Date: Friday, May 15
Distance: 244km
Start location: Formia
Finish location: Blockhaus
Start time: 09:45 BST / 10:45 CEST / 04:45 EDT
Finish time (approx.): 16:11 BST / 17:11 CEST / 11:45 EDT
After Thursday’s sprint chaos in Naples, the Giro d'Italia changes shape entirely on Friday. At 244 kilometres, stage seven is the longest day in this year’s race – and it finishes atop the Blockhaus, 13.6 kilometres of narrow road averaging 8.4% through the Majella massif, with gradients nudging 14% in the final push to the line.
The day begins with a climb from Formia before long flat roads give the peloton a false sense of calm. That ends at Rionero Sannitico, after which the race piles through Roccaraso, the Passo Forchetta and the Passo San Leonardo before the final reckoning. By the time the Blockhaus begins, legs will have been in the saddle for over six hours.
Giro d'Italia 2026 stage seven profile

Contenders
The main GC favourites sit more than six minutes down on maglia rosa Afonso Eulálio (Bahrain-Victorious) after the stage five chaos – this is their first real chance to start taking back time. Eulálio himself showed on the Montagna Grande di Viggiano that he can climb well, and his lead is substantial enough that he should be able to hold onto it on the Blockhaus. But the Portuguese rider is unlikely to contend for the win himself.
Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) has yet to be truly tested. He was already in the mood to attack on stage two and a long, attrition-heavy day ending on a steep climb is precisely his terrain. Visma's strength in depth is also worth noting: Sepp Kuss has been quiet, if the race explodes on the Blockhaus, the American could himself feature in the final kilometres.
Giulio Pellizzari (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) won the Tour of the Alps in convincing fashion and will have the tifosi in full voice behind him. His teammate Jai Hindley, a former Giro winner, tends to grow into a race and after a quiet opening week could make his presence felt.
Enric Mas (Movistar) and his team were the most aggressive on stage four, shredding the peloton on the Cozzo Tunno, and the Spaniard has looked in excellent condition all week. Felix Gall (Decathlon CMA CGM) has been consistently well-placed throughout and is the kind of rider who thrives as the kilometres stack up. Ben O'Connor (Jayco AlUla) is a natural climber who tends to save his best for the high mountains; the Blockhaus, after a day this long, is exactly the kind of stage that plays to his strengths. Jan Christen (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) has impressed so far, but the Blockhaus will really test whether he can hold onto a strong GC position.

Mas' Movistar team paced hard on the Cozzo Tunno climb on stage four (Image: Zac Williams / SWpix.com)
Egan Bernal (Netcompany-Ineos) was candid about suffering an abnormally high heart rate on stage four, but if that was a blip rather than a deeper concern, the 2021 champion has the instinct to make his mark here. His teammate Thymen Arensman is just two seconds behind on GC and equally motivated; on his best day he is capable of climbing well on a finish like this.
Derek Gee-West (Lidl-Trek) was fourth here last year and remains a quiet dark horse of this race. His teammate Giulio Ciccone has been openly targeting stage wins and, having worn the pink jersey earlier this week, will carry extra confidence onto the Blockhaus. The Italian's climbing sprint is as good as anyone's in a reduced group, but can he hang on to make use of it?
Prediction
We think Vingegaard will make his first real statement of this Giro on the Blockhaus.