Tour de France Prize Money: From 6,075 Francs to €500,000

The winner of the 2026 Tour de France will collect 500,000 euros for three weeks and roughly 3,320 kilometers of racing, the largest single check in cycling, drawn from a total purse of about 2.3 million euros that pays everyone from the yellow jersey down to the last-placed finisher, who gets exactly 1,000 euros for surviving. And by the sport’s most beloved tradition, the winner will then give essentially all of it away.

The money has always been the Tour’s strangest subplot. The first winner in 1903 took home 6,075 francs, several times a factory worker’s annual wage, for a race invented to sell newspapers. For most of the century that followed, the official prizes were almost beside the point: the real fortune was in the post-Tour exhibition circuit, where a Tour winner could multiply his appearance fees overnight. In the 1980s the winner’s haul famously included an apartment. Today the winner’s 500,000 euros has sat frozen for roughly a decade, while the women’s Tour champion earns a tenth of it.

The chart below covers the full money story: the complete 2026 payout structure, what every jersey and stage is worth, the 123-year history of the winner’s check, the traditions that decide where the money actually goes, and how the Tour compares to everything else. Take a look, then we’ll break it all down.

Tour de France Prize Money
From 6,075 francs to 500,000 euros: the full history

500k
euros to the winner
2.3M
total purse (euros)
11k
euros per stage win
1903
Garin’s 6,075 francs
The 2026 payout: general classification
1st (yellow in Paris) 500,000 euros
2nd 200,000 euros
3rd 100,000 euros
4th / 5th 70,000 / 50,000 euros
Wearing yellow for a day 500 euros per day in the jersey
Every single finisher At least 1,000 euros, including the lanterne rouge in last place
The full 2026 purse is 2,302,800 euros, and in a wonderfully French detail, it’s actually a couple thousand euros SMALLER than 2025’s, the pot shrinks or grows slightly each year with the route’s particulars.

What everything else pays
Winning a stage 11,000 euros (a pot of 28,650 paid down to 20th place, every day)
Green jersey (points) 25,000 euros final; intermediate sprints pay 1,500 / 1,000 / 500 each
Polka dot (mountains) 25,000 final; the biggest climbs pay 800 to first over the top
White jersey (youth) 20,000 final; 500 per day to the day’s best young rider
Team classification 50,000 to the winning team; 2,800 per day to the day’s best
Combativity 2,000 per day for the most aggressive rider; 20,000 for the Tour’s Super Combatif
The mountain bonus The Souvenir Henri Desgrange: 5,000 euros for cresting the race’s highest peak first
The design rewards animation, not just winning: a breakaway artist who never threatens yellow can out-earn a top-10 finisher through stage placings, sprint primes, climb money, and combativity awards.

The winner’s check through history
1903: Maurice Garin 6,075 francs of a 20,000-franc purse: several years of a worker’s wages
The mid-century Modest official prizes; the fortune was in post-Tour exhibition races
The 1980s The famous era of prizes in kind: the winner’s haul included an apartment and a car
The 2000s-2010s Cash standardized and climbed: 400,000 euros, then 450,000, then 500,000
Today 500,000 euros, unchanged for roughly a decade, quietly shrinking in real terms
Garin’s 1903 winnings were transformative money for a former chimney sweep, he famously used his cycling fortune to open a gas station, and the race he won existed for one commercial reason: to sell copies of the newspaper L’Auto.

Where the money actually goes
The tradition Winners share the prize with teammates AND staff, down to the bus driver
Why they can afford to Salaries dwarf prizes: a star’s contract is worth many Tours per year
The team spread, 2025 Top team ~709,000 euros in prizes; the last-placed team ~15,500
The organizer’s side ASO also pays appearance fees and covers teams’ hotels for three weeks
The historical echo Sharing dates to the criterium era, when the yellow jersey multiplied everyone’s fees
The custom solves the sport’s structural unfairness: domestiques destroy themselves for zero personal results, so the man whose results they built pays them back in cash and keeps the jersey.

How the Tour compares
Tour de France ~2.3M euro purse; 500,000 to the winner
Giro d’Italia Roughly 1.6M euros total
Vuelta a Espana Roughly 1.1M euros total
Tour de France Femmes ~270,000 total; 50,000 to the winner, a tenth of the men’s check
Other sports A single tennis major pays its champion several times the entire Tour purse
Cycling’s counterargument to the small purses: the Tour is free to watch for 12 million roadside fans, the organizer funds the entire traveling circus, and the riders’ real market, salaries, prices in Tour glory at rates no prize fund could match.

2026 figures per race organizer ASO’s official sporting stakes (total 2,302,800 euros); historical amounts per Tour archives, with early-era sums in period francs; comparisons per each race’s published funds. Current as of July 2026.

The 2026 money, top to bottom

The 2026 Tour pays out 2,302,800 euros in total, a figure with the fine-grained precision of a race that has been keeping books since 1903, and, delightfully, a purse slightly smaller than last year’s, since the pot flexes with each route’s particulars. The general classification consumes nearly half: 500,000 euros to the winner, 200,000 for second, 100,000 for third, sliding down a published scale until every rider who reaches Paris collects at least 1,000 euros, last place included. Around the GC, the race scatters money across every road in France: 11,000 euros per stage win from a daily pot paid twenty deep, 25,000 apiece for the final green and polka-dot jerseys, 20,000 for white, 50,000 for the best team, 500 for every day spent in yellow, 2,000 a day for the most combative rider, and a 5,000-euro bonus, the Souvenir Henri Desgrange, for the first rider over the race’s highest summit. The structure’s quiet genius is that it pays for entertainment: a fearless breakaway rider with no hope of yellow can out-earn a conservative top-ten finisher.

1903 to today: the check’s strange journey

The Tour was invented to sell newspapers, and its first prize list was a circulation stunt that worked: Maurice Garin, a chimney sweep turned cyclist, won 6,075 francs of a 20,000-franc purse in 1903, several years of an ordinary wage in one July, money he eventually parlayed into a gas station he ran for the rest of his life. For the half-century after, the official prizes mattered less than what victory unlocked: the post-Tour criterium circuit, exhibition races across Europe where appearance fees, not prize checks, made champions rich, and where a yellow jersey multiplied a rider’s asking price overnight. The 1980s produced the era fans still talk about, when the winner’s official haul included prizes in kind, famously an apartment and a car, before the modern era standardized cash and ratcheted it upward: 400,000 euros in the 2000s, 450,000, then 500,000, where it has now sat frozen for roughly a decade, shrinking quietly against inflation even as the race’s global audience grows. The Femmes comparison stings hardest: the women’s Tour winner earns 50,000 euros, a tenth of the men’s check.

The tradition: winning it all and keeping none

The best fact about Tour prize money is what happens to it. By a custom older than most of the peloton, the winner doesn’t keep his 500,000 euros: the money is pooled and distributed among the teammates who paced, sheltered, and sacrificed for him, and the staff, mechanics, soigneurs, chefs, and, famously, the bus driver, who ran the three-week traveling household. The economics make it possible (star salaries dwarf prize money many times over; the team-wide gulf is real regardless, with the top squad clearing some 709,000 euros in 2025 prizes while the last-placed team took roughly 15,500) and the history explains it: the custom crystallized in the criterium era, when the yellow jersey raised every teammate’s appearance fees, and sharing the windfall was simply accurate accounting. The result is the rarest thing in professional sports: a seven-figure competition whose champion’s traditional take-home, in cash terms, is approximately zero, and who considers it the best deal in cycling.

Final Word

Tour de France prize money, explained historically: a 2,302,800-euro purse in 2026 paying 500,000 to the winner, 11,000 per stage, four jersey funds, daily combativity money, and 1,000 euros to the very last man in Paris, descended from Garin’s 6,075 francs in 1903, the criterium fortunes of mid-century, and the apartment-and-car prizes of the 1980s. The check has been stuck at half a million for a decade, the women’s race pays a tenth of it, and the winner gives his share away to the team and the bus driver anyway. The Tour’s money story, like the race itself, makes no sense until you accept the premise: the yellow jersey was never really about the cash.

How those eight-man squads earn and split it is in Tour de France teams explained, and the 20,000-euro jersey with the crystal-ball reputation is in the white jersey explained.