All the stages of the Tour de France 2026: history, spectacle and legendary mountains
The Tour de France 2026 promises a spectacular three-week journey: 21 stages, 3,333 kilometres, early Pyrenean drama, a decisive Lake Geneva time trial and a historic double finish on Alpe d’Huez.
General Introduction
The Tour de France 2026 is designed as a race of constant pressure: a technical start in Barcelona, an early summit finish in the Pyrenees, demanding terrain through the Massif Central and Vosges, and a final Alpine block that could rewrite the general classification in just three days.
The race starts with a rare team time trial in Barcelona, mixing collective strength with individual risk. From there, the peloton quickly moves toward the Pyrenees, where Les Angles and Gavarnie-Gèdre will force the first major selection. The middle section of the Tour is built around transition stages that are never truly easy: rolling roads, crosswinds, short climbs and nervous finishes will keep teams under pressure.
The final week is where the 2026 edition becomes legendary. After the individual time trial along Lake Geneva, the route enters the Alps with Orcières-Merlette, then delivers two consecutive summit finishes on Alpe d’Huez. This rare double appearance of cycling’s most famous climb gives the route a dramatic, almost theatrical conclusion before the final parade and sprint in Paris.
A balanced but demanding Tour, with almost no truly simple days.
The Alpine finale, especially Stages 19 and 20 on Alpe d’Huez.
Versatility: climbing, time trialling, descending, recovery and team control.

Tour de France 2026 Route at a Glance
The table below gives a fast overview of all 21 stages, including date, route, distance and race profile.
| Stage | Date | Route | Distance | Profile |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 4 July | Barcelona → Barcelona | 19.7 km | Team time trial |
| 2 | 5 July | Tarragona → Barcelona | 178 km | Hilly |
| 3 | 6 July | Granollers → Les Angles | 196 km | Mountain summit finish |
| 4 | 7 July | Carcassonne → Foix | 182 km | Hilly |
| 5 | 8 July | Lannemezan → Pau | 158 km | Flat |
| 6 | 9 July | Pau → Gavarnie-Gèdre | 186 km | Mountain summit finish |
| 7 | 10 July | Hagetmau → Bordeaux | 175 km | Flat |
| 8 | 11 July | Périgueux → Bergerac | 182 km | Flat / rolling |
| 9 | 12 July | Malemort → Ussel | 185 km | Hilly |
| Rest | 13 July | Cantal | — | Rest day |
| 10 | 14 July | Aurillac → Le Lioran | 167 km | Mountain |
| 11 | 15 July | Vichy → Nevers | 161 km | Flat |
| 12 | 16 July | Circuit Nevers Magny-Cours → Chalon-sur-Saône | 181 km | Flat |
| 13 | 17 July | Dole → Belfort | 205 km | Hilly |
| 14 | 18 July | Mulhouse → Le Markstein | 155 km | Mountain summit finish |
| 15 | 19 July | Champagnole → Plateau de Solaison | 184 km | Mountain summit finish |
| Rest | 20 July | Haute-Savoie | — | Rest day |
| 16 | 21 July | Évian-les-Bains → Thonon-les-Bains | 26 km | Individual time trial |
| 17 | 22 July | Chambéry → Voiron | 175 km | Flat / rolling |
| 18 | 23 July | Voiron → Orcières-Merlette | 185 km | Mountain summit finish |
| 19 | 24 July | Gap → Alpe d’Huez | 128 km | Mountain summit finish |
| 20 | 25 July | Le Bourg-d’Oisans → Alpe d’Huez | 171 km | High mountain queen stage |
| 21 | 26 July | Thoiry → Paris, Champs-Élysées | 130 km | Flat / final circuit |
Stages 1–9 — From Catalonia to the Pyrenees and Massif Central
The first week is much more than a warm-up. Barcelona brings technical racing from day one, the Pyrenees arrive unusually early, and the rolling roads toward Ussel create a demanding bridge into the first rest day.

Saturday, 4 July 2026 — Barcelona → Barcelona
The 2026 Tour begins with a spectacular team time trial through Barcelona. The route combines fast boulevards, coastal sections, iconic city views and the decisive Montjuïc climb, making the opening stage both a showpiece and an immediate sporting test.
Unlike a traditional opening parade, this stage can create real gaps from the first day. Team coordination, pacing discipline and the ability to handle corners at high speed will be essential. The climb toward Montjuïc also means that the strongest leaders may become more important than pure team depth.

Sunday, 5 July 2026 — Tarragona → Barcelona
Stage 2 moves from Tarragona back to Barcelona across Catalonia’s coastal and inland terrain. The first part can be fast and exposed, while the final urban circuit around Montjuïc brings a punchy and technical conclusion.
This is a stage for versatile riders: strong sprinters who can survive short climbs, puncheurs with a fast finish, and teams willing to use crosswinds to create tension. GC riders will mostly focus on avoiding splits and crashes.

Monday, 6 July 2026 — Granollers → Les Angles
The first true mountain appointment arrives early. From Granollers, the race heads toward the Eastern Pyrenees, with long climbs, altitude and a summit finish at Les Angles.
The final climb is not the longest of the Tour, but after nearly 200 kilometres and almost 4,000 metres of climbing, it can expose weak legs. The stage is likely to reveal the first real hierarchy among the general classification contenders.

Tuesday, 7 July 2026 — Carcassonne → Foix
A deceptive day across the Pre-Pyrenees. The route from Carcassonne to Foix is not a high-mountain stage, but its irregular climbs, technical descents and narrow roads make it ideal for breakaway specialists.
Col de Coudons and Col de Montségur can split the race, especially if teams decide to increase the pace. Foix often rewards brave riders who can descend well and time their final effort with precision.

Wednesday, 8 July 2026 — Lannemezan → Pau
After the first mountain test, Stage 5 gives the sprinters a clearer opportunity. The road toward Pau is more manageable, but wind and positioning can make even a flat stage dangerous.
Pau is one of the Tour’s most symbolic cities, often acting as a gateway between the Pyrenees and the plains. Sprint trains will need precision in the final kilometres, while GC riders must stay protected.

Thursday, 9 July 2026 — Pau → Gavarnie-Gèdre
This is the first major turning point of the Tour. From Pau, the race heads into a classic Pyrenean sequence featuring Col d’Aspin, Col du Tourmalet and the final ascent to Gavarnie-Gèdre.
The Tourmalet can drain domestiques and expose weak leaders before the final climb. The finish at Gavarnie-Gèdre adds a spectacular new dimension: not the highest summit, but one that comes after a brutally demanding day.

Friday, 10 July 2026 — Hagetmau → Bordeaux
A classic sprinters’ day through the flatlands toward Bordeaux. The route appears straightforward, but exposed roads and fatigue after the Pyrenees can complicate the chase.
Bordeaux is one of the Tour’s great sprint cities. The final kilometres require excellent positioning, and the long run-in can become a fierce battle between lead-out trains.

Saturday, 11 July 2026 — Périgueux → Bergerac
Stage 8 crosses the Dordogne and Périgord, a region of forests, castles and vineyard roads. The profile is not severe, but the constant undulations make it harder than a simple sprint stage.
A breakaway can succeed if the peloton hesitates. If the race comes back together, the slightly rising finale in Bergerac favours resilient sprinters and punchy finishers rather than pure speed alone.

Sunday, 12 July 2026 — Malemort → Ussel
The final stage before the first rest day is a grinding day through Corrèze. No single climb defines the race, but the constant sawtooth profile can exhaust riders before they realise how much energy they have spent.
Suc au May is the symbolic climb of the day, short but steep enough to make a difference. The finish in Ussel suits a clever attacker who can manage repeated accelerations and technical roads.
Monday, 13 July — First Rest Day
After the stage to Ussel, the peloton finally pauses. The rest day is a moment for recovery, transfers, medical care and tactical reassessment before the Massif Central reopens the race with steep gradients and fresh tension.
Stages 10–15 — Massif Central, Vosges and Haute-Savoie
The second week is built for attrition. Short but steep climbs, exposed plains, long transition days and two hard summit finishes will shape the race before the second rest day.

Tuesday, 14 July 2026 — Aurillac → Le Lioran
The Tour restarts on France’s National Day with a demanding Massif Central stage. The climbs are not Alpine giants, but the gradients are sharp and the roads constantly change rhythm.
Pas de Peyrol and Col de Pertus can create real selection, especially if riders react poorly after the rest day. With patriotic energy along the road, French riders will see this stage as a dream opportunity.

Wednesday, 15 July 2026 — Vichy → Nevers
A controlled stage for sprinters, but never a day to switch off. The roads from Vichy to Nevers are wide enough for high speeds, while open sections can expose riders to wind.
The final approach to Nevers should favour a power sprint. For GC teams, the goal is simple: avoid crashes, stay near the front and spend as little energy as possible before harder terrain returns.

Thursday, 16 July 2026 — Circuit Nevers Magny-Cours → Chalon-sur-Saône
Stage 12 begins in a unique setting: the Magny-Cours motor racing circuit. Once the peloton leaves the track, the route opens across Burgundy and the Saône valley, where wind can quickly change the race.
If conditions are calm, sprinters’ teams should control the stage. If crosswinds appear, the day can become a tactical battle with echelons and sudden gaps.

Friday, 17 July 2026 — Dole → Belfort
The longest stage of the 2026 Tour connects the Jura to Belfort. Distance is the main enemy: more than 200 kilometres deep into the second week can drain energy even before the final climb.
Ballon d’Alsace adds historic weight and tactical difficulty. It is not the steepest mountain, but after a long day it can separate the strongest breakaway riders and create dangerous descents toward Belfort.

Saturday, 18 July 2026 — Mulhouse → Le Markstein
The Vosges may be lower than the Alps, but their gradients and rhythm are brutal. This short mountain stage brings repeated climbing and very little room for recovery.
Grand Ballon, Platzerwasel and Col du Haag form a demanding sequence before Le Markstein. The stage rewards riders who can hold high power steadily rather than those relying only on explosive attacks.

Sunday, 19 July 2026 — Champagnole → Plateau de Solaison
The Tour enters Haute-Savoie with a brutal finish at Plateau de Solaison. The final climb is steep, irregular and unforgiving, making it one of the most decisive tests before the second rest day.
Col de la Croisette will begin the selection, but Solaison is where the real damage can happen. Riders who misjudge their effort can lose minutes, not seconds.
Monday, 20 July — Second Rest Day
After the Plateau de Solaison, the race pauses near Haute-Savoie and Lake Geneva. This rest day is crucial: the time trial and the Alpine finale are still to come, and recovery can decide who arrives in Paris wearing yellow.
Stages 16–17 — Lake Geneva Time Trial and Alpine Plains
The race resumes with a precise and potentially decisive time trial, followed by a rolling day that gives sprinters one last opportunity before the Alpine trilogy.

Tuesday, 21 July 2026 — Évian-les-Bains → Thonon-les-Bains
The Lake Geneva time trial is short enough to be explosive, but technical enough to punish poor pacing. It follows the French shore from Évian-les-Bains to Thonon-les-Bains, mixing speed, gentle rises and potential wind exposure.
Time trial specialists can gain precious seconds, while climbers must limit losses before the final mountain block. After two weeks of fatigue, position, aerodynamics and concentration will matter as much as raw power.

Wednesday, 22 July 2026 — Chambéry → Voiron
Stage 17 is the last breath before the Alpine finale. The route is not mountainous, but early climbs and rolling terrain make it challenging for pure sprinters.
Chambéry to Voiron offers a final chance for fast riders who can survive hills. GC teams will ride cautiously, while breakaway riders may sense an opportunity if sprint teams lose control.
Stages 18–20 — Orcières-Merlette and the Double Alpe d’Huez
The final Alpine block is the heart of the 2026 route: one historic summit finish, one short and explosive Alpe d’Huez stage, and one brutal queen stage with Galibier, Sarenne and a second finish on the Alpe.

Thursday, 23 July 2026 — Voiron → Orcières-Merlette
Orcières-Merlette is a name full of Tour history. In 2026 it opens the decisive Alpine trilogy, testing riders with a long approach, the Col de Manse, the Col du Festre and the final steady climb to the ski station.
This stage may not be as brutal as the following two, but it can reveal who still has the legs to fight for Paris. A long-range breakaway is possible, while GC riders may use the final climb to test rivals without spending everything.

Friday, 24 July 2026 — Gap → Alpe d’Huez
A short, explosive mountain stage ending on the most famous climb in cycling. The distance is limited, but the intensity will be extreme from the start.
The Col d’Ornon and Col de la Croix de Fer set up the final ascent of Alpe d’Huez. With 21 hairpins, packed crowds and steep opening kilometres, the Alpe rewards riders who combine physical strength with emotional control.

Saturday, 25 July 2026 — Le Bourg-d’Oisans → Alpe d’Huez
This is the decisive mountain stage of the 2026 Tour. Croix de Fer, Télégraphe, Galibier, Col de Sarenne and Alpe d’Huez combine into a brutal Alpine epic.
The Galibier is the roof of the race, while the Sarenne adds danger, isolation and tactical uncertainty before the final return to Alpe d’Huez. Whoever survives this stage in yellow will be within reach of Paris.
Stage 21 — Paris, Champs-Élysées

Sunday, 26 July 2026 — Thoiry → Paris, Champs-Élysées
The final stage is the celebration of the Tour: champagne, team photos, applause for the jersey winners and the traditional arrival in Paris. Yet the route also includes an extra spark with repeated passages over Montmartre before the Champs-Élysées finale.
The last sprint in Paris remains one of the most prestigious victories in cycling. Sprinters must survive the urban circuit, hold position and launch at exactly the right moment beneath the lights and monuments of the capital.

General Guidelines and Useful Facts
The 2026 Tour de France is a race for complete riders. Climbing ability will be essential, but the route also rewards time-trial discipline, descending skill, team coordination and the ability to recover quickly between very different types of stages.
Stage 1 opens with a team time trial in Barcelona, while Stage 16 brings an individual time trial along Lake Geneva.
Les Angles, Gavarnie-Gèdre, Le Markstein, Plateau de Solaison, Orcières-Merlette and Alpe d’Huez define the mountain story.
Crosswinds, heat, altitude temperature drops and Alpine storms can all influence tactics and performance.
Key numbers of the Tour de France 2026
| Category | Detail |
|---|---|
| Total distance | 3,333 km |
| Total stages | 21 |
| Rest days | 2 — 13 July and 20 July |
| Mountain stages | 8 |
| Flat stages | 7 |
| Hilly stages | 4 |
| Time trials | 1 team time trial and 1 individual time trial |
| Longest stage | Stage 13 — Dole → Belfort, 205 km |
| Shortest road mountain stage | Stage 19 — Gap → Alpe d’Huez, 128 km |
| Highest point | Col du Galibier, 2,642 m |

How the race could be won
- Start strong in Barcelona: the opening team time trial can create early psychological and time advantages.
- Survive the first Pyrenean block: Les Angles and Gavarnie-Gèdre arrive early enough to punish riders who are not fully ready.
- Stay alert on transition days: wind, narrow roads and technical finishes can be as dangerous as climbs.
- Master the Lake Geneva time trial: Stage 16 can rebalance the general classification before the Alps.
- Conquer the double Alpe d’Huez: Stages 19 and 20 are the final exam of endurance, courage and tactical clarity.
References and In-Depth Sources
The route information, stage order, distances, mountain structure and overall race characteristics are based on official Tour de France route materials and specialist cycling coverage.
| Category | Source | Main content |
|---|---|---|
| Official route | Tour de France / A.S.O. | Stage list, route structure, classifications and official race overview. |
| Stage analysis | Specialist cycling media | Stage characteristics, tactical interpretation and historical context. |
| Route context | International cycling coverage | Barcelona Grand Départ, double Alpe d’Huez and final Paris circuit. |
| Technical details | Race previews and route guides | Climbs, distance notes, time-trial format and stage tendencies. |
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