Win the Tour de France and you get the porcelain bowl made in Sèvres by the state-owned pottery company Manufacture Nationale de Sèvres. It’s a unique trophy and has no official title, except it is awarded “in the name of the Presidency of the French republic“. It’s elegant and you probably wouldn’t use it as a fruit bowl. But it’s not that valuable in crude money terms.
Instead, there are plenty of cash prizes up for grabs. The Euro might be in crisis thanks to worries in Greece and other countries but when the Tour de France starts, riders and teams stand to share a cash pot totalling €3,412,546. Over the three weeks there’s money up for grabs every day, from stage wins to team prizes, sprints to climbs but also prizes big and small for those who reach Paris.
Two things stand out. First the overall pot might look big but it’s not that significant compared to other sports events. For starters the headline number I’ve quoted includes about a million Euros in admin payments, expenses paid to the teams to cover their costs during the race. Subtract this and the prize pot is just one third of that awarded for the men’s singles in the Wimbledon tennis tournament. Second, if the pot isn’t that big, it’s also full of micro-payments. You can win €200 here and there, a relatively small amount for a pro but added together over three weeks it helps.
Note teams split the money. Each team has a different formula but when a rider wins some money, it’s put into a pot and shared amongst the team. Team mates get a share but the money is also given to mechanics, soigneurs and the bus driver.
Anyway, here is how the money is paid out during the race.
- Each day on a normal stage there’s €8,000 for the winner, €4000 for second place and a decreasing scale down to a modest €200 for 20th place.
- For the final overall classification in Paris, first place brings in €450,000, then it’s €200,000 for second and €100,000 for third.
- The full breakdown is €450,000, €200,000, €100, 000, €70,000, 50,000, €23,000, €11,500, €7,600, €4,500, €3,800, €3,000, €2,700, €2,500, €2,100, €2,000, €1,500, €1,300, €1,200, €1,000, €950, €900, €850, €750, €700 and €650 for 25th place.
- Then 26th to 30th place collects €600
- 31st to 40th place gets €550
- 41st to 50th place gets €500
- 51st to 90th place gets €450
- every other finisher collects €400
There are other pots of money available in the race:
- €350 a day to whoever wears the yellow jersey, €300 for the other jersey holders
- €25,000 for the final winner of the green and polka dot jerseys
- €20,000 for the final winner of the white jersey
- There’s also money for the first three in the intermediate sprint and for getting mountain points too
- The highest point in the Pyrenees and the Alps each sees a prize. On Stage 12 the Prix Jacques Goddet will be awarded to the first rider to the top of the Col du Tourmalet iand is worth €5,000. On Stage 18 the Henri Desgrange prize is awarded at the top of the Galibier and is again worth €5,000
- The “most combative” prize is awarded and worth €2,000 each day, the “Super combative” prize is awarded in Paris and the winner collects €20,000.
- There’s also a team prize with €2,800 awarded each day to the leading team on the overall, as calculated by the best three riders overall.
- In addition, every team that starts gets paid a touch over €50,000 to cover expenses. And should a squad make it to Paris with seven or more riders they stand to collect an additional €1,600 bonus for each rider the have left.
In summary that’s €2,021,200 in prizes, €1,127,346 in expenses and €264,000 in bonus payments for near-complete teams: a total payout of €3,412,546.
Nobody races the Tour for money but you might spot riders jumping for an intermediate sprint or hill points even if they’re way out of contention because a short sprint can literally pay off. Even the big prize on offer is really a secondary consideration. This is still a sport where victory itself is the greatest prize, not the cash pay out. Although this is partly because a rider’s salary will soar if they win.
At the time of writing: €1 = US$1.44 / £0.89 /AU$1.35
€4100,000 for third. – rather large typo there…
Any idea what the post-tour crits offer as start money?
Damn that’s informative as hell.
Good job!
Great detail. I did not know so many small prizes were paid.
Alex: fixed, thanks.
Alex: it varies, like the prizes it’s a “winner takes all” scenario where some names might be able to get €50,000 to show up, possibly more for a couple of races, but even stage winner during the race might struggle for €5,000.
Fat2Cat: thanks, I thought it was worth going into detail.
Timmo: yes, all those prizes add up though and remember they go to the team as a whole so the riders can collectively do well. But each year some teams take most of the money and a few get almost nothing.
Timmo: I take it you have never raced 😉
Even all the amateur races have little prices up for grabs during a race.
It’s crazy if you see how the folks here sprint for even 5 Euro. But I can’t say I’m better, especially in the light that 5 Euro are nearly two meals in the university cafeteria for me. 😉
Do the stage winners of some stages get a local prize from hosting town/village. I remember seeing some photos of winners with various local produce and once even a cow.
Also worth noting the race fines dished out by the UCI will have a tiny bit more of a bite to them this year considering the Euro vs. the Swiss Franc.
when Peugeot were the official car sponsor of the race, each stage winner got a car.
That boosted the winnings of not just the race winner, everyone got a ‘chop’ of the pie.
I remember a few years back, Cadel Evans was being interviewed on Australian radio by an announcer who didn’t know too much about pro cycling. It was after one of his overall podium finishes…
“So Cadel – did you earn enough in prizemoney to be able to continue riding full-time? Or will you have to come back and work to fund the rest of the season?”
You could almost hear him rolling his eyes… He graciously answered:
“Uh, yeah – I’m doing OK out of cycling, so I should be right for the rest of the season…”
Any idea about internal team bonuses?
It sounded like Cavendish was miffed at not getting more compensation for wins, but in the Armstrong era the team took out an insurance policy (legal gambing) for a payout if he won.
Interesting to see that there are equivalent prizes in the TDF as the Cima Coppi in the Giro, I’d not heard of these before, so I wonder if they have a similar prestige to the Cima? Is there a highest mountain prize for the Vuelta? Is it named after Bahamontes?
Very interesting. How does this compare to the other grand tours?
>€350 a day to whoever wears the yellow jersey
>There’s also a team prize with €2,800 awarded each day to the leading team on the overall
This is very strange, I thought the yellow worth much more than leading the team classification.
Many doesn’t even know which team leads.
“Super combative” prize is awarded in Paris and the winner collects €20,000.
That’s better then finishing 7th on GC, so all of Voeckler or Hoogerland or “Crazy’s” attacks will probably end up earning them more then Wiggins when he gets 10th place… (yeah, I went there…).
🙂
Looks like it’s the same as last year. Haven’t been able to find “les regles” online for 2011 yet. Where did you get them? Any link?
leif: that can vary a lot, it’s more in a rider’s employment contract than something done for the race.
Martin: about 1.5 to 2 times the amount.
Jennifer: I have the 2011 rules but it’s for “reference” and I can’t put it all online. Hopefully the organisation will publish them for everyone soon, maybe next Tuesday when the open the media centre in the host town.
Interesting to see what the actual prize money is , I think it’s safe to say nobody becomes a cyclist to get rich , I’m steering my kids in the direction of golf and tennis !