All the bikes and tech on display at the 2024 Tour De France

By Jack Luke

Published: Wednesday, 12 June 2024 at 10:00 AM


The 2024 Tour de France starts on 29 June in Florence, making a loop through Cesenatico, home of 1998 winner Marco Pantani before heading to France.

This year’s route is unusual, looping anticlockwise past Paris before crossing the Pyrenees and finishing after 3,493km in Nice.

There are two time trials – 25.3km on stage 7 in Burgundy and the final 33.7km stage from Monaco to Nice, which will see the riders on their fast, specialist equipment. 

As usual, there’s some very flashy tech on show throughout the race and we can expect more to be announced in the run-up to the Grand Depart. This will probably include Trek’s new skinny-tubed Madone look-alike, the unreleased updated Pinarello Dogma F and the refreshed Canyon Aeroad.

More will certainly be unearthed by the sharp-eyed tech nerds at BikeRadar as the race proceeds.

Read on for a complete list of the bikes in this year’s Tour de France, along with the components they’re fitted with and our pick of some of the new bikes and tech to keep an eye out for.

Tour de France 2024 bike brands

The 2024 Tour de France peloton consists of 22 teams of eight, making 176 riders in total.

The 18 WorldTour squads receive an automatic invitation to compete, while four second-tier Pro Continental teams receive a wildcard invitation. Between them, 19 bike brands are represented. 

New brands this year are ENVE with its Melee, which costs over £10,000 in a consumer build with Ultegra. This is ridden by Team TotalEnergies.

Van Rysel’s £9,000 RCR Pro bike – the most affordable in the pro peloton – is used by Decathlon-AG2R. 

A notable leaver is Lapierre, which had been a feature of top-level men’s cycling for 22 years. Its place as bike provider to the Groupama-FDJ team has been taken by Wilier, now one of three brands to sponsor two teams, along with Specialized and Canyon.

Lotto-Dstny has changed from Ridley to Orbea bikes this year.

Bike brands represented at the 2024 Tour de France:

  • Bianchi: Arkéa-B&B Hotels
  • Cannondale: EF Education-EasyPost
  • Canyon: Alpecin-Deceuninck, Movistar Team
  • Cervélo: Visma-Lease a Bike
  • Colnago: UAE Team Emirates 
  • Cube: Intermarché-Wanty
  • Dare: Uno-X Mobility
  • ENVE: Team TotalEnergies
  • Factor: Israel-Premier Tech
  • Giant: Team Jayco-AlUla
  • Look: Cofidis
  • Merida: Bahrain Victorious
  • Pinarello: Ineos Grenadiers
  • Orbea: Lotto-Dstny
  • Scott: Team DSM-Firmenich PostNL
  • Specialized: Bora-Hansgrohe, Soudal-QuickStep
  • Trek: Lidl-Trek
  • Van Rysel: Decathlon-AG2R La Mondiale
  • Wilier Triestina: Astana-Qazaqstan, Groupama-FDJ

What’s new in tech?

The all-rounder reigns

Teams are increasingly equipped with a single all-rounder lightweight/aero bike rather than separate aero and climbing bikes. – Matt Grayson / Our Media

While a few years ago, many teams had a separate aero bike for flat stages, then climbed on a lightweight bike when the road pointed uphill, most teams now have one bike for all stages. 

Lightweight bikes are now almost as aero as the aero bikes of a few years ago. In some cases, such as the Cannondale SuperSix, they’re claimed to be more so.

With most pro bikes close to the 6.8kg UCI bike weight limit, there’s no reason to have a separate climbing bike, so one bike can now do it all.

No Campagnolo

Thompson Falcon Super Record Wireless bike at Velofollies
Campagnolo is absent from the Tour de France this year. – Ashley Quinlan / Our Media

Campagnolo has been a feature of the Tour for almost 100 years, but in the last few the number of teams using its groupsets has dwindled. Last year, there was one, this year there are none.  

That means all teams at the 2024 Tour de France will use Shimano Dura-Ace or the latest SRAM Red AXS groupset on their bikes. 

There are no wheels from Campagnolo or its Fulcrum companion brand either.  

Will Campagnolo return to the pro peloton? Time will tell, but for now, its momentum appears to be in gravel, with a new second-tier Ekar GT groupset joining the original Ekar in February.

1x will become even more important

SRAM Red XPLR AXS rear derailleur
1×13-speed SRAM Red XPLR made an appearance at the Unbound gravel race. – Sam Andrews / Our Media

The first outing of single-chainring only bikes on the race circuit a few years ago with Aqua Blue Sport ended unhappily, but 1x hasn’t died in the pro peloton.

Jonas Vingegaard rode a 1x bike on two road stages of last year’s Tour and there have been several other notable instances of riders using the tech – not least Primoz Roglič, when he won the penultimate-stage time trial at the 2023 Giro d’Italia to clinch the overall victory. 

Will 1x go mainstream at the Tour? For pro riders, a major issue is the potentially larger jumps between gear ratios than with a 2x setup.

The increasing number of sprockets available makes this less of a problem though, with 12-speed cassettes providing one- or two-tooth jumps between the most-used ratios.

Now, a new 13-speed SRAM Red XPLR groupset has been spotted on gravel bikes ridden at Unbound. Having 13 ratios to choose from could help to increase acceptance of 1x setups in the Tour, with their simplicity, aero benefits and lower weight making them attractive.

Riders will take risks with tyre choices

32.2mm Continental GP5000 TT TR tyre on Tadej Pogačar's Colnago V4Rs before the 2023 Tour de France Grand Depart
A 32.2mm Continental GP5000 TT TR tyre on Tadej Pogačar’s Colnago V4Rs before the 2023 Tour de France Grand Depart. – George Scott / Our Media

As with disc brakes, it’s taken a while for the pros to see the benefits of tubeless tyres. But almost all teams have now swapped to these from glued-on tubular.

While inopportune flats were a fact of life with tubs, the sealant in tubeless tyres provides some protection to help keep you riding. Wheel and bike changes with thru-axles have become much slicker too.

That looks to have led some riders to swap to lightweight time trial tyres in place of their sponsors’ standard road tyres at the 2023 Tour. At the expense of reduced puncture resistance, most time trial tyres are lighter and faster-rolling than their road equivalents. We expect more riders to follow suit this year.

Tour de France 2024 bikes

All 18 WorldTour teams ride the Tour de France and every one of them gets the pick of the best bikes from their sponsors’ ranges. That includes all teams using 12-speed wireless/semi-wireless electronic groupsets on their road bikes and a choice of top-spec carbon wheels.

The invited Pro Continental teams (Israel-Premier Tech, Lotto-Dstny, TotalEnergies, Uno-X Mobility) too are on top-spec bikes and equipment – there’s no second-best here.

Alpecin-Deceuninck (ADC)

Alpecin-Deceuninck is one of two teams riding the Canyon Aeroad.

Arkéa-B&B Hotels (ARK)

The Bianchi Oltre RC is one of two aero options for the team.

Astana-Qazaqstan (AST)

Astana Qazaqstan’s main ride is the Wilier Filante SLR.

Bahrain Victorious (TBV)

Merida rides the Reacto aero bike as well as the lightweight Scultura.

Bora-Hansgrohe (BOH)

Bora-Hansgrohe has an all-Specialized setup.

Cofidis (COF)

Look supplies its bikes to the Cofidis team.

Decathlon-AG2R La Mondiale Team (DAT)

The Decathlon-AG2R team ride Decathlon’s new Van Rysel RCR Pro.

EF Education-EasyPost (EFE)

The Cannondale SuperSix Evo LAB71 is both low in weight and aero.

Groupama-FDJ (GFC)

Stefan Küng’s 2024 Paris-Roubaix Wilier Filante SLR
Goupama-FDJ has switched from Lapierre to Wilier bikes this year. – Matt Grayson / Our Media

Ineos Grenadiers (IGD)

Ineos Grenadiers riders are on the Pinarello Dogma F.

Intermarché-Wanty (IWA)

Cube supplies bikes and its Newmen wheels to Intermarché-Wanty.

Israel-Premier Tech (IPT)

2024 Factor Ostro VAM
The new 2024 Factor Ostro VAM is ridden by Israel-Premier Tech. – Factor

Lidl-Trek (LTK)

The new Trek Émonda has a similar profile to the Madone, just slimmed down.

Lotto-Dstny (LTD)

Lotto Dstny has switched to Orbea bikes this year.

Movistar Team (MOV)

Movistar is riding the Canyon Aeroad at the Tour.

Soudal-QuickStep (SOQ)

Soudal-QuickStep riders are using the Specialized Tarmac SL8.

Team DSM-Firmenich PostNL (DFP)

The aero Scott Foil is the ride for DSM.

Team Jayco-AlUla (JAY)

Jayco-AlUla’s bikes are an all-Giant affair.

Team Visma-Lease a Bike (TVL)

Visma-Lease a Bike rides the Cervélo R5 as well as the S5.

TotalEnergies (TEN)

TotalEnergies has switched to the ENVE Melee this year – probably the only pro bike with mudguard mounts.

UAE Team Emirates (UAD)

Is the pink Colnago in for a yellow respray for the Tour?

Uno-X Mobility (UXM)

Uno-X Mobility uses bikes from Norwegian brand Dare.