Vendée Globe
The Vendée Globe is widely regarded as the toughest single-handed regatta and is not without reason called the "Everest of the Seas": one skipper, one boat, no stops, no outside help – and a course of around 24,000 nautical miles through the Atlantic, Indian Ocean and the feared Southern Ocean. Every four years the world's best IMOCA 60 sailors start in Les Sables-d'Olonne on the French Atlantic coast and sail eastward until they arrive alone in the finish harbour weeks or months later. Anyone following Legendary Offshore Races cannot ignore this race – it defines standards for safety, boat technology and media reach in offshore and long-distance sailing.
What is the Vendée Globe?
The Vendée Globe is a single-handed non-stop round-the-world race exclusively for the IMOCA 60 class. Unlike stage races such as The Ocean Race, no harbour may be entered, no crew taken on board and no technical assistance provided from outside. Every repair, every weather decision and every night watch lies solely with the skipper – that makes the competition the ultimate test in single-handed sailing.
The three great cape passages
The course routing requires passage of three legendary Cape Horn equivalents in the Southern Hemisphere:
- Cape Agulhas / Cape of Good Hope – entrance to the Indian Ocean, often the first heavy storm conditions.
- Cape Leeuwin – southwest of Australia, treacherous low-pressure systems and cold water.
- Cape Horn – southernmost tip of South America, symbol of offshore boundary experiences.
Course routing at a glance
Distinction from other offshore formats
While The Ocean Race sails in stages with a crew and other formats in Legendary Offshore Races cover shorter or more manual routes, the Vendée Globe combines global distance, non-stop character and strictly solo in one format. More on classification: Regatta vs. Cruising vs. Offshore.
History and milestones
The idea emerged in the late 1980s – inspired by the 1968 Golden Globe Challenge and the desire to create a regular, professionally organised solo race. The first Vendée Globe started on 26 November 1989 with 13 participants; only seven sailed to the finish. Since then the race has taken place on a four-year cycle and has developed from adventure to globally followed elite sport.
Vendée Globe milestones
Notable winners and stories
The Vendée Globe thrives on human drama: capsizes in the Southern Ocean, spectacular rescues and comebacks shape the narrative. Michel Desjoyeaux remains the only double winner (2000–01 and 2008–09). François Gabart set a record of 78 days in 2012–13 that stood for a decade. The 2020–21 edition went to Yannick Bestaven, who received time credits from the jury for assistance in a rescue operation – a rare example of how fairness and sportsmanship are anchored in the rules.
The tenth edition 2024–25 marked a technological leap: Charlie Dalin won on a foil-equipped IMOCA 60 in around 64 days, clearly beating Gabart's best mark. This shows how foils, data analysis and professional preparation are pushing the boundaries of what is possible.
IMOCA 60 boat class
The Vendée Globe is closely linked to the IMOCA class (International Monohull Open Class Association). The 60-foot monohull yachts are high-performance carbon machines with foils that partially lift the hull out of the water above a certain speed. Those who want to deepen the technical background will find details under Figaro and IMOCA single-handed and IMOCA and new boats.
Technical key data
- Length: 18.28 metres (60 feet)
- Beam: approx. 5.80 metres (widened in newer generations for more stability)
- Mast height: up to approx. 29 metres
- Displacement: approx. 7.5–8 tonnes
- Foils: permitted since rules extension; standard on newer boats from around 2020
IMOCA generations compared
Rules and safety requirements
The Vendée Globe rulebook is deliberately strict – it aims to minimise risk without diluting the character as the ultimate challenge.
Core rules
- Non-stop – no entering harbours; anchoring only under strict conditions.
- No outside assistance – repairs only with own material and own tools on board.
- Solo – no crew, no co-skipper, no material exchange with other boats.
- IMOCA class rules – measurement certificate, safety equipment and construction regulations are checked before the start.
- Rescue – assistance in life-threatening situations is permitted and is treated separately in the scoring.
Important: The "no-assistance rule" is the heart of the Vendée Globe. It distinguishes the race from almost all other offshore formats and makes every successful arrival a personal masterpiece.
Safety equipment (selection)
The Southern Ocean remains the most dangerous phase: ice fields, storms with over 50 knots and waves several metres high challenge even experienced professionals. Safety equipment is not a formality – it decides between life and death.
Strategy and tactics on the course
Success in the Vendée Globe depends less on short tactical duels than on long-term routing, boat condition and self-management. The best skippers combine meteorological knowledge with psychological stability over two to three months of isolation.
Routing and weather windows
The central strategic question is: how far south do you sail? Closer to the Antarctic low-pressure belt means stronger wind and higher speeds – but also more risk from ice, storms and material stress. A more northerly route saves risk but costs distance and time. Details on methodology: Offshore and long-distance regattas.
Routing decision: process
Sleep management and damage control
IMOCA skippers sleep in micro-sessions of 20–40 minutes, often controlled by autopilot and alarm limits. Material damage – torn foil, water ingress, rig problems – must be contained immediately because defects spread uncontrollably in storms. Professionals train repair scenarios for months before the start.
The most important strategic phases
- Start to Cape of Good Hope – fast settling in, positioning before the Indian Ocean.
- Indian Ocean to Cape Leeuwin – correctly assess low-pressure systems and ice limits.
- Pacific to Cape Horn – longest open-sea leg, often the toughest conditions.
- Cape Horn and Atlantic ascent – psychological turning point, check material after southern cape damage.
- Final approach to Les Sables – use last weather windows, tactical refinements in changing coastal wind.
Qualification and participation
Not every IMOCA skipper may start in the Vendée Globe. The field is limited – typically 40 starting places – and qualification requires proven offshore experience.
Typical path to the start
- Figaro season – French single-handed school, many Vendée Globe skippers come from here.
- IMOCA qualification races – e.g. Transat Jacques Vabre, Route du Rhum, The Transat.
- Solitaire du Figaro – multi-week single-handed stages as a talent test.
- Safety courses – sea survival, medicine, survival training to OSR standard.
- Boat charter or own IMOCA programme – budget of several million euros for a competitive boat.
Start field statistics 2024–25: 40 IMOCA 60 at the start, 11 nationalities, 6 women – highest proportion of women in the race's history.
Media, tracking and audience
The Vendée Globe has developed from a niche sport to a globally followed event. Live tracking on the official website, daily video blogs from the skippers and professional TV productions bring the race close to millions of viewers. For beginners it is worth comparing with the stage and crew format of The Ocean Race – there as with the Vendée Globe, trackers show not only positions but also speed, wind and strategic group formation.
Tip: Those following the Vendée Globe should open GRIB weather charts alongside the tracker. This makes it visible why a skipper suddenly veers north or south – a pure lesson in single-handed offshore sailing.
Checklist: understanding and following the Vendée Globe
- Know the course routing and the three cape passages
- Roughly classify IMOCA 60 technology and foils
- Understand the no-assistance rule and safety logic
- Follow live tracker and skipper blogs during the edition
- Interpret weather routing with GRIB data in parallel
- Be able to name the difference to The Ocean Race and Route du Rhum
- Place historical winners and record editions in context
Frequently asked questions
Why is the race called Vendée Globe?
The name derives from the French département Vendée, in which Les Sables-d'Olonne lies as the start and finish harbour. "Globe" stands for the round-the-world voyage.
How long does a Vendée Globe take?
The fastest skippers today need around 65 days; the field stretches over 70 to 110 days, depending on weather, material and deficits.
May skippers go ashore?
No. Entering harbour, mooring or support from land is forbidden. Medical emergency evacuation ends the race for the affected skipper.
How often does the Vendée Globe take place?
Every four years, typically in November with a start in Les Sables-d'Olonne.
Significance for regatta sailing
The Vendée Globe drives innovation in the IMOCA class: foils, more sustainable materials, improved safety systems and data analysis at the limit. For young skippers it remains the ultimate career goal in single-handed offshore – and for sailing fans worldwide the most captivating spectacle on the open sea.
Related topics
- Legendary Offshore Races
- Offshore and Long-Distance Regattas
- Single-Handed and Short-Handed
- Figaro and IMOCA Single-Handed
- IMOCA and New Boats (The Ocean Race)
Last updated: 4 July 2026