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Tour de France 2026: The Barcelona Grand Départ Explained

Tour de France 2026: The Barcelona Grand Départ Explained

For the first time in its history, the Tour de France 2026 starts in Barcelona. The Grand Départ moves to Catalonia, opening with stages through one of Europe's great cycling cities before the race pushes into the Pyrenees and eventually north to Paris. Here is everything worth knowing before the first pedal stroke.

The 2026 Grand Départ: Barcelona, Spain

The 2026 Tour de France Grand Départ is set for Barcelona, Catalonia — the first time the race has started in Spain. ASO announced the full route in Paris in late October 2025. The opening stages are expected to take in the Montjuïc climb and a team time trial in the Barcelona metropolitan area before the peloton heads toward the Pyrenees and crosses into France. The final stage finishes in Paris, with the Côte de la Butte Montmartre climb — introduced in 2025 — expected to feature again before the traditional sprint on the Champs-Élysées.

The route was designed to give Spanish fans a Grand Départ they have never had before, while preserving the race's mountain character. Catalan climbs will set the tone for the GC battle before the Alps and the time trial decide the classification.

The History of Tour de France Foreign Starts

The Tour has left France on several occasions, and some of those starts are more memorable than others.

London hosted the race in 2007. The prologue — a 7.9 km individual time trial — was won by Fabian Cancellara through central London, and the peloton completed a stage to Canterbury the following day before crossing to France. Mark Cavendish rode his first Tour in that edition.

Dublin 1998 was chaotic from the start. Chris Boardman won the prologue but crashed out on Stage 1. Tom Steels won the sprint in Dublin. The 1998 edition went on to become the Festina-affair Tour — one of the most turbulent in the race's history.

Utrecht 2015 was well-organised and closely watched. The 13.8 km opening time trial was won by Rohan Dennis, not Cancellara as some sources have misreported. Cancellara took yellow after Stage 2.

Brussels 2019 marked 50 years since Eddy Merckx's first Tour victory. Stage 1 was won by Mike Teunissen in a reduced sprint after a late crash — the first Dutch yellow jersey since 1989. Stage 2 was a Jumbo-Visma team time trial win. The homage to Merckx was deliberate and well-executed.

Copenhagen 2022 remains the most geographically unusual modern start. The peloton was 1,500 km from Paris. Three stages were raced in Scandinavia — including a 13.2 km individual time trial won by Yves Lampaert, a genuine surprise ahead of Wout van Aert and Tadej Pogačar — before the race flew back to France.

Yorkshire 2014 produced some of the largest roadside crowds the Tour had ever seen. Stage 1 (Leeds to Harrogate) was won by Marcel Kittel. Stage 2 (York to Sheffield) was won by Vincenzo Nibali, who took yellow that day.

Why the Opening Week Changes Everything

From a sporting standpoint, the first week of any Tour sets the classification before a mountain has been climbed. Crashes and crosswinds reshape GC battles early — as Roglič found out in 2021 when he abandoned after a crash, and as many riders discovered across multiple editions when echelon splits cut the peloton to pieces. The opening week in Barcelona and the Pyrenees will be no different.

Every team arrives at the Grand Départ on bikes built for the specific demands of that week — aero frames for the Catalan flatlands and time trial, lightweight builds for the Pyrenean stages. After the race, some of those team machines find their way onto the secondary market. At Bikeroom, verified World Tour bikes from professional teams are listed when they come available — race-used builds and team editions, authenticated and ready to ride.

Explore World Tour Bikes on Bikeroom

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