List of Tour de France general classification winners

The Tour de France is an annual road bicycle race held over 23 days in July. Established in 1903 by newspaper L'Auto, the Tour is the best-known and most prestigious of cycling's three "Grand Tours"; the others are the Giro d'Italia and the Vuelta a España.[1] The race usually covers approximately 3,500 kilometres (2,200 mi), passing through France and neighbouring countries such as Belgium.[2] The race is broken into day-long stages. Individual finishing times for each stage are totalled to determine the overall winner at the end of the race. The course changes every year, but has always finished in Paris; since 1975, it has finished along the Champs-Élysées.[3]

General classification (GC)
at the Tour de France
A man with dark hair stood up riding a bicycle wearing a yellow jersey
Miguel Indurain, winner of five consecutive GC Tour titles from 1991 to 1995.
LocationSince 1975, finished on the Champs-Élysées in Paris
DatesJuly annually

The rider with the lowest aggregate time at the end of each day wears the yellow jersey, representing the leader of the general classification. There are other jerseys as well: the green jersey, worn by the leader of the points classification; the polka dot jersey, worn by the leader of the mountains classification; and the white jersey, worn by the leader of the young rider classification.[4]

Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, and Miguel Indurain, have won the most Tours with five each. Indurain is the only man to win five consecutive Tours. Henri Cornet is the youngest winner; he won in 1904, just short of his 20th birthday. Firmin Lambot is the oldest winner, he was 36 years, 4 months old when he won in 1922.[5] French cyclists have won the most Tours; 21 cyclists have won 36 Tours among them. Belgian cyclists are second with 18 victories, and Spanish riders are third with 12 wins.[6] The most recent winner is Slovenian rider Tadej Pogačar, who won the 2024 Tour.[7]

After it emerged that Lance Armstrong had used performance-enhancing drugs, in October 2012, the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) stripped Armstrong of the seven consecutive Tour general classification titles between 1999 and 2005.[8][9]

History

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The Tour de France was established in 1903 by the newspaper L'Auto, in an attempt to increase its sales. The first race was won by Frenchman Maurice Garin. He won again the next year, but was disqualified after allegations that he had been transported by car or rail arose. Henri Cornet became the winner after the dispute was settled; he is the youngest to win the Tour. Following the scandals in 1904, the scoring system was changed from being time-based to a point-based system, in which the cyclist who has the fewest points at the end of the race is victorious. This system lasted until 1912, when the time-based system was re-introduced. French cyclists were successful in the early Tours; the first non-Frenchman to win the Tour was François Faber of Luxembourg, who won in 1909.[10]

Belgian riders were more successful before and after the First World War (which suspended the Tour from 1915 to 1918). In the 1920s, trade teams dominated the Tour; cyclists such as Nicolas Frantz won the Tour with the Alcyon team. However, when Alcyon cyclist Maurice De Waele won the Tour in 1929 while ill, the organisers decided to introduce national teams the following year, to stop team tactics from undermining the race. Because of the Second World War, the Tour de France was suspended from 1940 to 1946.[11]

 
The yellow jersey (French: maillot jaune) of 1963, worn by general classification leader Gilbert Desmet of Wiel's–Groene Leeuw

After the Second World War, no one dominated the Tour until Louison Bobet, who won three consecutive Tours from 1953 to 1955—he was the first person to achieve this feat.[12] This was bettered by the French cyclist Jacques Anquetil, who won four successive Tours from 1961 to 1964. Anquetil, who also won in 1957, became the first to win five Tours.[13] Anquetil's five victories were matched when Belgian cyclist Eddy Merckx won four successive Tours from 1969 to 1972 and the 1974 Tour. Merckx is the only person to have won the general, points and king of the mountains classifications in the same Tour. He achieved this in 1969, when he won his first Tour.[14]

Merckx looked to be heading for a record sixth Tour victory in 1975, but Bernard Thévenet beat him, becoming the first French winner in seven years. Thévenet won again in 1977; however, he was eclipsed in following years by fellow Frenchman Bernard Hinault, who won consecutive Tours in 1978 and 1979. Hinault won the Tour at his first attempt in 1978; becoming one of 11 cyclists (including Anquetil, Merckx, Hugo Koblet and Fausto Coppi) managed to do so.[15] In 1980, Hinault was going for a third consecutive win, but had to pull out because of tendinitis, and the Tour was won by Joop Zoetemelk.[16] Hinault returned in 1981 and won that race as well as the one after that. Hinault sat out the Tour in 1983, and another Frenchman—Laurent Fignon—achieved victory. Fignon won again the following year, beating Hinault; Hinault recovered in 1985 to win his fifth Tour.

American Greg LeMond became the first non-European to win the Tour in 1986. LeMond missed out in 1987 and 1988, but returned in 1989 to win the Tour by finishing eight seconds ahead of Laurent Fignon, the smallest winning margin in the Tour's history. LeMond also won in 1990.[17] In 1991, Spaniard Miguel Indurain won his first Tour. Indurain came to dominate the Tour, winning four more Tours consecutively—making him the first person to win five consecutive Tours.[18] He tried to win a record-high sixth Tour in 1996, but was beaten by Bjarne Riis, who later admitted to using Erythropoietin.[19] Jan Ullrich and Marco Pantani won in 1997 and 1998, respectively; however, Pantani's victory was overshadowed by doping scandals.[20]

The 1999 Tour saw the first victory of Lance Armstrong,[21] which was followed by six more, for a total of seven consecutive victories.[22] He was later stripped of his titles in October 2012, when it emerged he had used performance-enhancing drugs throughout much of his career, including the Tour de France victories.[9] Floyd Landis won the Tour in 2006, but was later stripped of his title, after a drug-control test demonstrated the presence of a skewed testosterone/epitestosterone ratio.[23] Óscar Pereiro was subsequently awarded the victory. Alberto Contador won the 2007 Tour with the Discovery Channel. The 2007 Tour was also marred by doping scandals, thus Contador was unable to defend his title in 2008, as his Astana team was banned for its part in the controversy. Fellow Spaniard Carlos Sastre of Team CSC won.[24] Contador and Astana returned in 2009 to regain the title. He won the Tour again in 2010, but was later stripped of his title after he was found guilty of doping. Runner-up Andy Schleck was awarded the victory.

Cadel Evans became the first Australian to win the Tour in 2011.[25] The following year, Bradley Wiggins became the first British cyclist to win the Tour.[26] Chris Froome became the second successive British winner in 2013, which was the 100th edition of the race.[27] He could not defend his title the following year, as he crashed out in stage 5, with Vincenzo Nibali winning his first Tour.[28] Froome regained the title in 2015 and then successfully defended it in 2016, the first rider in over 20 years to do so.[29] Froome won the Tour for a third consecutive year in 2017.[30] He was unsuccessful in his attempts to win a fourth Tour in succession in 2018 edition, Froome's teammate, Geraint Thomas, was the winner instead.[31] Thomas was unable to win for a second year in succession in 2019. He finished second behind his teammate Egan Bernal, who became the first Colombian cyclist to win the Tour.[32]

The 2020 Tour was postponed to commence on 29 August, following the French government's extension of a ban on mass gatherings after the worldwide COVID-19 outbreak.[33] This was the first time since the end of World War II that the Tour de France was not held in the month of July.[34] It was won by Tadej Pogačar, who became the first Slovenian rider to win the race as well as one of the youngest winners in Tour history. He repeated as champion in the 2021 edition. The following year, Jonas Vingegaard became the first Danish rider since 1996 to win the race. Vingegaard won again the following year; he won the 2023 edition by 7 minutes and 29 seconds from Pogačar.[35] Pogačar regained the general classification in 2024 and became the first person to win the Giro and Tour in the same year since Pantani in 1998.[7]

Winners

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Also won points classification in the same year
* Also won mountains classification in the same year
# Also won young rider classification in the same year
Also won points and mountains classification in the same year
§ Also won mountains and young rider classification in the same year
  • The "Year" column refers to the year the competition was held, and wikilinks to the article about that season.
  • The "Distance" column refers to the distance over which the race was held.
  • The "Margin" column refers to the margin of time or points by which the winner defeated the runner-up.
  • The "Stage wins" column refers to the number of stage wins the winner had during the race.
Tour de France general classification winners[36][37]
Year Country Cyclist Sponsor/Team Distance Time/Points Margin Stage wins
1903   France Maurice Garin La Française 2,428 km (1,509 mi) 94h 33′ 14″ + 2h 59′ 21″ 3
1904   France Henri Cornet[a] Conte 2,428 km (1,509 mi) 96h 05′ 55″ + 2h 16′ 14″ 1
1905   France Louis Trousselier Peugeot–Wolber 2,994 km (1,860 mi) 35 26 5
1906   France René Pottier Peugeot–Wolber 4,637 km (2,881 mi) 31 8 5
1907   France Lucien Petit-Breton Peugeot–Wolber 4,488 km (2,789 mi) 47 19 2
1908   France Lucien Petit-Breton Peugeot–Wolber 4,497 km (2,794 mi) 36 32 5
1909   Luxembourg François Faber Alcyon–Dunlop 4,498 km (2,795 mi) 37 20 6
1910   France Octave Lapize Alcyon–Dunlop 4,734 km (2,942 mi) 63 4 4
1911   France Gustave Garrigou Alcyon–Dunlop 5,343 km (3,320 mi) 43 18 2
1912   Belgium Odile Defraye Alcyon–Dunlop 5,289 km (3,286 mi) 49 59 3
1913   Belgium Philippe Thys Peugeot–Wolber 5,287 km (3,285 mi) 197h 54′ 00″ + 8′ 37″ 1
1914   Belgium Philippe Thys Peugeot–Wolber 5,380 km (3,340 mi) 200h 28′ 48″ + 1′ 50″ 1
1915 ~Not contested due to World War I
1916
1917
1918
1919   Belgium Firmin Lambot La Sportive 5,560 km (3,450 mi) 231h 07′ 15″ + 1h 42′ 54″ 1
1920   Belgium Philippe Thys La Sportive 5,503 km (3,419 mi) 228h 36′ 13″ + 57′ 21″ 4
1921   Belgium Léon Scieur La Sportive 5,485 km (3,408 mi) 221h 50′ 26″ + 18′ 36″ 2
1922   Belgium Firmin Lambot Peugeot–Wolber 5,375 km (3,340 mi) 222h 08′ 06″ + 41′ 15″ 0
1923   France Henri Pélissier Automoto–Hutchinson 5,386 km (3,347 mi) 222h 15′ 30″ + 30 '41″ 3
1924   Italy Ottavio Bottecchia Automoto 5,425 km (3,371 mi) 226h 18′ 21″ + 35′ 36″ 4
1925   Italy Ottavio Bottecchia Automoto–Hutchinson 5,440 km (3,380 mi) 219h 10′ 18″ + 54′ 20″ 4
1926   Belgium Lucien Buysse Automoto–Hutchinson 5,745 km (3,570 mi) 238h 44′ 25″ + 1h 22′ 25″ 2
1927   Luxembourg Nicolas Frantz Alcyon–Dunlop 5,398 km (3,354 mi) 198h 16′ 42″ + 1h 48′ 41″ 3
1928   Luxembourg Nicolas Frantz Alcyon–Dunlop 5,476 km (3,403 mi) 192h 48′ 58″ + 50′ 07″ 5
1929   Belgium Maurice De Waele Alcyon–Dunlop 5,286 km (3,285 mi) 186h 39′ 15″ +44′ 23″ 1
1930   France André Leducq France 4,822 km (2,996 mi) 172h 12′ 16″ + 14′ 13″ 2
1931   France Antonin Magne France 5,091 km (3,163 mi) 177h 10′ 03″ + 12′ 56″ 1
1932   France André Leducq France 4,479 km (2,783 mi) 154h 11′ 49″ + 24′ 03″ 6
1933   France Georges Speicher France 4,395 km (2,731 mi) 147h 51′ 37″ + 4′ 01″ 3
1934   France Antonin Magne France 4,470 km (2,780 mi) 147h 13′ 58″ + 27′ 31″ 3
1935   Belgium Romain Maes Belgium 4,338 km (2,696 mi) 141h 23′ 00″ + 17′ 52″ 3
1936   Belgium Sylvère Maes Belgium 4,442 km (2,760 mi) 142h 47′ 32″ + 26′ 55″ 4
1937   France Roger Lapébie France 4,415 km (2,743 mi) 138h 58′ 31″ + 7′ 17″ 3
1938   Italy Gino Bartali* Italy 4,694 km (2,917 mi) 148h 29′ 12″ + 18′ 27″ 2
1939   Belgium Sylvère Maes* Belgium 4,224 km (2,625 mi) 132h 03′ 17″ + 30′ 38″ 2
1940 ~Not contested due to World War II
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947   France Jean Robic France 4,642 km (2,884 mi) 148h 11′ 25″ + 3′ 58″ 3
1948   Italy Gino Bartali* Italy 4,922 km (3,058 mi) 147h 10′ 36″ + 26′ 16″ 7
1949   Italy Fausto Coppi* Italy 4,808 km (2,988 mi) 149h 40′ 49″ + 10′ 55″ 3
1950   Switzerland Ferdinand Kübler Switzerland 4,773 km (2,966 mi) 145h 36′ 56″ + 9′ 30″ 3
1951   Switzerland Hugo Koblet Switzerland 4,690 km (2,910 mi) 142h 20′ 14″ + 22′ 00″ 5
1952   Italy Fausto Coppi* Italy 4,898 km (3,043 mi) 151h 57′ 20″ + 28′ 17″ 5
1953   France Louison Bobet France 4,476 km (2,781 mi) 129h 23′ 25″ + 14′ 18″ 2
1954   France Louison Bobet France 4,656 km (2,893 mi) 140h 06′ 05″ + 15′ 49″ 3
1955   France Louison Bobet France 4,495 km (2,793 mi) 130h 29′ 26″ + 4′ 53″ 2
1956   France Roger Walkowiak France 4,498 km (2,795 mi) 124h 01′ 16″ + 1′ 25″ 0
1957   France Jacques Anquetil France 4,669 km (2,901 mi) 135h 44′ 42″ + 14′ 56″ 4
1958   Luxembourg Charly Gaul Luxembourg 4,319 km (2,684 mi) 116h 59′ 05″ + 3′ 10″ 4
1959   Spain Federico Bahamontes* Spain 4,358 km (2,708 mi) 123h 46′ 45″ + 4′ 01″ 1
1960   Italy Gastone Nencini Italy 4,173 km (2,593 mi) 112h 08′ 42″ + 5′ 02″ 0
1961   France Jacques Anquetil France 4,397 km (2,732 mi) 122h 01′ 33″ + 12′ 14″ 2
1962   France Jacques Anquetil Saint-Raphaël–Helyett–Hutchinson 4,274 km (2,656 mi) 114h 31′ 54″ + 4′ 59″ 2
1963   France Jacques Anquetil Saint-Raphaël–Gitane–R. Geminiani 4,138 km (2,571 mi) 113h 30′ 05″ + 3′ 35″ 4
1964   France Jacques Anquetil Saint-Raphaël–Gitane–Dunlop 4,504 km (2,799 mi) 127h 09′ 44″ + 55″ 4
1965   Italy Felice Gimondi Salvarani 4,188 km (2,602 mi) 116h 42′ 06″ + 2′ 40″ 3
1966   France Lucien Aimar Ford France–Hutchinson 4,329 km (2,690 mi) 117h 34′ 21″ + 1′ 07″ 0
1967   France Roger Pingeon Peugeot–BP–Michelin 4,779 km (2,970 mi) 136h 53′ 50″ + 3′ 40″ 1
1968   Netherlands Jan Janssen Pelforth–Sauvage–Lejeune 4,492 km (2,791 mi) 133h 49′ 42″ + 38″ 2
1969   Belgium Eddy Merckx Faema 4,117 km (2,558 mi) 116h 16′ 02″ + 17′ 54″ 6
1970   Belgium Eddy Merckx* Faemino–Faema 4,254 km (2,643 mi) 119h 31′ 49″ + 12′ 41″ 8
1971   Belgium Eddy Merckx Molteni 3,608 km (2,242 mi) 96h 45′ 14″ + 9′ 51″ 4
1972   Belgium Eddy Merckx Molteni 3,846 km (2,390 mi) 108h 17′ 18″ + 10′ 41″ 6
1973   Spain Luis Ocaña Bic 4,090 km (2,540 mi) 122h 25′ 34″ + 15′ 51″ 6
1974   Belgium Eddy Merckx Molteni 4,098 km (2,546 mi) 116h 16′ 58″ + 8′ 04″ 8
1975   France Bernard Thévenet Peugeot–BP–Michelin 4,000 km (2,500 mi) 114h 35′ 31″ + 2′ 47″ 2
1976   Belgium Lucien Van Impe Gitane–Campagnolo 4,017 km (2,496 mi) 116h 22′ 23″ + 4′ 14″ 1
1977   France Bernard Thévenet Peugeot–Esso–Michelin 4,096 km (2,545 mi) 115h 38′ 30″ + 48″ 1
1978   France Bernard Hinault Renault–Gitane–Campagnolo 3,908 km (2,428 mi) 108h 18′ 00″ + 3′ 56″ 3
1979   France Bernard Hinault Renault–Gitane 3,765 km (2,339 mi) 103h 06′ 50″ + 13′ 07″ 7
1980   Netherlands Joop Zoetemelk TI–Raleigh–Creda 3,842 km (2,387 mi) 109h 19′ 14″ + 6′ 55″ 2
1981   France Bernard Hinault Renault–Elf–Gitane 3,753 km (2,332 mi) 96h 19′ 38″ + 14′ 34″ 5
1982   France Bernard Hinault Renault–Elf–Gitane 3,507 km (2,179 mi) 92h 08′ 46″ + 6′ 21″ 4
1983   France Laurent Fignon# Renault–Elf 3,809 km (2,367 mi) 105h 07′ 52″ + 4′ 04″ 1
1984   France Laurent Fignon Renault–Elf 4,021 km (2,499 mi) 112h 03′ 40″ + 10′ 32″ 5
1985   France Bernard Hinault La Vie Claire 4,109 km (2,553 mi) 113h 24′ 23″ + 1′ 42″ 2
1986   United States Greg LeMond La Vie Claire 4,094 km (2,544 mi) 110h 35′ 19″ + 3′ 10″ 1
1987   Ireland Stephen Roche Carrera Jeans–Vagabond 4,231 km (2,629 mi) 115h 27′ 42″ + 40″ 1
1988   Spain Pedro Delgado Reynolds 3,286 km (2,042 mi) 84h 27′ 53″ + 7′ 13″ 1
1989   United States Greg LeMond AD Renting–W-Cup–Bottecchia 3,285 km (2,041 mi) 87h 38′ 35″ + 8″ 3
1990   United States Greg LeMond Z–Tomasso 3,504 km (2,177 mi) 90h 43′ 20″ + 2′ 16″ 0
1991   Spain Miguel Indurain Banesto 3,914 km (2,432 mi) 101h 01′ 20″ + 3′ 36″ 2
1992   Spain Miguel Indurain Banesto 3,983 km (2,475 mi) 100h 49′ 30″ + 4′ 35″ 3
1993   Spain Miguel Indurain Banesto 3,714 km (2,308 mi) 95h 57′ 09″ + 4′ 59″ 2
1994   Spain Miguel Indurain Banesto 3,978 km (2,472 mi) 103h 38′ 38″ + 5′ 39″ 1
1995   Spain Miguel Indurain Banesto 3,635 km (2,259 mi) 92h 44′ 59″ + 4′ 35″ 2
1996   Denmark Bjarne Riis[b] Team Telekom 3,765 km (2,339 mi) 95h 57′ 16″ + 1′ 41″ 2
1997   Germany Jan Ullrich# Team Telekom 3,950 km (2,450 mi) 100h 30′ 35″ + 9′ 09″ 2
1998   Italy Marco Pantani Mercatone Uno–Bianchi 3,875 km (2,408 mi) 92h 49′ 46″ + 3′ 21″ 2
1999 No winner[c] 3,687 km (2,291 mi)
2000 No winner[c] 3,662 km (2,275 mi)
2001 No winner[c] 3,458 km (2,149 mi)
2002 No winner[c] 3,278 km (2,037 mi)
2003 No winner[c] 3,427 km (2,129 mi)
2004 No winner[c] 3,391 km (2,107 mi)
2005 No winner[c] 3,359 km (2,087 mi)
2006   Spain Óscar Pereiro[d] Caisse d'Epargne–Illes Balears 3,657 km (2,272 mi) 89h 40′ 27″ + 32″ 0
2007   Spain Alberto Contador# Discovery Channel 3,570 km (2,220 mi) 91h 00′ 26″ + 23″ 1
2008   Spain Carlos Sastre* Team CSC 3,559 km (2,211 mi) 87h 52′ 52″ + 58″ 1
2009   Spain Alberto Contador Astana 3,459 km (2,149 mi) 85h 48′ 35″ + 4′ 11″ 2
2010   Luxembourg Andy Schleck#[e] Team Saxo Bank 3,642 km (2,263 mi) 91h 59′ 27″ + 1′ 22″ 2
2011   Australia Cadel Evans BMC Racing Team 3,430 km (2,130 mi) 86h 12′ 22″ + 1′ 34″ 1
2012   Great Britain Bradley Wiggins Team Sky 3,496 km (2,172 mi) 87h 34′ 47″ + 3′ 21″ 2
2013   Great Britain Chris Froome Team Sky 3,404 km (2,115 mi) 83h 56′ 20″ + 4′ 20″ 3
2014   Italy Vincenzo Nibali Astana 3,660.5 km (2,274.5 mi) 89h 59′ 06″ + 7′ 37″ 4
2015   Great Britain Chris Froome* Team Sky 3,360.3 km (2,088.0 mi) 84h 46′ 14″ + 1′ 12″ 1
2016   Great Britain Chris Froome Team Sky 3,529 km (2,193 mi) 89h 04′ 48″ + 4′ 05″ 2
2017   Great Britain Chris Froome Team Sky 3,540 km (2,200 mi) 86h 20′ 55″ + 54″ 0
2018   Great Britain Geraint Thomas Team Sky 3,349 km (2,081 mi) 83h 17′ 13″ + 1′ 51″ 2
2019   Colombia Egan Bernal# Team Ineos 3,366 km (2,092 mi) 82h 57′ 00″ + 1′ 11″ 0
2020   Slovenia Tadej Pogačar§ UAE Team Emirates 3,484 km (2,165 mi) 87h 20′ 13″ + 59″ 3
2021   Slovenia Tadej Pogačar§ UAE Team Emirates 3,414.4 km (2,121.6 mi) 82h 56′ 36″ + 5′ 20″ 3
2022   Denmark Jonas Vingegaard* Team Jumbo–Visma 3,328 km (2,068 mi) 79h 32′ 29″ + 2′ 43″ 2
2023   Denmark Jonas Vingegaard Team Jumbo–Visma 3,406 km (2,116 mi) 82h 05′ 42″ + 7′ 29″ 1
2024   Slovenia Tadej Pogačar UAE Team Emirates 3,498 km (2,174 mi) 83h 38′ 56″ + 6′ 17″ 6
2025 3,320 km (2,060 mi)

Multiple winners

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The following riders have won the Tour de France on more than one occasion.

Alberto Contador won three Tours, but was stripped of one following an anti-doping violation.[D]

Lance Armstrong was removed from the head of the list after having all seven of his Tour victories stripped when he was found guilty of repeated doping offences.

Multiple winners of the Tour de France general classification
Cyclist Total Years
  Jacques Anquetil (FRA) 5 1957, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964
  Eddy Merckx (BEL) 5 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1974
  Bernard Hinault (FRA) 5 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1985
  Miguel Indurain (ESP) 5 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995
  Chris Froome (GBR) 4 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017
  Philippe Thys (BEL) 3 1913, 1914, 1920
  Louison Bobet (FRA) 3 1953, 1954, 1955
  Greg LeMond (USA) 3 1986, 1989, 1990
  Tadej Pogačar (SVN) 3 2020, 2021, 2024
  Lucien Petit-Breton (FRA) 2 1907, 1908
  Firmin Lambot (BEL) 2 1919, 1922
  Ottavio Bottecchia (ITA) 2 1924, 1925
  Nicolas Frantz (LUX) 2 1927, 1928
  André Leducq (FRA) 2 1930, 1932
  Antonin Magne (FRA) 2 1931, 1934
  Sylvère Maes (BEL) 2 1936, 1939
  Gino Bartali (ITA) 2 1938, 1948
  Fausto Coppi (ITA) 2 1949, 1952
  Bernard Thévenet (FRA) 2 1975, 1977
  Laurent Fignon (FRA) 2 1983, 1984
  Alberto Contador (ESP) 2 2007, 2009
  Jonas Vingegaard (DEN) 2 2022, 2023

By nationality

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Tour de France general classification winners by nationality
Country No. of wins No. of winning cyclists
  France 36 21
  Belgium 18 10
  Spain 12 7
  Italy 10 7
  Great Britain 6 3
  Luxembourg 5 4
  Denmark 3 2
  United States 3 1
  Slovenia 3 1
  Switzerland 2 2
  Netherlands 2 2
  Ireland 1 1
  Germany 1 1
  Australia 1 1
  Colombia 1 1

See also

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Footnotes

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  1. ^ Henri Cornet was declared the winner of the 1904 Tour de France after the disqualification of Maurice Garin for cheating.[38]
  2. ^ Bjarne Riis admitted to doping during the 1996 Tour de France. The organizers of the Tour de France stated that they no longer consider him to be the winner, although Union Cycliste Internationale has so far refused to change the official status owing to the amount of time that has passed since his win. Jan Ullrich was placed second on the podium in Paris.[39]
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Lance Armstrong was declared winner of seven consecutive Tours from 1999 to 2005. However, in October 2012, he was stripped of all titles by the UCI owing to his use of performance-enhancing drugs. The Tour director Christian Prudhomme had previously declared that if this happened, there would be no alternative winners for those years, but this has not yet been made official.[40]
  4. ^ Floyd Landis was the winner at the podium ceremony in Paris on the last day of the 2006 Tour, but subsequently was found to have tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs during stage 17 of the race. The United States Anti-Doping Agency found him guilty of using synthetic testosterone during the race and stripped him of his title on 20 September 2007.[41]
  5. ^ Alberto Contador was the winner at the podium ceremony in Paris on the last day of the 2010 Tour, but subsequently was found to have tested positive for the prohibited substance clenbuterol on a rest day. The Court of Arbitration for Sport found him guilty of using clenbuterol during the race and stripped him of his title on 6 February 2012.[42]

References

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  1. ^ FAQ. Union Cycliste Internationale. Archived from the original on 23 July 2009. Retrieved 17 August 2009.
  2. ^ Dauncey, Hugh; Hare, Geoff (2003). Tour de France: 1903–2003. Routledge. p. 149. ISBN 978-0-7146-5362-4.
  3. ^ "Tour de France Gallery: History on the Champs-Élysées". Cycling News. 21 July 2013. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
  4. ^ Bonville-Ginn, Tom (24 August 2020). "Tour de France jerseys: Yellow, green, white and polka-dot explained". Cycling Weekly. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
  5. ^ Scholiansky, Christopher (6 July 2009). "Will He? Won't He? Can Armstrong Win Tour de France?". American Broadcasting Company. Retrieved 14 August 2009.
  6. ^ "Guide Historique 2017" (PDF). Tour de France. Retrieved 9 October 2017.
  7. ^ a b Rindl, Joe (21 July 2024). "Pogacar seals third Tour de France with stage 21 win". Retrieved 21 July 2024.
  8. ^ "Armstrong seals seventh Tour win". BBC Sport. 24 July 2005. Retrieved 17 August 2009.
  9. ^ a b "Armstrong stripped of all seven Tour de France wins by UCI". BBC Sport. 22 October 2012. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  10. ^ "1903–1914: Pioneers and 'assassins'". BBC Sport. 5 June 2001. Retrieved 20 August 2009.
  11. ^ "1930–1939: Adapt to survive". BBC Sport. 5 June 2001. Retrieved 20 August 2009.
  12. ^ "1947–1956: Post-war rivalries". BBC Sport. 5 June 2001. Retrieved 20 August 2009.
  13. ^ "1957–1966: Anquetil 5–0 Poulidor". BBC Sport. 5 June 2001. Retrieved 20 August 2009.
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