All the Giro d’Italia Winners from 1909 to Today

Giro d’Italia History · 1909 to 2025

All the Giro d’Italia Winners from 1909 to Today

The Giro d’Italia is one of cycling’s most dramatic Grand Tours: a race built on mountains, endurance, tactics, courage and legendary champions who have shaped more than a century of road cycling.

1909 First edition of the race
5 Record wins by Binda, Coppi and Merckx
3 Grand Tours alongside Tour and Vuelta
2025 Latest listed winner: Simon Yates

The Giro d’Italia is more than a stage race. Since 1909 it has crowned riders able to combine climbing strength, time-trial precision, tactical intelligence and the mental resilience required to survive three weeks of pressure.

Its identity is inseparable from the Italian landscape. The Stelvio, Gavia, Mortirolo, Monte Grappa, Colle delle Finestre and the Dolomites have turned the Giro into a race where champions are often revealed on the hardest slopes.

From the early dominance of Alfredo Binda to the post-war rivalry between Fausto Coppi and Gino Bartali, from Eddy Merckx’s total control to Marco Pantani’s explosive climbing and the modern brilliance of Tadej Pogačar and Simon Yates, every winner adds a new chapter to the race’s mythology.

Why the Giro d’Italia is one of cycling’s greatest tests

The Giro rewards complete riders, but it often punishes anyone who lacks consistency, recovery and courage in the mountains.

The Giro d’Italia is famous for its ability to change suddenly. A rider can dominate for two weeks and still lose everything on a brutal mountain stage, a cold descent, a technical time trial or a day when the race explodes far from the finish.

That unpredictability is part of its prestige. Winning the Giro means mastering the race’s rhythm: saving energy when the peloton allows it, attacking when the opportunity appears, staying calm through bad weather, and remaining focused when the Maglia Rosa becomes both a privilege and a burden.

The riders with five Giro d’Italia victories

Only three riders have reached the legendary mark of five overall victories.

Alfredo Binda

Winner in 1925, 1927, 1928, 1929 and 1933. One of the first true masters of stage racing.

Fausto Coppi

Winner in 1940, 1947, 1949, 1952 and 1953. A symbol of elegance, innovation and Italian cycling greatness.

Eddy Merckx

Winner in 1968, 1970, 1972, 1973 and 1974. The most complete and dominant rider of his generation.

Legendary champions who defined the Giro

These riders turned the Giro into a race of myths, rivalries and unforgettable sporting stories.

Fausto Coppi: The Champion of Champions

Nicknamed “Il Campionissimo”, Fausto Coppi is widely regarded as one of the greatest cyclists in history. His five Giro victories came across a career marked by climbing brilliance, strong time-trialling and tactical intelligence.

Coppi’s 1949 performance remains one of the defining moments of the race. His long-range attacks and mountain dominance helped create the image of the modern Grand Tour champion: elegant, courageous and almost untouchable on his best days.

5 Giro wins Italian icon Mountain legend

Gino Bartali: The Fighting Spirit

Gino Bartali won the Giro d’Italia in 1936, 1937 and 1946. His career bridged the pre-war and post-war eras, making him a symbol of resilience as well as sporting excellence.

Beyond cycling, Bartali is remembered for his courage during World War II, when he used his training rides as cover to help transport documents. His legacy combines athletic greatness with rare moral strength.

3 Giro wins Climbing strength National hero

Alfredo Binda: The Pioneer of Dominance

Alfredo Binda was one of cycling’s earliest superstars. With five Giro victories, he set a standard of dominance that shaped the professional identity of the sport.

His superiority was so great that in 1930 he was famously paid not to race the Giro, a remarkable sign of how predictable his presence could make the competition appear.

5 Giro wins Early superstar Pure dominance

Eddy Merckx: The Cannibal

Eddy Merckx won the Giro five times and brought an unmatched all-round ability to the race. He could climb, time trial, sprint and control a peloton with extraordinary authority.

His nickname, “The Cannibal”, reflected his hunger for victory. In the Giro, as in the Tour de France and the Classics, Merckx raced to win everything possible.

5 Giro wins All-round master Belgian legend

From Pantani to Pogačar and Yates

The modern Giro has been shaped by explosive climbers, complete Grand Tour specialists and tactical masterpieces.

Marco Pantani: The Pirate of the Mountains

Marco Pantani won the Giro d’Italia in 1998, the same year he completed the rare Giro-Tour double. His explosive climbing style made him one of the most loved and emotional figures in modern cycling.

Pantani’s attacks on steep gradients were instinctive and spectacular. Although his career was marked by controversy and tragedy, his presence in the mountains remains unforgettable.

1998 winner Giro-Tour double Pure climber

Vincenzo Nibali: The Shark of the Strait

Vincenzo Nibali won the Giro in 2013 and 2016. Known for his descending skills, tactical intelligence and courage, he became one of the few riders to win all three Grand Tours.

Nibali’s victories showed the value of race reading: knowing when to attack, when to wait, and how to turn technical terrain into a decisive advantage.

2 Giro wins Grand Tour specialist Descent master

Tadej Pogačar: A Historic Debut

Tadej Pogačar won the 2024 Giro d’Italia in his first participation, dominating the race with six stage victories and a commanding overall performance.

His success confirmed his status as one of the most complete riders of the modern era: aggressive in the mountains, efficient in time trials and tactically sharp under pressure.

2024 winner 6 stage wins Modern superstar

Simon Yates: The 2025 Comeback Victory

Simon Yates won the 2025 Giro d’Italia, securing the Maglia Rosa after a decisive final mountain phase and completing one of the most important victories of his career.

His triumph added a modern chapter to the Giro’s long tradition of late-race drama, proving once again that the race can remain open until the final decisive climbs.

2025 winner British champion Late-race attack

The climbs that made Giro history

The Giro’s mountains are not only obstacles. They are stages where reputations are created, destroyed and remembered forever.

Passo dello Stelvio

One of the race’s most iconic high-altitude climbs, famous for its switchbacks, thin air and epic scenery.

Passo Gavia

A climb associated with extreme conditions, heroic endurance and some of the Giro’s most dramatic days.

Mortirolo

Steep, relentless and feared, the Mortirolo is a pure climber’s battlefield where gaps can become decisive.

The Giro is often won by the rider who knows how to suffer with intelligence: conserving energy, reading the race and attacking when the road becomes hardest.

All Giro d’Italia winners from 1909 to 2025

Here is the complete year-by-year list of Giro d’Italia winners, including editions not held during the World Wars.

The 1912 edition was awarded by team classification.

Year Winner Country
1909–1950
1909 Luigi Ganna Italy
1910 Carlo Galetti Italy
1911 Carlo Galetti Italy
1912 Atala Team Italy
1913 Carlo Oriani Italy
1914 Alfonso Calzolari Italy
1915–1918 Not held World War I
1919 Costante Girardengo Italy
1920 Gaetano Belloni Italy
1921 Giovanni Brunero Italy
1922 Giovanni Brunero Italy
1923 Costante Girardengo Italy
1924 Giuseppe Enrici Italy
1925 Alfredo Binda Italy
1926 Giovanni Brunero Italy
1927 Alfredo Binda Italy
1928 Alfredo Binda Italy
1929 Alfredo Binda Italy
1930 Luigi Marchisio Italy
1931 Francesco Camusso Italy
1932 Antonio Pesenti Italy
1933 Alfredo Binda Italy
1934 Learco Guerra Italy
1935 Vasco Bergamaschi Italy
1936 Gino Bartali Italy
1937 Gino Bartali Italy
1938 Giovanni Valetti Italy
1939 Giovanni Valetti Italy
1940 Fausto Coppi Italy
1941–1945 Not held World War II
1946 Gino Bartali Italy
1947 Fausto Coppi Italy
1948 Fiorenzo Magni Italy
1949 Fausto Coppi Italy
1950 Hugo Koblet Switzerland
1951–2000
1951 Fiorenzo Magni Italy
1952 Fausto Coppi Italy
1953 Fausto Coppi Italy
1954 Carlo Clerici Switzerland
1955 Fiorenzo Magni Italy
1956 Charly Gaul Luxembourg
1957 Gastone Nencini Italy
1958 Ercole Baldini Italy
1959 Charly Gaul Luxembourg
1960 Jacques Anquetil France
1961 Arnaldo Pambianco Italy
1962 Franco Balmamion Italy
1963 Franco Balmamion Italy
1964 Jacques Anquetil France
1965 Vittorio Adorni Italy
1966 Gianni Motta Italy
1967 Felice Gimondi Italy
1968 Eddy Merckx Belgium
1969 Felice Gimondi Italy
1970 Eddy Merckx Belgium
1971 Gösta Pettersson Sweden
1972 Eddy Merckx Belgium
1973 Eddy Merckx Belgium
1974 Eddy Merckx Belgium
1975 Fausto Bertoglio Italy
1976 Felice Gimondi Italy
1977 Michel Pollentier Belgium
1978 Johan De Muynck Belgium
1979 Giuseppe Saronni Italy
1980 Bernard Hinault France
1981 Giovanni Battaglin Italy
1982 Bernard Hinault France
1983 Giuseppe Saronni Italy
1984 Francesco Moser Italy
1985 Bernard Hinault France
1986 Roberto Visentini Italy
1987 Stephen Roche Ireland
1988 Andrew Hampsten United States
1989 Laurent Fignon France
1990 Gianni Bugno Italy
1991 Franco Chioccioli Italy
1992 Miguel Indurain Spain
1993 Miguel Indurain Spain
1994 Evgeni Berzin Russia
1995 Tony Rominger Switzerland
1996 Pavel Tonkov Russia
1997 Ivan Gotti Italy
1998 Marco Pantani Italy
1999 Ivan Gotti Italy
2000 Stefano Garzelli Italy
2001–2025
2001 Gilberto Simoni Italy
2002 Paolo Savoldelli Italy
2003 Gilberto Simoni Italy
2004 Damiano Cunego Italy
2005 Paolo Savoldelli Italy
2006 Ivan Basso Italy
2007 Danilo Di Luca Italy
2008 Alberto Contador Spain
2009 Denis Menchov Russia
2010 Ivan Basso Italy
2011 Michele Scarponi Italy
2012 Ryder Hesjedal Canada
2013 Vincenzo Nibali Italy
2014 Nairo Quintana Colombia
2015 Alberto Contador Spain
2016 Vincenzo Nibali Italy
2017 Tom Dumoulin Netherlands
2018 Chris Froome United Kingdom
2019 Richard Carapaz Ecuador
2020 Tao Geoghegan Hart United Kingdom
2021 Egan Bernal Colombia
2022 Jai Hindley Australia
2023 Primož Roglič Slovenia
2024 Tadej Pogačar Slovenia
2025 Simon Yates United Kingdom

The legacy of the Giro d’Italia winners

Every Giro champion represents a different way to win: domination, patience, risk, endurance or tactical brilliance.

The Giro d’Italia has always been a race where human limits are exposed. Its winners are remembered not only for the final classification, but for the decisive moments that made their victories unforgettable: a mountain attack, a brave descent, a time trial under pressure, or the ability to defend the Maglia Rosa when the entire peloton was racing against them.

That is why the Giro remains one of cycling’s most fascinating races. Its champions are not simply names in a table. They are part of a story written on Italian roads, through suffering, strategy and ambition.

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