Saturday 21 March 2026 at 00h32
La Primavera is already here today, Saturday, March 21, 2026! Milan-Sanremo 2026 will be the Italian classic that, as usual, derives its difficulty from its length (no less than 298 km) and the climbs that complicate the final stretch of the race.
In this post, you’ll find the route for Milan-San Remo 2026 on an OpenStreetMap map — also downloadable in Google Earth — as well as the race profile, its schedule, and ... the list of starters!
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The 2026 Milan-San Remo route on OpenStreetMap, the schedule, and the race profile
Milan-San Remo 2026 will start, as it did last year, in Pavia, south of Milan, from Piazza della Vittoria, turning immediately left onto Strada Nuova.The riders will then head north at first, but at Zeccone they will turn left toward Certosa di Pavia, before returning toward Pavia. Unlike last year, when they continued south and southwest, this time they head west to Sannazzaro de’ Burgondi before turning south to Casei and then briefly east to Voghera, where they rejoin the 2025 route. As in 2025, they will therefore rejoin the usual route in Tortona, which will eventually take them to San Remo. From there, they pass through Nova Ligure, Basaluzzo, Silvano D’Orba, Ovida, and Campo Ligure, before reaching the race’s first major climb, the Passo del Turchino (5.6 km at 2.9%).
They then continue toward the sea and follow the coast all the way, through Arenzano, Varazze, Savona, Finale Ligure, Ceriale, and Laigueglia, and even more so as they enter the final stretch of the last 50 kilometers, where they face no fewer than five climbs before finally crossing the finish line—a moment of relief after nearly 300 kilometers in their legs.
There they encounter, in succession, Capo Mele (1.8 km at 3.6%), Capo Cervo (2.1 km at 2.5%) and Capo Berta (2 km at 6.3%), before climbing the famous Cipressa (5.6 km at 4.1%) and finally the Poggio di Sanremo (3.7 km at 3.7%), before heading toward the finish line in Sanremo, on Via Roma.
Below you will find the route of the 2026 Milan-Sanremo on an OpenStreetMap map, the schedule, and the race profile. Click on the different images to open them.

The 2026 Milan-San Remo route in Google Earth
Would you like to open the 2026 Milan-San Remo route in Google Earth instead, so you can take a virtual flyover of the Italian classic’s route? You can do so by downloading the KML file below:>> Download the 2026 Milan-San Remo route in Google Earth
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The 2026 Milan-San Remo start list
The 2026 Milan-Sanremo start list features an impressive lineup of contenders for the win! It includes, of course, Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates XRG) versus Mathieu van der Poel (Alpecin-Premier Tech) ... but also names like Tom Pidcock (Pinarello-Q36.5), Wout Van Aert (Team Visma | Lease a Bike), the 2020 winner, and Filippo Ganna (INEOS Grenadiers), who is looking to reach the top step of the podium after having watched it from the step just below on several occasions.The list also includes names such as Romain Grégoire (Groupama-FDJ United), Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek), Matteo Jorgenson (Team Visma | Lease a Bike), Primož Roglič and Giulio Pellizzari (Red Bull-BORA-hansgrohe), and Andrea Vendrame (Jayco AlUla).
Below is the complete list of starters for Milan-Sanremo 2026 with their bib numbers:

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this publication is published in: Classics | OpenStreetMap/Google Maps/Google Earth





by Thomas Vergouwen over