Every year, the 1000 Miglia has some surprises in store. The passage through Genoa, with a view of the port and a parade along the seafront, will be the absolute novelty of the coming edition. The month of June and the five race days confirmed the more than 400 cars will cross seven Italian regions traveling anticlockwise, as in 2021.
Brescia launch point
After starting in Brescia on Tuesday afternoon, 11 June, 2024, and passing through Bergamo, Novara and Vercelli, the first leg will end in Turin.
On the second day, from Turin, the convoy will descend southwards, passing through the Langhe and through the center of Alba before heading towards Genoa, the 2024 European Capital of Sport for the first race lunch. After lunch, the race will leave the Riviera di Levante for the Tyrrhenian coast where it will reach Viareggio, the site of the arrival of the second day of the race.
All roads lead to Rome
The descent towards Rome will characterize the third leg, which will initially see a deviation into the Tuscan hinterland with the passage through Lucca, before returning to the coast at Livorno and continuing until the lunch break in Castiglione della Pescaia. In the afternoon, passing through Grosseto, entering Lazio and descending along Lake Bolsena, the day will end with a parade in Via Veneto.
Charming Umbria
After the halfway point in Rome, on the fourth day the crews will drive up to Orvieto before stopping for lunch in Solomeo, a characteristic medieval village nestling in the Umbrian hills, from where they will set off again towards Siena and Prato. Before reaching the leg finale in Bologna, drivers and navigators will cross the Futa and Raticosa passes. From Bologna, the last leg will include Ferrara and Mantua, and again Lake Garda with the Valtenesi and Salò before the classic parade in Viale Venezia in Brescia.
To enter for the 1000 Miglia, cars must hold or have applied for a certificate from the Registro 1000 Miglia.
List of eligible cars https://www.registro1000miglia.it/requirements/
Go HERE for more information
All photos © 1000 Miglia