2025 Tour de Suisse - Men

Tour de Suisse 2025 Schedule

Tour de Suisse 2025 Schedule

The Tour de Suisse 2025 will take place in Switzerland from June 15-22. Here’s a look at the schedule for the 88th edition of the race.

Jun 6, 2025 by Matt Cannizzaro
How Yates Stole The Giro 2025 Show - Stage 21

What could be better than eight consecutive days of racing on FloBikes? How about two consecutive eight-day events serving as warm-ups for the Tour de France in July?

As the Critérium du Dauphiné 2025 wraps up in France on June 15, the action will just be starting at the Tour de Suisse 2025 men’s race in Switzerland!

The first stage of the Tour de Suisse 2025 will get underway June 15 at 8:30 a.m. Eastern, with FloBikes coverage for viewers in Canada, the United States and U.S. territories, beginning at 9:10 a.m. EDT. 

The Tour de Suisse will end two weeks before the start of the 21-stage Tour de France, so the competitors will get the best of two worlds – they’ll be able to ride into form across the hills and mountains of Switzerland and Italy, and they’ll have plenty of time to rest and tweak things before heading off to France.

The plan for the Tour de Suisse 2025 is some hills to kick things off, with four total hilly stages, two mountain challenges in the middle and an individual time trial to close the event. In all, the riders will cover nearly 1,300 kilometers. 

So far, 22 teams of riders are expected for the men’s Tour de Suisse in 2025, though a final entry list has not yet been released.

This year’s race is the 88th in history, with the inaugural edition taking place in 1933. 

Last year, Great Britain’s Adam Yates won the race with a total time of 20:18:49, finishing 22 seconds ahead of Portugal’s Joao Almeida and 3 minutes, 2 seconds ahead of Denmark’s Mattias Skjelmose.

Yates’ twin brother, Simon, recently won the Giro d’Italia 2025, which took place from May 9 through June 1.

Schedule For The Tour de Suisse 2025 

  • Stage 1 – June 15: Küssnacht Küssnacht (129.4km)
  • Stage 2 – June 16: Aarau Schwarzsee (177km)
  • Stage 3 – June 17: Aarau Heiden (195.6km)
  • Stage 4 – June 18: Heiden Piuro (Valchiavenna) (193.2km)
  • Stage 5 – June 19: La Punt Santa Maria in Calanca (183.8km)
  • Stage 6 – June 20: Chur – Neuhausen am Rheinfall (186.7km)
  • Stage 7 – June 21: Neuhausen am Rheinfall – Emmetten (207.3km)
  • Stage 8 – June 22: Beckenried – Stockhütte (10km)

Total kilometers for 2025 is 1,283.2km.

To see the complete routes and race information, click here.

How To Watch The Tour de Suisse 2025

The Tour de Suisse 2025 is streaming on FloBikes and the FloSports app for viewers in Canada, the United States and U.S. territories.

Highlights, replays and breaking news will be available on both platforms. 

For those who want to drop in early for the Tour de Suisse women’s race, FloBikes will be broadcasting all four stages from June 12-15.

More About The Tour de Suisse

The first Tour de Suisse – or Tour of Switzerland – was held in 1933. It started in Zurich and only featured five stages. 

It wasn’t until the 1950s that the raced moved to its current June timeslot to serve as a warm-up event for many riders headed to the Tour de France. 

The 2025 Tour de Suisse will be the 88th edition of the race, which was not held for three years during World War II and went on hiatus again in 2020 due to COVID-19.

Similar to the Tour de France and other multi-stage races, the Tour de Suisse offers a variety of jersey colors rewarded for success along the route – overall leader (yellow), points leader (black), king of the mountains (red) and best young rider (white).

The same applies for the shorter women’s Tour de Suisse (now four stages), which debuted in 1998 and was held until 2001, before taking a long hiatus of its own. It returned in 2021 alongside the men’s race. 

Italy’s Pasquale Fornara has the most wins at the Tour de Suisse with four – 1952, 1954, 1957 and 1958, while three other riders have won three times, and seven have a pair of victories. 

As a country, Switzerland tops the wins list at the men’s Tour de Suisse with 23 wins, followed by Italy (20) and Belgium (eight). 

Zulfiya Zabirova has the most wins on the women’s side with two, while Demi Vollering of the Netherlands is the reigning champion. 

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