Tour of Bruges (previous Classic Brugge–De Panne, Three Days of Bruges–De Panne and Three Days of De Panne) is a road cycling race in Belgium in late March. Since 2018 it is raced over two days with a men's race on Wednesday and a women's race on Thursday. Historically, races started in Bruges and finished in the seaside resort of De Panne. Since 2026 this race has a new name, as the race starts and finishes in Bruges. The race is considered a "sprinters classic", with many editions finishing in a sprint finish.

The women's event is included in the UCI Women's World Tour; the men's race was part of the UCI Europe Tour as a 1.HC event, but was promoted to the UCI World Tour as a 1.WT event in 2019.

History

Three Days of De Panne

The Three Days of De Panne was created in 1977 as a three-day cycling event in the week leading up to the Tour of Flanders, in late March or early April. The first day was usually a hilly stage starting in De Panne and finishing in the Flemish Ardennes. The second day held a long flat stage back to the Flemish coast, with a finish in Koksijde. The third day consisted of two stages that both started and finished in De Panne, of which the final stage was an individual time trial. Raced from Tuesday to Thursday, it was the last Flemish race ahead of the Tour of Flanders and was considered a desirable preparation for the main event on Sunday. Eric Vanderaerden, a strong sprinter and time triallist, won the race five times in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

The race director had been Bernard Van de Kerckhove; after his death in 2015, the "Bernard Van de Kerckhove trophy" was created, given to the best young rider (U23) in the race.

Three Days of Bruges–De Panne

Classic Brugge–De Panne logo

Since 2018, the Three Days of De Panne is raced under a new format following a calendar switch with Dwars door Vlaanderen. The race comes one week earlier, in the week following Milan–San Remo, and the men's event has morphed into a one-day race on Wednesday. The Flemish Ardennes roads and the concluding time trial were abandoned in favour of a route entirely in the province of West Flanders. The iconic Kemmelberg and several cobbled sectors have a more prominent part in the new course.

In order to continue the multi-day format, a women's event was inaugurated on the day after the men's race. Both races started in Bruges and had two finishing circuits in and around De Panne. The women's race is part of the UCI Women's World Tour, cycling's top tier professional competition. Jolien D'Hoore won the first running of the women's Three Days in a sprint. Six of the eight editions of the women's race have finished in a sprint finish, with the race considered a "sprinters classic".

The finish in De Panne was criticised due to the amount of street furniture and tight corners prior to the finish.

Tour of Bruges

From 2026, the race will start and finish in Bruges, with a new name of Tour of Bruges. Organisers stated that it was no longer possible for the race to safely finish in De Panne, due to the "tram tracks, train tracks, traffic islands, bus stops, and road narrowings".

Winners

Men's race

Eric Vanderaerden (pictured at the 1993 Tour de France) won the Three Days of De Panne five times, relying on strong sprint and time trialling abilities.
YearCountryRiderTeam
"Three Days of De Panne"
1977BelgiumRoger RosiersFrisol–Thirion–Gazelle
1978BelgiumGuido Van SweeveltIJsboerke–Gios
1979BelgiumGustave Van RoosbroeckIJsboerke–Warncke
1980IrelandSean KellySplendor–Admiral
1981BelgiumJan BogaertVermeer Thijs
1982NetherlandsGerrie KnetemannTI–Raleigh
1983NetherlandsCees PriemTI–Raleigh
1984NetherlandsBert OosterboschPanasonic
1985BelgiumJean-Luc VandenbrouckeLa Redoute
1986BelgiumEric VanderaerdenPanasonic
1987BelgiumEric VanderaerdenPanasonic–Isostar
1988BelgiumEric VanderaerdenPanasonic–Isostar
1989BelgiumEric VanderaerdenPanasonic–Isostar
1990NetherlandsErwin NijboerStuttgart
1991NetherlandsJelle NijdamBuckler–Colnago–Decca
1992NetherlandsFrans MaassenBuckler–Colnago–Decca
1993BelgiumEric VanderaerdenWordPerfect–Colnago–Decca
1994ItalyFabio RoscioliBrescialat–Ceramiche Refin
1995ItalyMichele BartoliMercatone Uno–Saeco
1996RussiaViatcheslav EkimovRabobank
1997BelgiumJohan MuseeuwMapei–GB
1998ItalyMichele BartoliAsics–CGA
1999BelgiumPeter Van PetegemTVM–Farm Frites
2000RussiaViatcheslav EkimovU.S. Postal Service
2001BelgiumNico MattanCofidis
2002BelgiumPeter Van PetegemLotto–Adecco
2003LatviaRaivis BelohvoščiksMarlux–Wincor Nixdorf
2004United StatesGeorge HincapieU.S. Postal Service
2005BelgiumStijn DevolderDiscovery Channel
2006BelgiumLeif HosteDiscovery Channel
2007ItalyAlessandro BallanLampre–Fondital
2008NetherlandsJoost PosthumaRabobank
2009BelgiumFrederik WillemsLiquigas
2010Great BritainDavid MillarGarmin–Transitions
2011BelgiumSébastien RosselerTeam RadioShack
2012FranceSylvain ChavanelOmega Pharma–Quick-Step
2013FranceSylvain ChavanelOmega Pharma–Quick-Step
2014BelgiumGuillaume Van KeirsbulckOmega Pharma–Quick-Step
2015NorwayAlexander KristoffTeam Katusha
2016NetherlandsLieuwe WestraAstana
2017BelgiumPhilippe GilbertQuick-Step Floors
"Three Days of Bruges–De Panne"
2018ItalyElia VivianiQuick-Step Floors
2019NetherlandsDylan GroenewegenTeam Jumbo–Visma
2020BelgiumYves LampaertDeceuninck–Quick-Step
"Classic Brugge–De Panne"
2021IrelandSam BennettDeceuninck–Quick-Step
2022BelgiumTim MerlierAlpecin–Fenix
2023BelgiumJasper PhilipsenAlpecin–Deceuninck
2024BelgiumJasper PhilipsenAlpecin–Deceuninck
2025ColombiaJuan Sebastián MolanoUAE Team Emirates XRG
"Tour of Bruges"
2026NetherlandsDylan GroenewegenUnibet Rose Rockets

Multiple winners

WinsRiderEditions
5Eric Vanderaerden(BEL)1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1993
2Michele Bartoli(ITA)1995, 1998
Viatcheslav Ekimov(RUS)1996, 2000
Jasper Philipsen(BEL)2023, 2024
Peter Van Petegem(BEL)1999, 2002
Sylvain Chavanel(FRA)2012, 2013
Dylan Groenewegen(NED)2019, 2026

Wins per country

WinsCountry
24Belgium
10Netherlands
5Italy
2France Ireland Russia
1Colombia Great Britain Latvia Norway United States

Women's race

YearCountryRiderTeam
"Three Days of Bruges–De Panne Women"
2018BelgiumJolien D'HooreMitchelton–Scott
2019NetherlandsKirsten WildWNT–Rotor Pro Cycling
2020NetherlandsLorena WiebesTeam Sunweb
"Classic Brugge–De Panne Women"
2021AustraliaGrace BrownTeam BikeExchange
2022ItalyElisa BalsamoTrek–Segafredo
2023Great BritainPfeiffer GeorgiTeam DSM
2024ItalyElisa BalsamoLidl–Trek
2025NetherlandsLorena WiebesTeam SD Worx–Protime
"Tour of Bruges Women"
2026Great BritainCarys LloydMovistar Team

Multiple winners

WinsRiderEditions
2Elisa Balsamo(ITA)2022, 2024
2Lorena Wiebes(NED)2020, 2025

Wins per country

WinsCountry
3Netherlands
2Great Britain Italy
1Australia Belgium

Notes

External links