The race typically runs three or four stages, blending hilly routes with exposed flat sections where crosswinds can fracture the peloton. Climbs are rarely long enough to create decisive gaps on their own, so the GC is usually shaped by a combination of late attacks, echelon splits, and positioning into uphill finishes. Teams need to control the race before the final acceleration, not simply rely on the last climb. Flat stages can turn selective quickly when the mistral blows, and riders caught out of position early often struggle to recover time. The winner is usually a climber with the tactical awareness to survive the flats and the punch to finish hard when the road tilts up.
Mont Ventoux queen stage
The Beast of Provence regularly serves as the queen stage summit finish, with the race climbing to Chalet Reynard or higher on the mountain's slopes.
Early-season stage racing
Held in February, the race offers one of the first European stage-race tests of the year, attracting Grand Tour contenders testing early form.
Sprinter and climber mix
Flat Provencal stages reward sprinters, while the mountain stage separates GC contenders, creating a race of two distinct halves.