Giro d'Italia records and statistics


Since the first Giro d'Italia in 1909 and as of 2025, there have been 2,116 stages. This number includes half-stages, prologues, and a small number of stages cancelled mid-race or immediately before the start. Since 1931, the race leader following each stage has been awarded the pink jersey.
Although the leader of the classification after each stage gets a pink jersey, he is not considered the winner of the pink jersey, only the wearer. Only after the final stage is complete, the wearer of the pink jersey is considered the winner of the pink jersey, and thereby the winner of the Giro d'Italia. In 2020, British rider Tao Geoghegan Hart became the first cyclist to win the overall pink jersey, having never worn it during the race itself.
In this article first-place-classifications before 1931 are also counted as if a pink jersey was awarded. Nonetheless, the number of pink jerseys awarded is not equal to the number of stages. In the 1912 Giro d'Italia, the race was contested by teams, so no individual cyclist is counted in this statistic. Sometimes more cyclists were leading the classification. On the other hand, jerseys were not awarded in between any of the 51 pairs of half-stages that took place during the history of the Giro. Thus, as of 2024, 2,019 pink jerseys have been awarded in the Giro d'Italia to 280 different riders.

Individual records

Key:

In previous Giri d'Italia, sometimes a stage was split in two. On such occasions, only the cyclist leading at the end of the day is counted. The "Maglia Rosa" column gives the number of days that the cyclist wore the pink jersey as the leader of the classification, the "Giro wins" column gives the number of days that the cyclist won the pink jersey. The next four columns indicate the number of times the rider won the points classification, the King of the Mountains classification, and the young rider competition, and the years in which the pink jersey was worn, with bold years indicating an overall Giro win. For example: Eddy Merckx has spent 76 days as leader of the race, won the general classification five times; won the points classification two times, won the mountains classification one time, and never won the young rider classification. He wore the pink jersey in the 1968, 1970, 1972, 1973, and 1974 editions of the race as well as 1969.
After Alberto Contador was stripped from his victory in the 2011 Giro d'Italia, Michele Scarponi became the new winner.
  • Ranked by most days in the Maglia Rosa, updated until after Stage 21 of the 2024 Giro d'Italia.
RankNameCountryMaglia
Rosa
Giro WinsPointsKoMYoung riderYears
1Eddy MerckxBelgium

Per country

The pink jersey has been awarded to 28 different countries since 1903. In the table below, "Jerseys" indicates the number of pink jerseys that were given to cyclists of each country. "Giro wins" stands for the number of Giro wins by cyclists of that country, "Points" for the number of times the points classification was won by a cyclist of that country, "KoM" for the number of times the mountains classification was won by a cyclist of that country, and "White" for the number of times the young rider classification was won by a cyclist of that country.
The "Most recent" column shows the cyclist of the country that lead the general classification most recently. The "Different holders" column gives the number of different cyclists of the country that lead the general classification.
Updated until after Stage 21 of the 2024 Giro d'Italia
RankCountryJerseysGiro winsPointsKoMYoung riderMost recent cyclistMost recent dateDifferent holders
1Italy

Stage wins per rider

Some 34 riders have won more than 10 stages at the Giro.
RankNameCountryWinsFirst winLast win
1Mario CipolliniItaly

Stage wins per country

Riders representing 37 countries have won at least one stage in Giro.

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Country visits

The following countries have hosted stages in the post-war era. Pre-WW2 has been excluded due to changing national borders, the route being less varied than today and, usually taking place entirely within Italy anyway. Countries hosting a Grande Depart are denoted with an asterisk* whilst countries the race route passed through without hosting a start or a finish are marked with brackets.
The years of 1946, 1948, 1960, 1967, 1970, 1975, 1976, 1978, 1980, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1999, 2003, 2005, 2020, 2024 are absent from below as they all took place entirely within Italian borders.
  • - 26 times -,, 1951,, 1954,,, 1963, 1965,,, 1973,,, 1989, 1995, 1996, 1998,, 2008,,, 2015,,, 2023
  • - 24 times -, 1951,,,, 1956, 1958, 1959,, 1964, 1965*, 1968, 1969,,, 1979,, 1987, 1997, 1998,,,, 2019
  • - 17 times -, 1955,,,,, 1973, 1982, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998*, 2000, 2002, 2007, 2013, 2016
  • - 8 times - 1971, 1994, 2001,, 2011,,, 2025
  • - 7 times - 1971, 1988, 1990, 1994, 2006, 2007, 2009
  • - 4 times -, 2002*, 2010*, 2016*
  • - 3 times -, 1974*,
  • - 3 times - 1973*, 2002, 2006*
  • - 2 times -, 1966*
  • - 2 times - 1973, 2002
  • - 2 times - 1973, 2002
  • - 1 time - 1996*
  • - 1 time - 2004
  • - 1 time - 2012*
  • - 1 time - 2014*
  • - 1 time - 2014
  • - 1 time - 2018*
  • - 1 time - 2022*
  • - 1 time - 2025*