In 1993, it was announced that the
Formula One Australian Grand Prix would move from
Adelaide,
South Australia, to
Melbourne,
Victoria, from the 1996 season. Following the loss of this major sporting event, the
Government of South Australia worked to organise other major sporting events to replace the Grand Prix, including the
Adelaide 500 and the Tour Down Under. Current-day professional team
Decathlon–AG2R La Mondiale has competed in every Tour Down Under. In 2005, the Tour Down Under secured the highest UCI ranking outside Europe. In 2007, South Australian Premier
Mike Rann and former tourism minister
Jane Lomax Smith launched a campaign for the Tour Down Under to become the first race outside of Europe to secure ProTour status from the UCI, thereby guaranteeing the attendance of all the world's top teams. That campaign successfully led to the Tour Down Under being awarded ProTour status the following year, and joining the
UCI World Ranking calendar in 2009. In September 2008, Rann announced that
Lance Armstrong would make his professional cycling comeback at the 2009 race. Armstrong's participation saw visitor numbers double, with the event’s economic impact more than doubling (from $17.3 million in 2008 to $39 million in 2009) and media coverage increased five-fold. In 2009 Santos bought the naming rights and in 2010 the Tour Down Under was named Australia's Best Major Event for the second year in a row in the Qantas Tourism Awards. Armstrong participated in three successive Tour Down Under events, retiring after 2011. The 2011 Tour Down Under had an economic impact of $43 million and crowds of more than 782,000. In 2013, it attracted more than 760,400 people to
Adelaide and regional
South Australia across eight days, including 40,000 interstate and international visitors who travelled there for the event. Since then the race has continued to build, with milestones including becoming the first non-European event to achieve
UCI ProTour status, being named as Australia's Best Sporting Event in 2016 and receiving a bronze medal at the Australian Tourism Awards. Its 2020 edition attracted 779,362 spectators, created 742 full-time equivalent jobs and generated an economic benefit of $66.4 million.
COVID-19 pandemic In November 2020, organisers confirmed the 2021 edition of the race would be cancelled due to logistical and quarantine complications arising from the
COVID-19 pandemic. An all-Australian event known as the
Santos Festival of Cycling was held 19–24 January 2021, featuring six days of competitions across road, track, paracycling, BMX, mountain bike and cyclocross, and a four-stage race on the
National Road Series. The men's National Road Series event was won by
Luke Durbridge, while the women's event was won by
Sarah Gigante. In September 2021 organisers confirmed that the Tour Down Under would be cancelled for the second consecutive year due to continued travel and quarantine restrictions affecting the ability for international teams to participate. The second annual Santos Festival of Cycling was held 21–29 January 2022.
Return of the race In 2023 the Tour Down Under resumed as an international event.
Grace Brown (FDJ-SUEZ) and
Jay Vine (UAE Team Emirates) won the women's and men's races respectively. In 2026, one stage of the race was shortened by around due to predicted temperatures of and an
"Extreme" fire warning.
List of overall winners Simon Gerrans has won the Tour four times (
2006,
2012,
2014, and
2016).
Stuart O'Grady (1999 and 2001),
André Greipel (
2008 and
2010),
Daryl Impey (
2018 and
2019),
Richie Porte (
2017 and
2020) and
Jay Vine (
2023 and
2026) have won the Tour Down Under twice; Impey is the only rider to successfully defend his title. The Santos Tour Down Under was not held in 2021 and 2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but in its place was the locally focused
Santos Festival Of Cycling.
Wins per country Tour directors • 1999–2020:
Michael Turtur AO. • 2021 – :
Stuart O'Grady ==Women's racing and the Women's Tour Down Under==