Cycling Monaco & the French Riviera — The Complete Guide

Stajvelo — Field Guide

Cycling Monaco
& the French Riviera

From the seafront at Port Hercule to the legendary cols of the Alpes-Maritimes. Everything you need to ride this coast well.

Routes covered

6

Climbs profiled

8

Rideable season

Year-round

Written from

Monaco

Monaco is the only place in the world where you can begin a ride at sea level, reach 1,000 metres of alpine altitude, and be back for lunch on a terrace overlooking the Mediterranean. That compression of landscape — coast, corniche, col — is what makes this corner of Europe unlike anywhere else on a bicycle.

This guide was written by the team at Stajvelo, the only bicycle brand conceived and designed in Monaco. We ride these roads. We know where the light is best at 7am on the Col de la Madone, and which café in Peille deserves a detour. Consider this the guide we wish had existed when we first arrived.

Road cycling

The classic routes

Three tiers of difficulty, all departing from Monaco or within easy reach. Road surfaces are generally excellent year-round.

Route 01

The Three Corniches

RoadEasy
Distance46 km
Elevation620 m
StartPort Hercule, Monaco
Best timeEarly morning

The Riviera’s three coastal roads — Corniche Inférieure, Moyenne Corniche, and Grande Corniche — form the most cinematic cycling circuit in France. Each sits at a different altitude, each offers a different relationship with the sea below.

From Monaco, take the Corniche Inférieure east through Cap-Martin to Menton. Return via the Moyenne Corniche through Eze, then descend via the Grande Corniche past La Turbie. You loop back through Beausoleil and into Monaco having covered three distinct road personalities in a single morning.

Stajvelo tip — Start by 7am in summer. The Corniche Inférieure becomes a car park by 9am in July and August. In spring and autumn, traffic is negligible and the light off the water is extraordinary.

Route 02

Col d’Èze & La Turbie

RoadModerate
Distance38 km loop
Elevation950 m
Summit507 m (Col d’Èze)
Bike typeRoad or gravel

The Col d’Èze is Monaco’s home climb — close, accessible and relentlessly beautiful. Less than 5 km from the coastline, it rises nearly 500 metres with views that take in Cap Ferrat to the west and the Italian border to the east.

From Monaco, climb through Beausoleil and follow the signs for La Turbie via the Grande Corniche. The Trophée des Alpes, a Roman monument at 480 metres, marks the halfway point. Continue to the Col d’Èze summit before descending via Èze village.

Stajvelo tip — La Turbie has some of the best views of Monaco you will ever see — and almost no one stops there. The village café is open from 7:30am.

Route 03

Col de la Madone

RoadHard
Distance55 km from Monaco
Elevation1,750 m
Col altitude927 m
Pro pedigreeLance Armstrong benchmark

The Madone is a pilgrimage. Lance Armstrong used it as his benchmark before every Tour de France. Today, 40 World Tour professionals based in Monaco train on it regularly.

From Menton, head north from the seafront and climb continuously for over 12 kilometres to the col at 927 metres. No shade. Exposed limestone. The gradient regularly touches 9%. Return via Cap Martin and the Moyenne Corniche.

Stajvelo tip — Trek named their flagship aero bike after this climb. Do not attempt it in July without at least two bidons and sunscreen above factor 30.

Gravel cycling

Off the tarmac

The Alpes-Maritimes have some of the finest gravel riding in southern Europe. These three routes reward riders willing to leave the coast behind.

Gravel 01

Col de Braus — UCI Gravel Circuit

GravelHard
Distance~70 km
Elevation2,100 m
SurfaceMixed tarmac / gravel
Race heritageUCI Gravel World Series

The Col de Braus gained new prestige as a Tour de France stage climb in 2024, and hosts the Monaco round of the UCI Gravel World Series. The route climbs to the Col des Boeufs, descends with views over the Mercantour massif, then pushes through forest to the Farghet Plateau.

The circuit returns via Col du Castillon and past Saint-Agnès before finishing near Peille in the hills above Monaco. An exceptional day out for experienced riders.

Stajvelo tip — The gravel sections between Col des Boeufs and Farghet are wide fire road. A 40mm tyre is comfortable; 35mm works fine.

Gravel 02

Fort de la Revère Loop

GravelAccessible
Distance35 km
Elevation780 m
Surface50/50 tarmac & gravel
HighlightViews over Monaco & Cap Ferrat

A gentler introduction to the Riviera’s gravel terrain. The route climbs gradually from the coast into wooded hills before reaching Fort de la Revère at 900 metres. From here the panorama stretches south: Monaco, Cap Ferrat, the open sea.

The gravel tracks are non-technical and wide. Perfect for riders transitioning from road to gravel, or for a contemplative half-day away from the coast road traffic.

Stajvelo tip — This is the ideal route for our Rocchetta or Nomades Gravel on a rest-day ride. The surface is forgiving; the views are worth more than the fitness cost.

Gravel 03

Via del Sale — Italian Border

GravelEpic
Distance99 km
Elevation2,800 m
SurfaceAncient military road
StartBreil-sur-Roya (1h from Monaco)

The Via del Sale traces an ancient salt-trading road along the Franco-Italian border ridge. This is not a day ride; it is an experience that requires planning.

Start in Breil-sur-Roya, climb to the border ridge via Col de Tende and Pas du Tanarel, then follow the ridgeline south before descending to Menton on the coast.

Stajvelo tip — Allow a full day with an early start. There are no cafés on the ridge. The descent into Menton at sunset is worth every metre of the 2,800 m climbed.

Quick reference

The key climbs at a glance

Climb Altitude Avg gradient From Monaco Type

Col d’Èze

Monaco’s home climb

507 m 5.5% 12 km Road

La Turbie

Roman monument at summit

480 m 6.1% 9 km Road

Col de la Madone

Pro tour benchmark

927 m 7.3% 30 km Road

Col de Braus

UCI Gravel World Series

1,002 m 6.8% 28 km Gravel

Col du Castillon

Above Saint-Agnès

728 m 5.2% 22 km Gravel

Col de Turini

Paris-Nice & Rally legend

1,607 m 6.4% 55 km Road

Fort de la Revère

Best views of Monaco

900 m 4.8% 18 km Gravel

Col de Vence

Winter classic

963 m 5.8% 50 km Road

Planning your trip

When to ride

The Riviera is genuinely rideable year-round. Each season has a distinct character.

Winter

November — February

The best-kept secret on the Riviera. Roads are quiet, skies often clear, temperatures 10–16°C on the coast. Pro teams descend on Monaco in January.

Spring

March — May

The premier season. Paris-Nice passes through in March. Wildflowers on the col roads, warm enough for a jersey without a gilet by April.

Summer

June — August

Start before 7am to beat the coast road traffic. The high cols are at their best in July. Carry two bidons minimum above 500 m.

Autumn

September — October

A quieter, golden version of spring. Tourist traffic dissipates after mid-September. September is considered the finest riding month by most residents.

What to ride

Stajvelo for every route

Three bikes for three ways of riding this coast.

For road routes

Beau Rivage

Full carbon road bike, designed for climbs like the Madone. Available with Shimano Ultegra Di2 through SRAM Red eTap AXS.

Discover →

For gravel routes

Rocchetta

The Riviera’s gravel terrain demands versatility. The Rocchetta handles fort roads, fire tracks and asphalt descents with equal composure.

Discover →

For e-assist rides

Nomades Gravel

The cols of the Alpes-Maritimes without the suffering. Opens every route in this guide to a wider range of riders.

Discover →

Getting here

  • Nice Côte d’Azur Airport is 22 km from Monaco
  • Train from Nice to Monaco takes 20 minutes, bikes allowed on TER trains
  • Stajvelo showroom can arrange rental or delivery
  • Fontvieille is the most convenient base for early morning departures

What to carry

  • Two bidons minimum in summer — no reliable water points above 600 m
  • Windproof layer for descents — temperatures drop 6–8°C per 1,000 m
  • Basic repair kit: inner tube, CO₂ cartridge, tyre levers, multi-tool
  • Cash — village cafés near Peille and La Turbie often don’t accept cards

Rules of the road

  • French traffic law: ride single-file on roads with significant traffic
  • Helmets strongly advised on the cols
  • The Corniche Inférieure is a public road — motor traffic has right of way
  • Monte-Carlo city centre: use as start/end point, not a route

Service & support

  • Stajvelo Atelier in Fontvieille: full-service workshop for all brands
  • Partner workshops in Nice and Menton
  • Bike rental from the Stajvelo showroom — road and gravel
  • Route GPX files available on request

Stajvelo — Monaco

Ready to ride?

Visit our showroom in Fontvieille to see the bikes in person, discuss the right build for your riding, or book a rental for your stay on the Riviera.

Stajvelo — Le Triton, Fontvieille, Monaco The only bicycle brand designed in Monaco stajvelo.com