Tour de Romandie

Road · Stage Race
When Late April
Course Stage Race
Since 1947
Format Stage Race
Category WorldTour
Why watch?

Tour de Romandie is the last serious WorldTour stage race before the Grand Tours begin, run through the Alps and lake country of French-speaking Switzerland.

Race guide

Tour de Romandie

Tour de Romandie is a WorldTour stage race held each spring in the French-speaking cantons of Switzerland. Run over five or six days in late April and early May, it typically includes a prologue or short time trial, several mountain stages, and a concluding individual time trial.

The race has been won by nearly every significant stage racer of the modern era, from Merckx and Hinault through Contador and Thomas.

Why this race matters

Romandie sits in the calendar's most revealing window. It arrives late enough that Grand Tour contenders are sharpening form, but early enough that they're still testing limits rather than protecting them. The race moves through terrain that matters: Alpine climbs steep enough to create separation, time trials long enough to expose weakness, and transition stages where crosswinds off Lac Léman can fracture the field. It's a race that rewards stage-race completeness without demanding three-week durability.

How this race is usually won

The race is usually decided across three pressure points: the prologue or opening time trial, which establishes early gaps and often determines who controls the race; the queen stage, typically run over two or three categorized climbs in the Valais or Vaud Alps; and the final individual time trial, which has overturned GC positions as late as the last afternoon. Stages around Lake Geneva can splinter in wind, and the short overall length means that every minute lost is difficult to recover. Climbers who can time trial hold the advantage, but pure climbers can survive if they gain enough in the mountains. The race rewards tactical patience more than single-day aggression, and breakaways rarely survive on the hardest stages.