Strade Bianche follows Omloop Het Nieuwsblad as the second WorldTour one-day race of the season, and has quickly become one of the most thrilling races of the year in its short lifetime. Iconic for its white roads – the eponymous strade bianche – the event takes place over sectors of white gravel roads before finishing in Siena. Its known for its beauty as well as its brutality.

Below, Cycling Weekly has laid out all the key information on broadcasters and live streams so you can watch Strade Bianche wherever you are.

Discovery+ (£30.99/mon)US: Max (from $18.49/mon)Canada: Flobikes ($39.99/mon)Australia: SBS (Free)Free live stream: SBS (Australia), RAI (Italy), Sporza, Auvio (Belgium)Anywhere: Watch your local stream from anywhere with NordVPN

SBS, the country’s public service broadcaster. Head to SBS On Demand to start streaming.

In Italy, the race is with public broadcaster RAI on their RAI Play web player, while Flemish and French speaking Belgians are both catered for through VRT/Sporza and RTBF/Auvio respectively.

Coverage is geo-restricted, so if you’re not in any of these countries right now, and these channels are your usual port of call, you’ll need a VPN to get your usual coverage while abroad – more on that below.

Should I use a VPN to watch cycling?

TNT Sports 3, or can be streamed on its sister platform Discovery+, priced at £30.99 a month.

TNT Sports is also £30.99 a month, but customers can get the channels cheaper with certain TV packages. Virgin Media, Sky TV and EE mobile customers can purchase TNT Sports as part of a package.

Max, which will cost $18.49 a month for the package including live sports.

Flobikes is in charge of broadcasting the race in Canada (but US Flobikes subscribers will be locked out for rights reasons). Subscriptions cost CA$39.99 a month, with big savings on annual plans.

Tadej Pogačar (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) has won the past two editions and will be on the start line, alongside 2023 winner Tom Pidcock (PinarelloQ36.5). In the women’s race, last year’s winner Demi Vollering (FDJ United-Suez), as well as Lotte Kopecky (SD Worx-Protime), who won in 2024, will both take the start, as will Kopecky’s team-mate Anna van der Breggen, who was second last year.

Last year saw Pogačar attack with Connor Swift (Ineos Grenadiers) and Pidcock, before going solo with 18km to go, while in the women’s race Vollering and Van der Breggen sprinted it out together on the final climb.


Strade Bianche