�These 21 stages have the following profiles:
10 flat stages,
7 mountain stages.
1 medium mountain stage.
2 individual time-trial stages.
1 team time-trial stage.
Distinctive aspects of the race:
3 mountain finishes.
2 rest days.
55 kilometres of individual time-trials.
20 Category 1, Category 2 and highest level passes will be climbed.
See the video of the route here.
Saturday, July 4: Stage 1, Monaco – Monaco (ITT): 15km
Sunday, July 5: Stage 2, Monaco – Brignoles: 182km
Monday, July 6: Stage 3, Marseille – La Grande-Motte: 196km
Tuesday, July 7: Stage 4, Montpellier – Montpellier (TTT): 38km
Wednesday, July 8: Stage 5, Le Cap d’Agde – Perpignan: 197km
Thursday, July 9: Stage 6, Gerone – Barcelone: 175km
Friday, July 10: Stage 7, Barcelone – Andorre Arcalis: 224km
Saturday, July 11: Stage 8, Andorre-la-Vieille – Saint-Girons: 176km
Sunday, July 12: Stage 9, Saint-Gaudens – Tarbes: 160km
Monday, July 13: Rest Day, Limoges
Tuesday, July 14: Stage 10, Limoges – Issoudun: 193km
Wednesday, July 15: Stage 11, Vatan – Saint-Fargeau: 192km
Thursday, July 16: Stage 12, Tonnerre – Vittel: 200km
Friday, July 17: Stage 13, Vittel – Colmar: 200km
Saturday, July 18: Stage 14, Colmar – Besancon: 199km
Sunday, July 19: Stage 15, Pontarlier – Verbier: 207km
Monday, July 20: Rest day, Verbier
Tuesday, July 21: Stage 16, Martigny – Bourg-Saint-Maurice: 160km
Wednesday, July 22: Stage 17, Bourg-Saint-Maurice – Le Grand-Bornand: 169km
Thursday, July 23: Stage 18, Annecy – Annecy (ITT): 40km
Friday, July 24: Stage 19, Bourgoin-Jallieu – Aubenas: 195km
Saturday, July 25: Stage 20, Montelimar – Mont Ventoux: 167km
Sunday, July 26: Stage 21, Montereau-Fault-Yonne – Paris Champs-Elysees: 160km












