Tour de Suisse

Road Β· Stage Race
When Mid June
Course Stage Race
Since 1933
Format Stage Race
Category WorldTour
Why watch?

The Tour de Suisse offers a week of Alpine climbing and time trialing that doubles as the final proving ground before the Tour de France.

Race guide

Tour de Suisse

The Tour de Suisse is a men's WorldTour stage race held each June across Switzerland. Run over eight days, it typically includes multiple mountain stages, a time trial, and occasional valley sprints, making it one of the most complete tests of stage racing before the Tour de France.

Past winners include Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, Miguel Indurain, and Jan Ullrich, a list that underscores the race's role as a Tour de France rehearsal.

Why this race matters

This is where July form gets its final calibration. The race attracts Tour de France contenders looking for high-altitude race days, climbers chasing stage wins in the Alps, and time trialists testing their condition against the clock. The Swiss terrain delivers variety without filler: serious climbing, technical descents, and stages that reward both power and positioning. It is also one of the last chances to see how the summer's biggest names are actually riding before they disappear into Grand Tour media lockdown.

How this race is usually won

The race is usually decided in the mountains and against the clock. Expect at least two or three summit finishes or high-altitude stages where climbers can gain meaningful time, plus one individual time trial that separates the pure climbers from the complete stage racers. The opening days often include rolling or flat stages that favor sprinters or breakaway specialists, but the GC battle begins in earnest once the route reaches the high Alps. Descending skill matters here: Swiss roads are narrow, technical, and unforgiving, and time gaps can open as much on the way down as on the way up. The race rewards riders who can recover overnight and sustain form across a full week, making it a reliable indicator of Tour readiness.