These classifications often overlap with the terrain. When a route contains large amounts of climbing, as the 2026 Tour does, the polka dot jersey competition tends to become more visible as riders target mountain points on the major ascents.

What type of rider does the 2026 route favour?
The 2026 Tour de France route favours riders who can climb consistently while limiting time losses during the two time trial stages.
The relationship between climbing and time trials often determines the character of a Grand Tour. In 2026, the race includes one team time trial and one individual time trial, which means time specialists cannot rely purely on the clock to create large gaps.
Instead, the route gradually builds pressure through repeated mountain stages. The early Pyrenees force general classification riders to reveal their form, while the following weeks gradually build pressure across multiple mountain ranges before the Alps appear.
By this point in the race, riders are no longer fresh. Small differences in endurance and recovery begin to matter more than explosive power, and that is often when the true contenders emerge.

How does the race unfold across the mountain regions?
The 2026 Tour de France route unfolds geographically through five mountain regions that gradually increase the difficulty of the race.
The first major mountains appear in the Pyrenees, where the peloton faces a summit finish at Gavarnie-Gèdre after climbing the legendary Col du Tourmalet. Early mountain stages like this often reveal which riders arrived at the Tour in strong form, even if they do not yet decide the overall race.
From there, the route continues through the Massif Central, a region known for irregular climbs and unpredictable racing. Stages in this part of France often encourage breakaways because the terrain makes it difficult for teams to control the race from start to finish.
Later in the Tour, the peloton crosses the Vosges and Jura, where the climbs are shorter but come in quick succession. Riders often begin to feel the cumulative demands of the race at this point, which makes these stages more selective than they might appear on paper.
And then the Alps arrive. By the time the race reaches the Galibier and Alpe d’Huez, riders have already climbed tens of thousands of metres over nearly three weeks.
Above: The winding switchbacks of the Col du Galibier are tackled directly after the Telegraphe.
Curious what these climbs actually feel like?
Watching the Tour often gives you a sense of the scale of these roads, but riding similar climbs yourself changes how you understand the race completely. Long Alpine and Pyrenean ascents feel very different once you settle into the rhythm of the gradient and begin managing the effort over time.
On ROUVY, you can explore virtual climbing routes inspired by the terrain seen during the Tour de France, whether you are curious about sustained mountain efforts, steady pacing, or simply how these famous roads feel beneath the wheels. For many riders, that first long virtual climb completely changes how they watch the race afterwards.

Which climbs could decide the 2026 Tour de France?
Several climbs stand out as the moments where the general classification could begin to change, particularly once the race reaches the Pyrenees and later the Alps.
Col du Tourmalet
The Col du Tourmalet is one of the most historic climbs in the Tour de France and often represents the first major mountain test of the race.
During Stage 6, riders climb both the Col d’Aspin and the Tourmalet before continuing toward the summit finish at Gavarnie-Gèdre. The Tourmalet is approached from the western side via Luz-Saint-Sauveur, a long and steady ascent that encourages riders to settle into a sustained rhythm rather than respond to repeated changes of pace.
At this point in the race, the peloton is still relatively intact, but the length of the climb and the altitude begin to reduce the group. By the summit, the group is often reduced, setting the context for the final climb of the stage.
- Stage: Stage 6
- Date: 9 July
- Location: Pyrenees
- Why it matters: First major mountain test that begins to reduce the peloton ahead of the summit finish.

Ride Col du Tourmalet on ROUVY
- Distance: 19.21 km
- Metres climbing: 1,436 m
- Average gradient: 7,7%
Gavarnie-Gèdre
Gavarnie-Gèdre refers to a Pyrenean summit finish that appears for the first time in the Tour de France during the 2026 edition.
After the Tourmalet and earlier climbs in the stage, the final ascent begins once the terrain has already shaped the race. The climb itself is long and irregular, with changing gradients that favour riders who can maintain a steady effort over time.
Time gaps on finishes like this can develop progressively rather than from a single point on the climb, with the front group separating over several kilometres as the gradient and altitude take effect.
- Stage: Stage 6
- Date: 9 July
- Location: Pyrenees
- Why it matters: First summit finish of the race, where early time gaps can begin to form.
Col de la Croix de Fer
The Col de la Croix de Fer is one of the long historic Alpine climbs that helps shape the queen stage of the 2026 Tour de France before the race reaches the Galibier and Alpe d’Huez.
Appearing early in Stage 20, the climb stretches across a long sequence of changing gradients rather than one continuous steep ascent. Climbs like this rarely produce decisive attacks on their own, but they steadily increase the demands of the stage and begin reducing the group before the higher Alpine passes arrive later in the day.
By the summit, riders have already spent a significant amount of time climbing, which changes the character of everything that follows. The Croix de Fer gradually shapes the rhythm and demands of the stage long before the race reaches the higher Alpine climbs later in the day.
- Stage: Stage 20
- Date: 25 July
- Location: Alps
- Why it matters: Long opening Alpine climb that shapes the rhythm and cumulative demands of the queen stage.

Ride Col de la Croix de Fer on ROUVY
- Distance: 31.4 km
- Metres climbing: 1560 m
- Average gradient: 4,4%
Col du Télégraphe & Col du Galibier
The Col du Galibier is the highest point of the 2026 Tour de France, reaching an altitude of 2,642 metres in the Alps.
In Stage 20, the Galibier is approached from the northern side via Valloire, following the Col du Télégraphe, which effectively turns the ascent into one continuous effort. The transition between the two climbs is minimal, and the elevation gain accumulates steadily toward the summit.
At this altitude, the terrain and exposure begin to define the effort more than the gradient alone. The climb often gives a clearer picture of which riders still have the strongest legs before the final climbs of the stage.
- Stage: Stage 20
- Date: 25 July
- Location: Alps
- Why it matters: The highest point of the race, climbed within a long Alpine stage that shapes the final selection.

Ride Col du Télégraphe - Galibier on ROUVY
- Distance: 35 km
- Metres climbing: 2,092
- Average gradient: 6%
Col de Sarenne
The Col de Sarenne is a lesser-known Alpine climb that plays a tactical role during Stage 20 of the race.
Rather than approaching Alpe d’Huez directly, the route first climbs the Sarenne before descending into Bourg d’Oisans via a separate road, where the final ascent begins from its traditional base. The road over the Sarenne is narrower and more irregular than the usual approach, which limits how teams can organise their effort on the climb.
The sequence of climb, descent and valley transition changes how the stage unfolds, as the race reaches the base of Alpe d’Huez in a more fragmented and less structured formation.
- Stage: Stage 20
- Date: 25 July
- Location: Alps
- Why it matters: Irregular approach before Alpe d’Huez that breaks up the race structure ahead of the final climb.
Alpe d’Huez
Alpe d’Huez is one of the most recognisable climbs in professional cycling and, in the 2026 Tour de France, it appears twice as a summit finish, including the decisive finale of the queen stage on Stage 20.
The climb first features on Stage 19, which starts in Gap and builds through a series of Alpine climbs, including the Col Bayard, Col du Noyer and Col d’Ornon, before the final ascent. At 128 km, it is one of the shorter mountain stages of the race, with repeated changes in terrain that slowly shape the group before the finish.
The climb then returns on Stage 20, this time after the approach over the Col de Sarenne. By the time riders reach the base in Bourg d’Oisans, the race has already been influenced by the previous day and the earlier climbs in the stage, creating a different context for the final ascent.
On Alpe d’Huez itself, the differences tend to emerge gradually. Riders settle into their pace early on, and time gaps build over the length of the climb rather than from a single moment, with the final kilometres often reflecting how evenly each rider can sustain their effort.
- Stage: Stage 19 and 20
- Date: 24 and 25 July
- Location: Alps
- Why it matters: The summit finish on consecutive stages, with the second ascent on Stage 20 forming the decisive final test.

Ride Alpe d'Huez on ROUVY
- Distance: 15.4 km
- Metres climbing: 1,124 m
- Average gradient: 8%
Why the final week often decides the Tour
The final week of the Tour de France is often where the accumulated demands of the race begin to separate the strongest riders from the rest of the field. Early mountain stages provide hints about form, but they seldom decide the entire race. Riders are still relatively fresh, and teams remain strong enough to control the tempo.
By the final week, the situation changes. Riders have spent nearly three weeks racing across France, climbing multiple mountain ranges and managing daily stress that steadily reduces their reserves.
That is why climbs like the Galibier and Alpe d’Huez carry such weight in the race narrative. They arrive at the moment when the difference between surviving and attacking becomes very clear.