Etoile de Bessèges – Tour du Gard

February's southern French stage race that opens the European season
WhenEarly February
CourseStage Race
SinceTBA
Also known asEtoile de Besseges
CategoryContinental
Why watch?

The Etoile de Bessèges opens the European stage-racing calendar in the Gard department, where early-season form meets varied terrain across five February days.

Overview

Etoile de Bessèges – Tour du Gard

The Etoile de Bessèges, also known as the Tour du Gard, is a five-day men's stage race held each February in southern France. It runs through the Gard department north of Montpellier, offering one of the first stage-race tests of the European season.

Also known as: Etoile de Besseges

Kévin Vauquelin and Mads Pedersen are among the recent winners who have used Bessèges as a springboard.

Race Notes
UpdatedMarch 5, 2026
MarketUnited States

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Why this race matters

This is where the European season begins in earnest. The race offers varied terrain across five days in the Gard, mixing punchy climbs, time trials, and sprint stages that reward different skillsets. It attracts a mix of French continental teams and WorldTour squads using it as an early-season proving ground, which creates unpredictable racing when form is still uneven and ambition runs ahead of condition.

Route DNA

The race typically includes a short opening time trial, several stages with punchy climbs in the garrigue hills north of Nîmes, and at least one sprint opportunity. The GC is usually decided by a combination of time-trial seconds and selective climbing stages rather than one dominant mountain test. Crosswinds can also split the race on exposed valley roads. The winner needs to handle short, steep efforts and limit losses against the clock, but pure climbers and pure sprinters rarely control the overall. Expect all-rounders who can gain time in multiple ways and for breakaways to succeed when the peloton is still finding its rhythm in February.

Race type

Five-day stage race in southern France opening the European season each February. The first stage race of the year for many riders.

Mixed terrain

Sprint stages in the Gard lowlands, punchy finishes in the garrigue hills, and a closing time trial create a complete early-season test.

Typical winner

A versatile all-rounder who can time trial and climb. The short format means every stage carries weight.

Iconic Moments

Most recent winner: Kevin Vauquelin

Memorable Editions

2023

Powless wins from the front

Neilson Powless used aggressive racing in the hills to build a lead, then defended it in the time trial.

2025

Vauquelin builds momentum

Kevin Vauquelin won the overall to continue his emergence as a French stage-race talent.

Iconic Victories

Tim Wellens

Won in 2021, showing the race rewards the same attacking, time-trial-strong profile he used to win the Renewi Tour.

Mads Pedersen

Won in 2024, using his all-round strength to control the short stages.

Kevin Vauquelin

Won in 2025, representing the next generation of French stage-race talent.

Signature Landmarks

The Gard department in southern France, between the Cevennes and the Mediterranean.

Stage type

Closing time trial

The final-stage time trial is the signature feature, often deciding the overall classification on the last day.

Terrain

Garrigue hills

The scrubby limestone hills of the Gard provide short, punchy climbs that separate contenders.