In professional road cycling, three races stand above all others, shaping both the riders' season and the imagination of fans. They are the Grand Tours: the Tour de France, the Giro d'Italia and the Vuelta a España. They are the only three-week stage races in the world, the longest, the most demanding and the most prestigious. Winning one of them transforms a career; winning all three writes a rider into legend. Here is a complete guide to the 3 Grand Tours of cycling: their identity, their records, the full winners list and the favourites for the 2026 season.
Contents
- What is a Grand Tour in cycling?
- The Tour de France
- The Giro d'Italia
- The Vuelta a España
- The 3 Grand Tours compared
- Records by Grand Tour
- Most Grand Tour wins of all time
- Riders who have won all 3 Grand Tours
- Grand Tour winners since the beginning
- 2026 outlook and favourites
- Frequently asked questions
- Conclusion
The 3 Grand Tours of professional cycling
Background
The Grand Tours are the three major stage races on the world calendar. Each is contested over roughly three weeks and around twenty stages, across flat roads, high mountains and time trials. Winning the general classification of a Grand Tour is the pinnacle of a season, on a par with a world championship title. Together, the Tour de France, the Giro and the Vuelta drive the heart of the cycling season, from May to September, and reveal the best riders of every generation.
What is a Grand Tour in cycling?
A Grand Tour is a three-week stage race holding the highest level of classification from the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI). There are only three:
- The Tour de France (July)
- The Giro d'Italia (May)
- The Vuelta a España (August–September)
All three share a common structure: a maximum of 21 stages, two rest days, a general classification on time marked by a distinctive jersey, plus secondary classifications (points/sprint, king of the mountains, best young rider, teams). They differ in age, geography, atmosphere and the prestige of their roll of honour.
1. The Tour de France
Nicknamed La Grande Boucle, the Tour de France is the most famous and most watched of the Grand Tours. Created in 1903 by the newspaper L'Auto, it is the most followed cycling event on the planet and one of the biggest annual sporting occasions in the world.
- First edition: 1903
- Country: France
- Period: July
- Distance: around 3,500 km
- Leader's jersey: yellow jersey (maillot jaune)
- Finish: traditionally in Paris, on the Champs-Élysées
The Tour de France crowns the most complete rider: able to shine in the high mountains (Alps, Pyrenees), to resist in the time trial and to manage three weeks of attrition. It is the most coveted Grand Tour, and the yellow jersey remains the ultimate symbol of road cycling.
2. The Giro d'Italia
The Giro d'Italia, or Corsa Rosa, is the Italian Grand Tour. Created in 1909 by the Gazzetta dello Sport (whose pink pages gave the leader's jersey its colour), it opens the Grand Tour cycle in May.
- First edition: 1909
- Country: Italy
- Period: May
- Distance: around 3,400 km
- Leader's jersey: maglia rosa (pink jersey)
- Key points: the Dolomites, the Italian Alps, legendary climbs such as the Stelvio, the Mortirolo and the Colle delle Finestre
Famous for its spectacular scenery, its unpredictable spring weather and its brutal mountain stages, the Giro is often considered the most physically demanding and the most unpredictable Grand Tour. It favours climbers and aggressive riders willing to take risks.
3. The Vuelta a España
The Vuelta a España, simply known as La Vuelta, is the Spanish Grand Tour and the youngest of the three. Created in 1935 and moved to late summer in 1995, it closes the Grand Tour season in August and September.
- First edition: 1935
- Country: Spain
- Period: August–September
- Leader's jersey: red jersey (la roja; gold until 2010)
- Key points: a very high number of summit finishes and steep walls such as the Angliru and the Lagos de Covadonga
The Vuelta has built a modern identity around its explosive climbs and dizzying gradients. Raced in the late-summer heat, it often serves as a springboard for young talents and a stage for redemption for riders who came up short at the Tour or the Giro.
| Grand Tour | Country | First edition | Period | Leader's jersey |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tour de France | France | 1903 | July | Yellow jersey |
| Giro d'Italia | Italy | 1909 | May | Maglia rosa (pink) |
| Vuelta a España | Spain | 1935 | August–September | Red jersey |
The 3 Grand Tours compared
While the three races share the same format, they each have a distinct personality:
- The Tour de France is the most prestigious and the deepest field: every leader targets the yellow jersey first.
- The Giro d'Italia is known for its difficulty, its extreme mountain stages and its unpredictable scenarios.
- The Vuelta a España stands out for its repeated summit finishes and very steep walls, ideal for explosive climbers.
Completing a career "Grand Slam" by winning all three is an extremely rare feat: only eight riders have managed it in the entire history of the sport.
| Grand Tour | Key qualities | Ideal rider profile |
|---|---|---|
| Tour de France | All-round ability, climbing, time trial, race management | Complete leader |
| Giro d'Italia | Mountain endurance, attacking instinct, resistance to cold | Aggressive climber |
| Vuelta a España | Explosiveness on steep climbs, punch, heat management | Puncheur-climber |
Records by Grand Tour
Each Grand Tour has its own record holders for general classification victories. At the Tour de France, four riders share the all-time record, while the Giro and the Vuelta have their own legends.
| Grand Tour | Record holder(s) | Number of wins |
|---|---|---|
| Tour de France | Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, Miguel Induráin | 5 |
| Giro d'Italia | Alfredo Binda, Fausto Coppi, Eddy Merckx | 5 |
| Vuelta a España | Roberto Heras, Primož Roglič | 4 |
Miguel Induráin remains the only rider to have won five Tours de France in a row (1991–1995). At the Vuelta, Roberto Heras and Primož Roglič share the record of four victories, ahead of Tony Rominger and Alberto Contador (three wins each).
Most Grand Tour wins of all time
Beyond the records for each race, a handful of champions have stacked up victories across all three Grand Tours. Eddy Merckx dominates this historical ranking, but the current generation, led by Tadej Pogačar and Jonas Vingegaard, is climbing fast.
| Rank | Rider | Total Grand Tours | Breakdown (Tour / Giro / Vuelta) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Eddy Merckx (BEL) | 11 | 5 / 5 / 1 |
| 2 | Bernard Hinault (FRA) | 10 | 5 / 3 / 2 |
| 3 | Jacques Anquetil (FRA) | 8 | 5 / 2 / 1 |
| 4 | Fausto Coppi (ITA) | 7 | 2 / 5 / 0 |
| 5 | Miguel Induráin (ESP) | 7 | 5 / 2 / 0 |
| 6 | Alberto Contador (ESP) | 7 | 2 / 2 / 3 |
| 7 | Chris Froome (GBR) | 7 | 4 / 1 / 2 |
| 8 | Felice Gimondi (ITA) | 5 | 1 / 3 / 1 |
| 9 | Tadej Pogačar (SLO) | 5 | 4 / 1 / 0 |
| 10 | Primož Roglič (SLO) | 5 | 0 / 1 / 4 |
Totals based on the official records after doping-related reallocations (Tour de France 1999–2005 with no winner, 2011 Vuelta awarded to Chris Froome, etc.). Active riders who may still climb the list: Tadej Pogačar, Jonas Vingegaard, Primož Roglič.
Riders who have won all 3 Grand Tours
Winning the Tour de France, the Giro and the Vuelta at least once each over a career is one of the rarest achievements in cycling. In 2026, Jonas Vingegaard became the eighth rider in history to complete this career "Grand Slam" by winning the Giro, after his 2022 and 2023 Tours de France and his 2025 Vuelta.
| Rider | Country | Set completed |
|---|---|---|
| Jacques Anquetil | France | 1963 |
| Felice Gimondi | Italy | 1968 |
| Eddy Merckx | Belgium | 1973 |
| Bernard Hinault | France | 1983 |
| Alberto Contador | Spain | 2008 |
| Vincenzo Nibali | Italy | 2014 |
| Chris Froome | Great Britain | 2018 |
| Jonas Vingegaard | Denmark | 2026 |
The same-year Grand Slam: a feat never achieved
While eight riders have won all three Grand Tours across their careers, no one has ever won the Tour de France, the Giro and the Vuelta in a single season. This same-year Grand Slam is considered virtually impossible: stringing together three three-week races at full intensity between May and September exceeds the known physiological limits of elite sport, and leaders almost always choose to target one or two events at most. The only seriously contested feat is the "Giro-Tour double" in the same year, itself extremely rare: achieved by the likes of Fausto Coppi, Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, Stephen Roche, Miguel Induráin and Marco Pantani, it had not been done for twenty-six years before Tadej Pogačar pulled it off again in 2024. The same-season triple remains cycling's last great fantasy.
Grand Tour winners since the beginning
The table below lists the general classification winners of the Tour de France, the Giro d'Italia and the Vuelta a España. The 20 most recent editions are shown by default; click the button beneath the table to expand the complete roll of honour, all the way back to the first Tour de France in 1903.
Key: "Vacant title" = Tour de France 1999–2005 (titles stripped from Lance Armstrong) · "Not held" = edition cancelled (World Wars, Spanish Civil War) · "n/a" = race not yet founded · "Upcoming" = 2026 edition not yet raced.
| Year | Tour de France | Giro d'Italia | Vuelta a España |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | Upcoming | Jonas Vingegaard | Upcoming |
| 2025 | Tadej Pogačar | Simon Yates | Jonas Vingegaard |
| 2024 | Tadej Pogačar | Tadej Pogačar | Primož Roglič |
| 2023 | Jonas Vingegaard | Primož Roglič | Sepp Kuss |
| 2022 | Jonas Vingegaard | Jai Hindley | Remco Evenepoel |
| 2021 | Tadej Pogačar | Egan Bernal | Primož Roglič |
| 2020 | Tadej Pogačar | Tao Geoghegan Hart | Primož Roglič |
| 2019 | Egan Bernal | Richard Carapaz | Primož Roglič |
| 2018 | Geraint Thomas | Chris Froome | Simon Yates |
| 2017 | Chris Froome | Tom Dumoulin | Chris Froome |
| 2016 | Chris Froome | Vincenzo Nibali | Nairo Quintana |
| 2015 | Chris Froome | Alberto Contador | Fabio Aru |
| 2014 | Vincenzo Nibali | Nairo Quintana | Alberto Contador |
| 2013 | Chris Froome | Vincenzo Nibali | Chris Horner |
| 2012 | Bradley Wiggins | Ryder Hesjedal | Alberto Contador |
| 2011 | Cadel Evans | Michele Scarponi | Chris Froome |
| 2010 | Andy Schleck | Ivan Basso | Vincenzo Nibali |
| 2009 | Alberto Contador | Denis Menchov | Alejandro Valverde |
| 2008 | Carlos Sastre | Alberto Contador | Alberto Contador |
| 2007 | Alberto Contador | Danilo Di Luca | Denis Menchov |
| 2006 | Óscar Pereiro | Ivan Basso | Alexander Vinokourov |
| 2005 | Vacant title | Paolo Savoldelli | Roberto Heras |
| 2004 | Vacant title | Damiano Cunego | Roberto Heras |
| 2003 | Vacant title | Gilberto Simoni | Roberto Heras |
| 2002 | Vacant title | Paolo Savoldelli | Aitor González |
| 2001 | Vacant title | Gilberto Simoni | Ángel Casero |
| 2000 | Vacant title | Stefano Garzelli | Roberto Heras |
| 1999 | Vacant title | Ivan Gotti | Jan Ullrich |
| 1998 | Marco Pantani | Marco Pantani | Abraham Olano |
| 1997 | Jan Ullrich | Ivan Gotti | Alex Zülle |
| 1996 | Bjarne Riis | Pavel Tonkov | Alex Zülle |
| 1995 | Miguel Induráin | Tony Rominger | Laurent Jalabert |
| 1994 | Miguel Induráin | Evgeni Berzin | Tony Rominger |
| 1993 | Miguel Induráin | Miguel Induráin | Tony Rominger |
| 1992 | Miguel Induráin | Miguel Induráin | Tony Rominger |
| 1991 | Miguel Induráin | Franco Chioccioli | Melcior Mauri |
| 1990 | Greg LeMond | Gianni Bugno | Marco Giovannetti |
| 1989 | Greg LeMond | Laurent Fignon | Pedro Delgado |
| 1988 | Pedro Delgado | Andrew Hampsten | Sean Kelly |
| 1987 | Stephen Roche | Stephen Roche | Luis Herrera |
| 1986 | Greg LeMond | Roberto Visentini | Álvaro Pino |
| 1985 | Bernard Hinault | Bernard Hinault | Pedro Delgado |
| 1984 | Laurent Fignon | Francesco Moser | Éric Caritoux |
| 1983 | Laurent Fignon | Giuseppe Saronni | Bernard Hinault |
| 1982 | Bernard Hinault | Bernard Hinault | Marino Lejarreta |
| 1981 | Bernard Hinault | Giovanni Battaglin | Giovanni Battaglin |
| 1980 | Joop Zoetemelk | Bernard Hinault | Faustino Rupérez |
| 1979 | Bernard Hinault | Giuseppe Saronni | Joop Zoetemelk |
| 1978 | Bernard Hinault | Johan De Muynck | Bernard Hinault |
| 1977 | Bernard Thévenet | Michel Pollentier | Freddy Maertens |
| 1976 | Lucien Van Impe | Felice Gimondi | José Pesarrodona |
| 1975 | Bernard Thévenet | Fausto Bertoglio | Agustín Tamames |
| 1974 | Eddy Merckx | Eddy Merckx | José Manuel Fuente |
| 1973 | Luis Ocaña | Eddy Merckx | Eddy Merckx |
| 1972 | Eddy Merckx | Eddy Merckx | José Manuel Fuente |
| 1971 | Eddy Merckx | Gösta Pettersson | Ferdinand Bracke |
| 1970 | Eddy Merckx | Eddy Merckx | Luis Ocaña |
| 1969 | Eddy Merckx | Felice Gimondi | Roger Pingeon |
| 1968 | Jan Janssen | Eddy Merckx | Felice Gimondi |
| 1967 | Roger Pingeon | Felice Gimondi | Jan Janssen |
| 1966 | Lucien Aimar | Gianni Motta | Francisco Gabica |
| 1965 | Felice Gimondi | Vittorio Adorni | Rolf Wolfshohl |
| 1964 | Jacques Anquetil | Jacques Anquetil | Raymond Poulidor |
| 1963 | Jacques Anquetil | Franco Balmamion | Jacques Anquetil |
| 1962 | Jacques Anquetil | Franco Balmamion | Rudi Altig |
| 1961 | Jacques Anquetil | Arnaldo Pambianco | Angelino Soler |
| 1960 | Gastone Nencini | Jacques Anquetil | Frans De Mulder |
| 1959 | Federico Bahamontes | Charly Gaul | Antonio Suárez |
| 1958 | Charly Gaul | Ercole Baldini | Jean Stablinski |
| 1957 | Jacques Anquetil | Gastone Nencini | Jesús Loroño |
| 1956 | Roger Walkowiak | Charly Gaul | Angelo Conterno |
| 1955 | Louison Bobet | Fiorenzo Magni | Jean Dotto |
| 1954 | Louison Bobet | Carlo Clerici | Not held |
| 1953 | Louison Bobet | Fausto Coppi | Not held |
| 1952 | Fausto Coppi | Fausto Coppi | Not held |
| 1951 | Hugo Koblet | Fiorenzo Magni | Not held |
| 1950 | Ferdinand Kübler | Hugo Koblet | Emilio Rodríguez |
| 1949 | Fausto Coppi | Fausto Coppi | Not held |
| 1948 | Gino Bartali | Fiorenzo Magni | Bernardo Ruiz |
| 1947 | Jean Robic | Fausto Coppi | Edward Van Dyck |
| 1946 | Not held | Gino Bartali | Dalmacio Langarica |
| 1945 | Not held | Not held | Delio Rodríguez |
| 1944 | Not held | Not held | Not held |
| 1943 | Not held | Not held | Not held |
| 1942 | Not held | Not held | Julián Berrendero |
| 1941 | Not held | Not held | Julián Berrendero |
| 1940 | Not held | Fausto Coppi | Not held |
| 1939 | Sylvère Maes | Giovanni Valetti | Not held |
| 1938 | Gino Bartali | Giovanni Valetti | Not held |
| 1937 | Roger Lapébie | Gino Bartali | Not held |
| 1936 | Sylvère Maes | Gino Bartali | Gustaaf Deloor |
| 1935 | Romain Maes | Vasco Bergamaschi | Gustaaf Deloor |
| 1934 | Antonin Magne | Learco Guerra | n/a |
| 1933 | Georges Speicher | Alfredo Binda | n/a |
| 1932 | André Leducq | Antonio Pesenti | n/a |
| 1931 | Antonin Magne | Francesco Camusso | n/a |
| 1930 | André Leducq | Luigi Marchisio | n/a |
| 1929 | Maurice De Waele | Alfredo Binda | n/a |
| 1928 | Nicolas Frantz | Alfredo Binda | n/a |
| 1927 | Nicolas Frantz | Alfredo Binda | n/a |
| 1926 | Lucien Buysse | Giovanni Brunero | n/a |
| 1925 | Ottavio Bottecchia | Alfredo Binda | n/a |
| 1924 | Ottavio Bottecchia | Giuseppe Enrici | n/a |
| 1923 | Henri Pélissier | Costante Girardengo | n/a |
| 1922 | Firmin Lambot | Giovanni Brunero | n/a |
| 1921 | Léon Scieur | Giovanni Brunero | n/a |
| 1920 | Philippe Thys | Gaetano Belloni | n/a |
| 1919 | Firmin Lambot | Costante Girardengo | n/a |
| 1918 | Not held | Not held | n/a |
| 1917 | Not held | Not held | n/a |
| 1916 | Not held | Not held | n/a |
| 1915 | Not held | Not held | n/a |
| 1914 | Philippe Thys | Alfonso Calzolari | n/a |
| 1913 | Philippe Thys | Carlo Oriani | n/a |
| 1912 | Odile Defraye | Team Atala (team classification) | n/a |
| 1911 | Gustave Garrigou | Carlo Galetti | n/a |
| 1910 | Octave Lapize | Carlo Galetti | n/a |
| 1909 | François Faber | Luigi Ganna | n/a |
| 1908 | Lucien Petit-Breton | n/a | n/a |
| 1907 | Lucien Petit-Breton | n/a | n/a |
| 1906 | René Pottier | n/a | n/a |
| 1905 | Louis Trousselier | n/a | n/a |
| 1904 | Henri Cornet | n/a | n/a |
| 1903 | Maurice Garin | n/a | n/a |
| ▲ Collapse table | |||
2026 outlook and Grand Tour favourites
The 2026 season has already delivered its first verdict. In May, Jonas Vingegaard won his first ever Giro d'Italia, beating Felix Gall and Jai Hindley in Rome. The win was historic: it made the Dane the eighth rider in history to have won all three Grand Tours, after his 2022 and 2023 Tours de France and his 2025 Vuelta.
The summer's headline event remains the Tour de France in July. Tadej Pogačar, the defending champion and already a four-time winner (2020, 2021, 2024, 2025), will chase a fifth title that would draw him level with Anquetil, Merckx, Hinault and Induráin at the top of the record books. Against him, Vingegaard, reinvigorated by his Giro triumph, will try to overturn the hierarchy, alongside Remco Evenepoel and the new wave of climbers such as Florian Lipowitz, Isaac del Toro and Paul Seixas.
Finally, the Vuelta a España will close the season in August and September. Often contested by riders seeking redemption or by rising young talents, it could suit Primož Roglič, record co-holder with Roberto Heras and a candidate for a record fifth win, or a newcomer taking advantage of any absence among the stars already satisfied by the Tour.
Last updated: 1 June 2026
Frequently asked questions about the Grand Tours
What are the 3 Grand Tours of cycling?
The three Grand Tours are the Tour de France (July), the Giro d'Italia (May) and the Vuelta a España (August–September). They are the only three-week stage races on the UCI calendar.
Which Grand Tour is the most prestigious?
The Tour de France is universally regarded as the most prestigious and most watched of the three, followed by the Giro d'Italia and then the Vuelta a España.
Who holds the record for most Tour de France wins?
Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault and Miguel Induráin share the record with five wins each. Induráin is the only rider to have won five Tours in a row.
How many riders have won all 3 Grand Tours?
Eight riders have won all three Grand Tours during their careers: Anquetil, Gimondi, Merckx, Hinault, Contador, Nibali, Froome and, since 2026, Jonas Vingegaard.
Has anyone ever completed the same-year Grand Slam of all 3 Grand Tours?
No. No rider has ever won the Tour de France, the Giro and the Vuelta in a single season: this same-year Grand Slam is considered virtually impossible physically. Only the Giro-Tour double in the same year has been done, most recently by Tadej Pogačar in 2024.
Which Grand Tour is the hardest?
The Giro d'Italia is often judged the toughest physically, due to its extreme mountain stages and unpredictable spring weather, but the Tour de France remains the deepest in terms of competition.
Conclusion
The 3 Grand Tours of professional cycling, namely the Tour de France, the Giro d'Italia and the Vuelta a España, form the backbone of the road season. Each tells a different story: the prestige and all-round demands of the Tour, the brutality and unpredictability of the Giro, and the explosiveness and modern flair of the Vuelta.
For a rider, winning a Grand Tour is the crowning moment of a career; winning all three opens the door to the very select circle of legends. For fans, these three three-week events are unique sporting sagas, full of suspense, suffering and heroics.
In short, to understand the Grand Tours is to understand the beating heart of world cycling.



















Share: