Jorgenson. L'Américain est bien parti pour remporter cette 82e édition de Paris-Nice.

Vlasov distancé

Le Russe ne peut rien faire, il est distancé à l'approche du sommet du col des Quatre-Chemins (3.8km à 8.1%).

  • Share full article

Advertisement

Supported by

Tour de France Route Steers Clear of Olympics, and Paris

The 2024 Summer Games have pushed the iconic bike race out of its traditional finish in Paris. The Tour will instead end in Nice, in the south of France.

Silhouetted bicycle racers on the Champs-Elysee in Paris during one of the final stages of the 2019 Tour de France

By Victor Mather

Everything makes way for the Olympics. Even an event as important to the host nation as the Tour de France.

Because the 2024 Summer Games will be taking over Paris starting on July 26, the men’s Tour de France — the world’s most famous cycling race — will relocate its traditional finish this year, ending not in Paris but in Nice on July 21. The women’s race, an eight-stage event that typically starts just after the end of the three-week men’s race, will be pushed back to Aug. 12, after the Olympics conclude on Aug. 11.

Race organizers announced the routes on Wednesday at the Palais des Congrès in Paris.

🤩 Here it is, the official route of the #TDF2024 ! 🤩 Voici le parcours officiel du #TDF2024 ! pic.twitter.com/3ORf31AS4T — Tour de France™ (@LeTour) October 25, 2023

Ending the race somewhere other than Paris is a major departure. After decades of finishing at the Parc des Princes Stadium near the Bois de Boulogne as well as the Bois de Vincennes, the Tour in 1975 began a tradition of concluding with several laps on the Champs-Élysées. The day often provides some of the race’s most iconic images: riders racing loops in a tight pack, crowds of spectators jamming the streets, the famous Arc de Triomphe as a backdrop.

When the Olympics comes to town, though, they fill a city’s hotels, restaurants, roads, stadiums and arenas, and dominate the attention of most sports fans and the security services. For those reasons, major sporting events, even in non-Olympic sports, are mostly kept away from host cities in the weeks surrounding the Games. In 1996, for example, the Atlanta Braves baseball team embarked on a 17-game, 20-day road trip while the Summer Olympics went on in their home city.

The Tour plans a different route every year, and it had previously announced some of this year’s featured changes, including the finish in Nice and a start in Italy. In between, the route this year will include the usual collection of flat roads, high mountain climbs and stages that blend both of those challenges — and a few new ones.

It is not uncommon for the Tour to begin in another country; it has done so six times in the last 10 years. Next year, the men’s Tour will start in Italy for the first time since its inception in 1903. The opening stage will travel east from Florence to Rimini on June 29, with Stages 2 and 3 in Italy as well before the race enters France.

There, riders will begin climbing in the Alps almost immediately with Stage 4, which features the grueling ascent of the Col du Galibier.

In Stage 9, near Troyes, riders who normally race on paved roads will face an unusual challenge: 14 sections — totaling just under 20 miles — of racing over white gravel roads in the countryside.

The Tour will reach the Pyrenees in the southwest of France on Stage 14, a day that includes a climb of the Col du Tourmalet, and eventually return to several extremely difficult days in the Alps.

Notable is Stage 19 in which riders, back near the Italian border, will climb three tough mountains, including the Col de la Bonette-Restefond, which at 9,193 feet is the highest point of the 2024 Tour and the highest paved through road in Europe. The peloton then will finish with a trip up to the ski resort Isola 2000.

The 21st and final stage will be the hilly time trial from Monaco to Nice. It will be the first time since 1989 that the Tour will close with a time trial. That year, on a dramatic final day, the American Greg LeMond overcame a 50-second deficit to Laurent Fignon and won the race’s overall title by eight seconds, the closest margin in history.

The women’s race will begin in the Netherlands, home of the defending champion, Demi Vollering, and then travel to Belgium before entering France.

From there, the race’s final three stages will travel south down the eastern side of France before finishing on the eighth and final stage with a potentially spectacular, and decisive, climb up the 21 switchbacks of L’Alpe d’Huez.

Some of the top women will face the Tour, among the biggest events on the women’s cycling calendar, only after competing for their countries in the Paris Games. Many of the men’s riders, meanwhile, will go straight from the Tour to the Olympics, though in both cases success in one of the events does not preclude success in the other: At the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, Tadej Pogacar of Slovenia followed a Tour de France win with a bronze medal in the Olympic road race.

Jonas Vingegaard of Denmark has won the men’s Tour de France the past two years.

The 2024 Tour will be broadcast on NBC channels and streamed on Peacock for viewers in the United States.

Victor Mather covers sports as well as breaking news for The Times. More about Victor Mather

2023 Tour de France route

From the Basque Country to Paris and all the stages in between

Tour de France 2023 map

The 2023 Tour de France got underway on July 1st in Bilbao, Spain with another demanding route that includes only a single 22km hilly time trial in the Alps and mountain stages in all five of France’s mountain ranges. From the Grand Départ in the Basque Country to the finish in Paris, Cyclingnews has all the route details.

The very limited amount of time trialling and preponderance of mountains no doubt suits French riders  Thibaut Pinot , David Gaudu and Romain Bardet. As a result, Remco Evenepoel, Primoz Roglič and Geraint Thomas targeted the Giro d’Italia, which had three times the amount of time trialling and fewer mountains.

Official information from race organiser ASO claimed the 3,404km route includes eight flat stages for the sprinters, four hilly stages suited to breakaways and eight mountain stages. Four of these include summit finishes: in the Pyrenees at Cauterets-Cambasque, on the legendary Puy de Dôme volcano in the Massif Central, on the Grand Colombier in the Jura and at Saint-Gervais Mont-Blanc in the Alps.

Tour de France 2023 route revealed Tour de France stage-by-stage previews 2023 Tour de France to start in the Basque Country 2023 Tour de France set to return to Puy de Dome mountain finish

The other mountain stages are also extremely difficult, even if some are short and extra intense.

Stage 14 to Morzine includes 4,200m of climbing, alongside the mighty Col de Joux Plane and its testing descent to the finish. Stage 15 ends with the 11% ‘wall’ of Côte des Amerands and then the 7km 7.7% climb up to Saint-Gervais in view of Mont-Blanc.       

Stage 17 to Courchevel is arguably the queen stage, climbing the 2,304m-high Col de la Loze and then descends to finish on the altiport runway. Stage 20 is a final brutal multi-mountain stage in the Vosges between Belfort and Le Markstein ski resort.

The only time trial is on stage 16 in the Arve Valley near Sallanches after the second rest day, but the 22km route between Passy and Combloux will test riders' bike handling skills and climbing as much as their time trialling. The stage includes the Côte de Domancy, where Bernard Hinault forged his 1980 Worlds victory, and which also featured as part of the final week time trial in the 2016 Tour.

2022 Tour de France winner Jonas Vingegaard was arguably the best climber of the last two editions of the Tour and he appears to have plenty of opportunities to go on the attack on the steep ascents in 2023.

Two-time winner  Tadej Pogačar  will no doubt relish the route on offer for next July’s challenge against Vingegaard, Jumbo-Visma, Ineos Grenadiers and anyone else.

For an in-depth analysis of this year's major contenders, check our regularly updated guide to the favourites of the 2023 Tour de France .

For a detailed description of each stage, click on the link in the table below.

Stage 1: Bilbao-Bilbao, 182 km - Hilly

Stage 2: vitoria-gasteiz to san sebastián, 208.9km - hilly, stage 3: amorebieta-etxano to bayonne, 193.5km - flat, stage 4: dax to nogaro, 181.8km - flat, stage 5: pau to laruns, 162.7km - mountain, stage 6: tarbes to cauterets-cambasque, 144.9km - mountain, stage 7: mont-de-marsan to bordeaux, 169.9km - flat, stage 8: libourne to limoges, 200.7km - hilly, stage 9: saint-léonard- de-noblat to puy de dôme, 182.4km - mountain, stage 10: vulcania to issoire, 167.2km - hilly, stage 11: clermont-ferrand to moulins, 179.8km - flat, stage 12: roanne to belleville-en-beaujolais, 168.8km - hilly, stage 13: châtillon-sur-chalaronne to grand colombier, 137.8km - mountain, stage 14: annemasse to morzine les portes du soleil, 151.8km - mountain, stage 15: les gets les portes du soleil to saint-gervais mont blanc, 179km - mountain, stage 16: passy to combloux, 22.4km - itt, stage 17: saint-gervais mont blanc à courchevel, 184.9km - mountain, stage 18: moûtiers to bourg-en-bresse, 184.9km - hilly, stage 19: moirans-en-montagne to poligny, 172.8km - flat, stage 20: belfort to le markstein fellering, 133.5km - mountain, stage 21: saint-quentin-en-yvelines to paris champs-élysées, 115.1km - flat.

tour de france route nice

Thank you for reading 5 articles in the past 30 days*

Join now for unlimited access

Enjoy your first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

*Read any 5 articles for free in each 30-day period, this automatically resets

After your trial you will be billed £4.99 $7.99 €5.99 per month, cancel anytime. Or sign up for one year for just £49 $79 €59

tour de france route nice

Try your first month for just £1 / $1 / €1

Get The Leadout Newsletter

The latest race content, interviews, features, reviews and expert buying guides, direct to your inbox!

Laura Weislo

Laura Weislo has been with Cyclingnews since 2006 after making a switch from a career in science. As Managing Editor, she coordinates coverage for North American events and global news. As former elite-level road racer who dabbled in cyclo-cross and track, Laura has a passion for all three disciplines. When not working she likes to go camping and explore lesser traveled roads, paths and gravel tracks. Laura's specialises in covering doping, anti-doping, UCI governance and performing data analysis.

Vuelta Femenina 2024 route to tackle Pyrenees and finish in Sierras of Madrid

Paris-Roubaix 2024 route to have more cobbles than any recent edition

Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale unveil galaxy-inspired kit redesign

Most popular.

By Daniel Ostanek February 21, 2024

By Laura Weislo February 15, 2024

By Laura Weislo February 12, 2024

By Cyclingnews February 05, 2024

By Stephen Farrand February 01, 2024

By Cyclingnews February 01, 2024

By Daniel Ostanek January 23, 2024

By Laura Weislo January 22, 2024

Latest on Cyclingnews

Tour de france 2024 - the gc favourites form guide, wilco kelderman fractures collarbone in crash on final stage of paris-nice, ef education-cannondale sweep podium at four-day trofeo ponente in rosa.

IMAGES

  1. On connaît le tracé des deux premières étapes du Tour de France 2020

    tour de france route nice

  2. On connaît le tracé des deux premières étapes du Tour de France 2020

    tour de france route nice

  3. Tour de France 2020 route: Stage-by-stage guide

    tour de france route nice

  4. Tour de France route and stages

    tour de france route nice

  5. Tour de France 2020 Stage 2

    tour de france route nice

  6. Tour de France 2020 Route stage 1: Nice

    tour de france route nice

COMMENTS

  1. Official route of Tour de France 2024

    The route of the Tour de France, stages, cities, dates. Club 2024 route 2024 Teams 2023 Edition Rankings Stage winners All the videos. Grands départs Tour Culture ... Nice > Col de la Couillole: 133 km: Stage 20 21: Individual time-trial: Sun 07/21/2024: Monaco > Nice: 34 km: Stage 21 ...

  2. Tour De France 2024

    Tour de France organisers unveiled, in the presence of Nice mayor Christian Estrosi and Prince Albert II of Monaco, the details of the last two stages of the 2024 edition. A mountainous course from Nice to Col de la Couillole has been designed for the 20th stage scheduled on Saturday, July 20th, while the 21st stage will be contested in a 35-km ...

  3. Tour de France 2024 Route stage 20: Nice

    Saturday 20 July - Stage 20 of the Tour de France is merely 132 kilometres long, but still, the riders are to conquer four mountain tops. The finish is situated at the Col de la Couillole, 15.7 kilometres long and averaging 7.1%. The penultimate stage of Le Tour has written Paris-Nice written all over it.

  4. Tour de France 2024 route

    Stage 17. After the mountainous 2023 Tour de France route that included just a single 22km time trial, race director Christian Prudhomme unveiled a more balanced but intriguing route for 2024 at ...

  5. Tour de France 2024 Route stage 21: Monaco

    Sunday 21 July - The 2024 Tour de France serves an ITT on the last day of action. The 35.2 kilometres route between Monaco and Nice features two climbs - 8.1 kilometres at 5.6% and 1.6 kilometres at 8.1% - before riders plunge down towards the Côte d'Azur. It's almost 20 kilometres along the coast to get from Monaco to Nice, but luckily the ...

  6. Paris-Nice 2024 route

    Profile of Stage 2 of 2024 Paris-Nice (Image credit: ASO). Stage 2 then continues with another of the traditional Paris-Nice early challenges, with its flat, exposed run from Thoiry to Montargis.

  7. Tour de France 2024 route map and stages from Florence to Nice

    Tour de France 2024 route revealed as race finishes outside Paris for first time in 120-year history. ... Route map of the 2024 Tour de France, from Florence to Nice.

  8. Tour de France 2024 : dream finale on the french riviera

    The same two will perhaps face each other in 2024, possibly in the company of Danish, Belgian, Spanish or even French rivals. In this final 35.2-km effort, they will have to make the best of climbs familiar to the Race to the Sun regulars. La Turbie and Col d'Eze feature on the route that will lead them swiftly to Nice and Place Masséna.

  9. Tour de France 2024 to end with hilly 35km time trial to Nice

    Tour de France 2024 route profile Nice time trial (Image credit: ASO) The Turini and Colmiane have also featured in the latter stages of Paris-Nice in recent years, while the Col de la Couillole ...

  10. Tour de France 2024: Route and stages

    Tour de France 2024 Route stage 21: Monaco - Nice Sunday 21 July - The 2024 Tour de France serves an ITT on the last day of action. The 35.2 kilometres route between Monaco and Nice features two climbs - 8.1 kilometres at 5.6% and 1.6 kilometres at 8.1% - before riders plunge down towards the Côte d'Azur.

  11. Summit finish and final day time-trial for 2024 Tour de France finale

    A challenging final two stages, including a summit finish and a final day time trial will cap the 2024 Tour de France in Nice, it was unveiled this afternoon. Due to a clash with the 2024 Paris ...

  12. Tour de France: 2024 Florence-Nice route announced

    The new route is set to include 3,492 km of road, two Alpine crossings, a time trial finish from Monaco, and the highest starting altitude of any Tour de France. Sunday, March 10, 2024 11:46 pm ...

  13. Official: Tour de France reveals 2024's brutal finale in Nice

    Paris-Nice has just concluded but taking the momentum from the spectacle in Nice, the Tour de France organizers have revealed how stages 20 and 21 of the 2024 Tour de France will look like, and there is a serious amount of climbing. The start will be in Florence on this year, and it's finale will be in Nice, as Paris hosts the Olympic Games ...

  14. How to watch Paris-Nice 2024: Schedule and stages for cycling race

    The Paris-Nice cycling stage races airs live on Peacock. The Paris-Nice cycling stage races airs live on Peacock. ... the reigning Giro d'Italia champion and the 2020 Tour de France runner-up. Watch for him to be a factor in the Grand Tours later this year. ... who owns a Grand Tour title (2022 Vuelta), plus world titles in the time trial ...

  15. A final time trial in Nice

    A final time trial in Nice. After 110 editions concluded at the Parc des Princes, the Cipale velodrome in the Bois de Vincennes or on the Avenue des Champs-Elysées, the Tour de France will finish far from Paris for the first time in 2024, with stage 21 in Nice on 21 July. For this exceptional final stage along the Mediterranean coast, a time ...

  16. Preview: Route and Stages of the Tour de France 2024

    The Tour de France 2024 will end in Nice at the Côte d'Azur. Seven mountain stages with five summit finishes, two time trials, one undulating gravel stage, eight flat stages, and three hilly sections - that's the Tour de France 2024 in numerical terms. The 111th edition of the most famous cycling race starts on June 29th in Florence and ...

  17. Cyclisme à Nice. Après Paris-Nice, le Tour de France est ...

    Le Tour de France se terminera à Nice et non à Paris, exceptionnellement, en 2024. Trois étapes sont tracées autour de la capitale azuréenne, du 19 au 21 juillet. On vous dit tout.

  18. 2024 Tour de France summit finish at Isola 2000 confirmed by Mayor of Nice

    First Tour finish for Alpine ski station since 1993. Another part of the 2024 Tour de France route has fallen into place after the Mayor of Nice confirmed that stage 19 will finish at the Isola ...

  19. Nice finish to tough Tour de France 2024 route as race misses Paris for

    The 2024 men's Tour starts earlier than usual, on 29 June, to allow a week between the end of the race in Nice, for the first time in history outside the capital, and the Olympic Games opening ...

  20. Tour de France 2024 route revealed

    The 2024 Tour de France will cover a total distance of 3,405.6km, with the focus on climbing underlined by the total of 52,000 metres of elevation gain. That's slightly down on the 2023 total but still over 10,000m more than the recently-revealed Giro d'Italia 2024 route. The 2024 Tour starts with three stages in Italy and crosses into France ...

  21. Tour de France 2024 route revealed: No Paris finish for first time as

    The 2024 Tour de France route has been revealed, with the Grand Depart set to take place in Florence on June 29 and ending in Nice on July 21.

  22. Stage 21

    TOUR DE FRANCE 2023 - VIDEO GAMES (PC, XBOX ONE, PS4 & PS5) ... Nice > Col de la Couillole Length 133 km Type Mountain ... On the route of the stage. infos. Find the best route. infos. Come on your bike. infos. Come by car-sharing. Follow the Tour. broadcasters.

  23. CARTE. Paris-Nice 2024 : horaires et parcours de la 8e et dernière

    Un final en apothéose. L'ultime étape du Paris-Nice 2024, dimanche 10 mars, est une boucle de 109,5 km avec plusieurs cols au programme.Au cours de ce parcours dont Nice en est le départ et l ...

  24. Résultat et résumé : Paris-Nice 2024, 8ème étape

    Revivez la course et les moments clés de la 8ème étape du Paris-Nice 2024 reliant Nice à Nice. Résultat et résumé : Paris-Nice, 8ème étape, 109.5km, Nice - Nice, 10 mars 2024 - L'Équipe

  25. First details of 2024 Tour de France route revealed

    The full route of the 2024 Tour de France and the Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift will be revealed on 25th October at the usual presentation event in Paris. The 2024 Tour de France will be held a ...

  26. Tour de France Route Steers Clear of Olympics, and Paris

    The 2024 Summer Games have pushed the iconic bike race out of its traditional finish in Paris. The Tour will instead end in Nice, in the south of France. The Tour de France had finished on the ...

  27. 2023 Tour de France route

    Stage 20. Stage 21. The 2023 Tour de France got underway on July 1st in Bilbao, Spain with another demanding route that includes only a single 22km hilly time trial in the Alps and mountain stages ...

  28. Remco Evenepoel : « Ce Paris-Nice est une très bonne ...

    La Une Le fil info Commentaires Partager Accueil Route Remco Evenepoel : « Ce Paris-Nice est une très bonne répétition pour le Tour de France » Remco Evenepoel a remporté la 8e et dernière étape de Paris-Nice, mais termine 2e au classement général de la Course au soleil, à 30 secondes de l'Américain Matteo Jorgenson.