The Tour de France 2025, the 112th edition of the race, will begin on 5 July 2025, with Lille hosting the Grand Depart. Running until 27 July, the 2025 Tour will feature 23 teams taking part in a 21-stage course that spans over 3,338.8 kilometres, finishing at the iconic Champs-Elysees in Paris.
With key riders like Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard set to take part in the event, the Tour de France 2025 will be one of the biggest editions so far. Let’s have a look at all the information about the teams taking part, the route to be followed, and more.
Tour De France 2025 – Live Streaming Details
As per media reports, the Tour de France 2025 will be live-streamed in 60 countries, and broadcast will be available in 190 countries on 100 channels. In the United States, the official broadcast rights are with NBC, with Peacock also showing the event.
While the Indian broadcasting situation is unclear, with no company holding the streaming rights as of now, fans can likely watch the event on the Eurosport channel, which will be available with Discovery+.
Tour De France 2025 – Full Team And Rider List
UAE Team Emirates: Tadej Pogacar, Joao Almeida, Jhonatan Narvaez, Nils Politt, Pavel Sivakov, Marc Soler, Tim Wellens, Adam Yates
Visma-Lease a Bike: Jonas Vingegaard, Victor Campenaerts, Edoardo Affini, Tiesj Benoot, Matteo Jorgenson, Sepp Kuss, Wout van Aert, Simon Yates
Soudal-Quick-Step: Remco Evenepoel, Mattia Cattaneo, Pascal Eenkhoorn, Tim Merlier, Valentin Paret-Peintre, Maximilian Schachmann, Bert Van Lerberghe, Ilan Van Wilder
EF Education-EasyPost: Vincenzo Albanese, Kasper Asgreen, Alex Baudin, Ben Healy, Neilson Powless, Harry Sweeny, Michael Valgren, Marijn van den Berg
Intermarche-Wanty: Biniam Girmay, Louis Barre, Vito Braet, Hugo Page, Laurenz Rex, Jonas Rutsch, Roel van Sintmaartensdijk, Georg Zimmermann
Team Bahrain Victorious: Santiago Buitrago, Phil Bauhaus, Kamil Gradek, Jack Haig, Lenny Martinez, Matej Mohoric, Robert Stannard, Fred Wright
Decathlon-AG2R La Mondiale: Felix Gall, Oliver Naesen, Bastien Tronchon, Callum Scotson, Aurelien Paret-Peintre, Clement Berthet, Stefan Bissegger, Bruno Armirail
Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe: Florian Lipowitz, Danny van Poppel, Jordi Meeus, Gianni Moscon, Mick van Dijke, Laurence Pithie, Aleksandr Vlasov, Primoz Roglic
Cofidis: Dylan Teuns, Damien Touze, Alexis Renard, Bryan Coquard, Benjamin Thomas, Ion Izagirre, Alex Aranburu, Emanuel Buchmann
Alpecin-Deceuninck: Gianni Vermeersch, Silvan Dillier, Xandro Meurisse, Emiel Verstrynge, Jonas Rickaert, Kaden Groves, Jasper Philipsen, Mathieu van der Poel
Arkea-B&B Hotels: Kevin Vauquelin, Clement Venturini, Mathis Le Berre, Ewen Costiou, Cristian Rodriguez, Amaury Capiot, Arnaud Demare, Raul Garcia Pierna
Ineos Grenadiers: Tobias Foss, Samuel Watson, Axel Laurance, Thymen Arensman, Geraint Thomas, Filippo Ganna, Carlos Rodriguez, Connor Swift
Lidl-Trek: Quinn Simmons, Toms Skujins, Thibau Nys, Simone Consonni, Edward Theuns, Jasper Stuyven, Mattias Skjelmose, Jonathan Milan
Groupama-FDJ: Quentin Pacher, Romain Gregoire, Clement Russo, Paul Penhoet, Cyril Barthe, Lewis Askey, Valentin Madouas, Guillaume Martin
Movistar Team: Einer Rubio, Ivan Romeo, Ivan Garcia Cortina, Will Barta, Gregor Mühlberger, Pablo Castrillo, Enric Mas, Nelson Oliveira
Team Picnic-PostNL: Frank van den Broek, Tobias Lund Andresen, Oscar Onley, Niklas Markl, Pavel Bittner, Sean Flynn, Warren Barguil, Tim Naberman
Team Jayco-AlUla: Luka Mezgec, Dylan Groenewegen, Luke Plapp, Luke Durbridge, Elmar Reinders, Mauro Schmid, Eddie Dunbar, Ben O'Connor
XDS Astana Team: Simone Velasco, Yevgeniy Fedorov, Davide Ballerini, Cees Bol, Mike Teunissen, Sergio Higuita, Clement Champoussin, Harold Tejada
Lotto: Jenno Berckmoes, Sebastien Grignard, Brent Van Moer, Eduardo Sepulveda, Jarrad Drizners, Lennert Van Eetvelt, Arnaud De Lie, Jasper De Buyst
Israel-Premier Tech: Joseph Blackmore, Alexey Lutsenko, Guillaume Boivin, Matis Louvel, Krists Neilands, Jake Stewart, Michael Woods, Pascal Ackermann
Team TotalEnergies: Mathieu Burgaudeau, Thomas Gachignard, Matteo Vercher, Steff Cras, Alexandre Delettre, Jordan Jegat, Anthony Turgis, Emilien Jeanniere
Tudor Pro Cycling Team: Julian Alaphilippe, Matteo Trentin, Michael Storer, Marius Mayrhofer, Fabian Lienhard, Marc Hirschi, Marco Haller, Alberto Dainese
Uno-X Mobility: Tobias Halland Johannessen, Magnus Cort, Jonas Abrahamsen, Stian Fredheim, Markus Hoelgaard, Anders Johannessen, Andreas Leknessund, Soren Waerenskjold
Tour De France 2025 – Route Map And Stage Overview
The Tour de France 2025 route will take place completely inside French territory for the first time since 2020, and will have eight flat stages, six hilly stages, six mountain stages, and two time trials – one individual and one mountain.
Stage 1: Lille to Lille (184.9 km) – 5 July 2025
Stage 2: Lauwin-Planque to Boulogne-sur-Mer (209.1 km) – 6 July 2025
Stage 3: Valenciennes to Dunkirk (178.3 km) – 7 July 2025
Stage 4: Amiens to Rouen (174.2 km) – 8 July 2025
Stage 5: Caen to Caen (33 km) – 9 July 2025
Stage 6: Bayeux to Vire Normandie (201.5 km) – 10 July 2025
Stage 7: Saint-Malo to Guerledan (197 km) – 11 July 2025
Stage 8: Saint-Meen-le-Grand to Laval (171.4 km) – 12 July 2025
Stage 9: Chinon to Châteauroux (174.1 km) – 13 July 2025
Stage 10: Ennezat to Mont-Dore (165.3 km) – 14 July 2025
Stage 11: Toulouse to Toulouse (156.8 km) – 16 July 2025
Stage 12: Auch to Hautacam (180.6 km) – 17 July 2025
Stage 13: Loudenvielle to Peyragudes (10.9 km) – 18 July 2025
Stage 14: Pau to Superbagnères (182.6 km) – 19 July 2025
Stage 15: Muret to Carcassonne (169.3 km) – 20 July 2025
Stage 16: Montpellier to Mont Ventoux (171.5 km) – 22 July 2025
Stage 17: Bollene to Valence (160.4 km) – 23 July 2025
Stage 18: Vif to Courchevel (171.5 km) – 24 July 2025
Stage 19: Albertville to La Plagne (129.9 km) – 25 July 2025
Stage 20: Nantua to Pontarlier (184.2 km) – 26 July 2025
Stage 21: Mantes-la-Ville to Paris (Champs-Elysees) (132.3 km) – 27 July 2025