The 104th edition of the Tour de France begins with stage 1: a 14 km individual time-trial stage that starts and ends in Düsseldorf (Germany).
Stage 2 is a 203.5 km flat stage from Düsseldorf (Germany) to Liège (Belgium).
Stage 3 is a 212.5 km hilly stage from Verviers (Belgium) to Longwy.
Stage 4 is a 207.5 km flat stage from Mondorf-les-Bains (Luxembourg) to Vittel.
Stage 5 is a 160.5 km hilly stage from Vittel to La Planche des Belles Filles.
Stage 6 is a 216 km flat stage from Vesoul to Troyes.
Stage 7 is a 213.5 km flat stage from Troyes to Nuits-Saint-Georges.
Stage 8 is a 187.5 km mountain stage from Dole to Station des Rousses.
Stage 9 is a 181.5 km mountain stage from Nantua to Chambéry followed by the first of two rest days tomorrow.
Following the first rest day, the cycling resumes with stage 10: a 178 km flat stage from Périgueux to Bergerac.
Stage 11 is a 203.5 km flat stage from Eymet to Pau.
Stage 12 is a 214.5 km mountain stage from Pau to Peyragudes.
Stage 13 is a 101 km mountain stage from Saint-Girons to Foix.
Stage 14 is a 181.5 km hilly stage from Blagnac to Rodez.
Stage 15 is a 189.5 km hilly stage from Laissac-Sévérac l'Église to Le Puy-en-Velay followed by the second and final rest day tomorrow.
Following the second and final rest day, the cycling resumes with stage 16: a 165 km hilly stage from Le Puy-en-Velay to Romans-sur-Isère.
Stage 17 is a 183 km mountain stage from La Mure to Serre-Chevalier.
Stage 18 is a 179.5 km mountain stage from Briançon to Izoard.
Stage 19 is a 222.5 km flat stage from Embrun to Salon-de-Provence.
Stage 20, the penultimate day of the Tour de France, is a 22.5 km individual time-trial stage that starts and ends in Marseille.
The 104th edition of the Tour de France ends with Stage 21: a 103 km flat stage from Montgeron to Paris (Champs-Élysées).