July 27, 2025
The Transcontinental Race
This is it—the big one. The ultimate self-supported race across Europe and arguably the world’s top ultra-endurance challenge. Time to give it a shot!
Details
Start: Fisterra, Spain
Finish: Constanta, Romania
↗️ Distance: 4’000km
↔️ Elevation: 40’000m
About the race
The Transcontinental Race is the definitive self-supported bicycle race across Europe. At the sharp end it is a beautifully hard bicycle race, simple in design but complex in execution. Factors of self reliance, logistics, navigation and judgement burden racers’ minds as well as their physiques. The strongest excel and redefine what we think possible, while many experienced riders target only a finish.
The Transcontinental is a single stage race in which the clock never stops. Riders plan, research and navigate their own course and choose when and where to rest. They will take only what they can carry and consume only what they can find. Four mandatory control points guide their route and ensure a healthy amount of climbing to reach some of cycling’s most beautiful and historic monuments. Each year our riders cover around 4000 km to reach the finish line.
#TCRNo11
TCRNo11 extends eastward like a tear line across Europe. A permission slip for a new decade of adventure, where change is the only constant. Riders of the Transcontinental have long learned to accept this aphorism, facing each day, each kilometre, and each new reality as and when they arrive. The most successful adapting, overcoming, and thriving in each fresh scenario.
As our riders do, so must the race change and adapt. Thriving in order to survive, redrawing the Transcontinental map. Starting on Europe’s far western edge, where pilgrims have ended their journeys for a thousand years, our riders go further west still, to Fisterra, the windswept cape which Romans believed to be the end of the world. From here, the route treads an almost horizontal line across the continent, crossing fewer parallels than any previous TCR and finishing less than two degrees north of its start.
At the race’s northernmost point, the Strada dell’Assietta, our flashback through history becomes more recent. It was here, as Ibbett chased down Hayden, the race took in its first off-road parcours. After traversing the Alps we swing south, exploring previously unreached roads in the Apennines of Italy, before crossing the Adriatic Sea to the Balkans, the Danube, and finally Constanta - Ancient Rome’s Tomis.