Giro d’Italia Women

Nine days across Italy each June
WhenLate May
CourseStage Race
Since1988
Also known asGiro Donne
Why watch?

The Giro d'Italia Women is the longest stage race on the women's calendar, where climbers, time trialists, and all-rounders face a week-plus test across Italian terrain.

Overview

Giro d’Italia Women

The Giro d'Italia Women is a multi-stage race held across Italy each late spring or early summer. First run in 1988, it has grown into the women's pedalboard's most sustained stage racing challenge, typically spanning nine or ten days with mountain, time trial, and transition stages that reward consistency and climbing strength.

Also known as: Giro Donne | Giro Rosa (2012-2020)

Elisa Longo Borghini, Annemiek van Vleuten, and Marianne Vos have each shaped the race's modern identity with multiple wins or memorable battles.

Race Notes
UpdatedMarch 5, 2026
MarketUnited States

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Why this race matters

This is the race where the women's peloton gets the closest thing to Grand Tour duration. The length matters: riders must survive crashes, recover between hard days, and manage form across more than a week of racing. The route typically builds toward high mountains in the final days, and the winner needs both climbing legs and the resilience to stay upright and healthy through the opening stages. Recent editions have featured compelling duels between pure climbers and stronger all-rounders, with time trials and summit finishes each playing a role.

Route DNA

The race is usually decided in the mountains, particularly in the final third when the route reaches the Dolomites or other alpine terrain. Expect at least one individual time trial, often mid-race, that can create or extend gaps before the climbing stages arrive. The opening days tend to favor sprinters or puncheurs, but they also serve as survival tests where crashes or splits can damage a contender's overall hopes before the mountains even begin. The longest climbs typically come in the last two or three stages, with summit finishes that reward pure climbing power over tactical patience. Because the race spans more than a week, form management and team depth matter more than in shorter stage races. Weather is less volatile than in the men's May Giro, but late spring in the mountains can still bring rain, cold, or wind that turns a planned mountain stage into an endurance trial.

Mountain finales

The Giro Donne regularly features summit finishes in the Italian Alps and Dolomites, with mountain stages that separate the GC contenders decisively.

Mixed-terrain week

The route balances flat sprint stages, medium mountain days, and at least one high-altitude test across a week of racing that rewards complete stage racers.

Italian heartland

The race crosses iconic Italian cycling terrain, connecting northern Italian cities with mountain passes that carry decades of Giro tradition.

Time trial discipline

Many editions include an individual or team time trial, adding a dimension beyond climbing that can reshape the overall classification.

Iconic Moments

Most recent winner: Elisa Longo Borghini

Memorable Editions

2020

Van der Breggen completes the double

Anna van der Breggen won both the Giro Donne and the Olympic road race in the same season, cementing her status as the most complete rider in women cycling.

2022

Van Vleuten at the summit of her career

Annemiek van Vleuten won her third Giro Donne title at age 39, combining mountain dominance with time trial strength in what was already a farewell season.

2024

Longo Borghini brings it home

Elisa Longo Borghini became the first Italian winner in 16 years, reclaiming the race for the host nation and sparking a new chapter in the Giro Donne story.

Iconic Victories

Annemiek van Vleuten

Four victories (2018, 2019, 2022, 2023) made Van Vleuten the modern master of the Giro Donne. Her mountain superiority and time trial power defined how the race was won.

Anna van der Breggen

Four victories spread across her career. Van der Breggen combined climbing talent with tactical intelligence to control the race from the front.

Fabiana Luperini

Five wins in the 1990s and 2000s made Luperini the all-time leader. Her dominance during the race early professional era established it as a serious stage-race test.

Elisa Longo Borghini

Back-to-back victories in 2024 and 2025 as the first Italian winner since Luperini. Longo Borghini restored Italian pride to the Giro Donne.

Signature Landmarks

The Giro d Italia Women crosses northern Italy on roads that carry the same weight and tradition as the men race, with mountain stages in the Dolomites and Alps serving as the ultimate test.

Mountain stages

Dolomite summit finishes

The race regularly visits the Italian Dolomites for decisive summit finishes that echo the climbing tradition of the men Giro d Italia.

Route identity

Italian lakeside stages

Stages along Lake Garda, Lake Como, or other northern Italian lakes provide transitional days where the scenery is as dramatic as the racing.

Stage type

Sprint finishes

Flat stages through the Po Valley or along the coast give sprinters their opportunities and break up the mountain-heavy second half of the race.

GC discipline

Time trial tests

When included, the individual time trial can reshape the GC. Winners who combine climbing and time trialing have historically controlled the race most convincingly.