Europe may be the home of the WorldTour but once a year the spotlight shifts to the completely different time zone and weather, heading to Australia for a southern hemisphere start to the season.

In 2026 the position of the block of racing down under as the entrenched season starter for the year of WorldTour racing has only been strengthened by new rules that mean a WorldTeam can only miss one top-tier event a season. That means more teams than ever will be out to take on the Australian block, combining the WorldTour events of the Tour Down Under and Cadel Evans Great Ocean Road Race for men and women, with some other ProSeries races added in too.

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Westbridge Funds Road National Championships a rare opportunity for the domestic riders to put their prowess on display against the returning WorldTour professionals. As such many of the hopefuls put it all on the line to be in top form for January, chasing performances to open doors to the WorldTour but there will be no gifts from those who have already passed through them, not given the pride of a national title is at stake.

The race against the clock opens up competition, playing out on a 9.8km route in Bold Park with a relatively flat start and a hairpin turn. The elite women take on three laps and the elite men four.

Brodie Chapman (UAE Team ADQ) and Luke Plapp (Jayco-AlUla) will be on the start line to defend their time trial titles but neither have the luxury of taking another year in green and gold for granted. Plapp’s biggest rival on paper is 2023 national champion Jay Vine (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) while Chapman has a wary eye on a number of players, particularly 20-year-old Felicity Wilson-Haffenden (Lidl-Trek) if the 2023 junior world time trial champion decides to throw her hat into the elite ring.

KIGALI, RWANDA - SEPTEMBER 21: Brodie Chapman of Team Australia competes during the 98th UCI Cycling World Championships Kigali 2025 - Women Elite Individual Time Trial a 31.2km race from Kigali to Kigali on September 21, 2025 in Kigali, Rwanda. (Photo by Dario Belingheri/Getty Images)

Brodie Chapman will be chasing another title against the clock (Image credit: Getty Images)

After the time trial, it’s time for the fast finishers to chase their chance on a 1.2km criterium course in Northbridge with six corners every lap. In the 50 minutes plus two laps elite and U23 women’s criterium, Amber Pate (Liv-AlUla-Jayco) will be chasing her third national title in a row. In the elite men’s criterium of 70 minutes plus two laps, Sam Welsford delivered a popular home-town win in 2025 and this year he’ll be lining up to see if he can deliver another in his first outing in Ineos Grenadiers colours.

After the criteriums have played out Luke Durbridge (Jayco-AlUla) and Lucinda Stewart (Liv-AlUla-Jayco Continental Team) will step into Sunday’s road races as the elite defending champions, though they will be facing an unpredictable battle on the 13.6km circuit that twists its way through Kings Park and sweeps by the Swan River before hitting the CBD. The punchy course last year caught many off guard, with both Durbridge and Stewart winners from the early break but there’ll be no excuses given it is now the second year running that the course will host the national title chase.

Jayco-AlUla will be a particularly hard outfit to overcome in the 177km elite men’s race, with Ben O’Connor joining the fray for a home-town title chase. That leaves them in the enviable position of holding three of the top cards as of course they also have the 2022-2024 winner of the elite road race title, Plapp. Australia’s only WorldTour team also presents a compelling case in the 109km women’s elite and U23 road race, as along with Stewart they have 2024 winner Ruby Roseman-Gannon lining up on the course that should suit her ability to deliver a fast finish after getting over the punchy climbs.

SD Worx-Protime traditionally the most notable absence.

The three-stage 395km women’s Santos Tour Down Under will kick off the proceedings in Willunga on Saturday, January 17 and conclude with a fiery stage to Campbelltown that includes two ascents of the Corkscrew climb. There looks set to be strong competition for the race winner’s ochre jersey as, on top of the full roster of teams, last year’s runner-up Silke Smulders (Liv-AlUla-Jayco) and the rider that beat her to the top spot, Noemi Rüegg (EF Education-Oatly) have both been confirmed, as has her teammate, world champion Magdeleine Vallieres. Mavi García and Brodie Chapman could also prove a formidable combination for UAE Team ADQ.

STIRLING, AUSTRALIA - JANUARY 19: (L-R) Eleonora Ciabocco of Italy and Team Picnic PostNL - White Best Young Rider Jersey, Noemi Ruegg of Switzerland and Team EF Education-Oatly - Orange Santos Leader's Jersey and Alyssa Polites of Australia and ARA Australian Cycling Team - Polka Dot Mountain Jersey celebrate at podium during the 9th Santos Women's Tour Down Under 2025, Stage 3 a 105.9km stage from Stirling to Stirling 444m / #UCIWWT / on January 19, 2025 in Stirling, Australia. (Photo by Dario Belingheri/Getty Images)

The jersey winners at the women’s Tour Down Under 2025 (Image credit: Getty Images)

The men’s Santos Tour Down Under then begins with a short and sharp prologue on Tuesday, January 20, which will make sure the GC battle starts early. Defending champion Jhonatan Narváez (UAE Team ADQ-XRG) is on the start list but the team also have 2023 winner Jay Vine on the squad so there is no question it will be a tough combination to beat. Though this year it is also clear Jayco-AlUla will be doing its utmost to recapture the home race, bringing Ben O’Connor to Adelaide for an early season GC outing. Then there is new Ineos Grenadiers rider Sam Welsford, who is bound to be one to watch in the sprints, walking away with three stage wins the last two years.

While the men’s Tour Down Under is beginning to unfold the women also have a one-day race, run over 12 laps of an 8.5km circuit. The UCI ProSeries level race takes place after the conclusion of the men’s stage 1 on Wednesday, January 21.

Ally Wollaston (FDJ United-Suez) will be on the start line but it seems a given considering her presence at the Tour Down Under, her defending status, and that its as close as the rider from New Zealand gets to a home race. She’ll have a target on her back in the race which often finishes with a stretched out field and sprint from a small group but that doesn’t necessarily mean that her rivals will be able to find a way to beat her over the line if she comes back with the form that took her to the top step of the 145km race in 2025.

It also seems that Mauro Schmid (Jayco-Alula) will be back to defend his title a the 186km men’s race, given he is on the Tour Down Under start list, and the second-placed Aaron Gate (XDS-Astana) was certainly hopeful that he’d be back when Cyclingnews spoke to him at the end of last season.

However, one thing revealed by the history of this race is that the winner one year is far from a good indicator of who will be on the top step the next. Since the men’s event started in 2015 there hasn’t been a single victor that has managed to repeat the feat. 2024 winner Laurence Pithie (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) is the rider who has come closest, having been back on the podium with third in 2025, so he’ll certainly be a rider to watch. Simon Clarke (NSN Cycling Team) will also be in the spotlight no matter the outcome as he will be bringing his career to a close at the event that is named after his close friend and where he has twice stood on the podium.

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