The Tour de France 2026 leaves the high Pyrenean drama of Les Angles behind on Tuesday 7 July, but stage 4 is not a simple transition day. The race runs 181.9km from Carcassonne to Foix, with a hilly profile, 2,700 metres of climbing and a finish that looks well suited to attackers rather than pure sprinters.
Table of Contents
ToggleFor a fuller breakdown of the route itself, see our Tour de France 2026 stage 4 preview. This live viewing update focuses on when the stage starts, when to tune in, where UK viewers can watch, and why the final hour should be worth keeping clear.
Photo Credit: GettyTour de France 2026 stage 4 start time
| Detail | Local time | UK time |
|---|---|---|
| Publicity caravan | 10:55 CEST | 09:55 BST |
| Neutralised start | 13:10 CEST | 12:10 BST |
| Expected finish, fastest schedule | 17:23 CEST | 16:23 BST |
| Expected finish, slower schedule | 17:47 CEST | 16:47 BST |
Stage 4 is scheduled to start in Carcassonne at 13:10 local time, which is 12:10 BST for UK viewers. The finish in Foix is expected between 17:23 and 17:47 local time, or 16:23 and 16:47 BST.
That gives the stage a fairly compact live window for weekday viewers. The full stage should be live from lunchtime in the UK, but the decisive section is likely to fall in the final 60 to 90 minutes.
How to watch stage 4 live in the UK
UK viewers can watch the Tour de France 2026 live through TNT Sports and HBO Max. TNT Sports is the main TV route, while HBO Max is the key streaming option for live and on-demand coverage.
For the wider platform details, including the change from ITV’s previous free-to-air coverage, see our guide on how to watch Tour de France 2026 in the UK.
Stage 4 is not one of the selected live free-to-air S4C stages, so viewers wanting live pictures from Carcassonne to Foix should plan around TNT Sports or HBO Max. Daily highlights are also expected to be available through 5, with the highlights programme scheduled for 7pm during the race.
Photo Credit: GettyHow to watch stage 4 around the world
| Country / region | Live coverage |
|---|---|
| UK | TNT Sports and HBO Max |
| France | France Télévisions / France.tv |
| Australia | SBS and SBS On Demand |
| United States | Peacock |
| Canada | FloBikes |
| Spain | RTVE Play |
Broadcaster schedules can vary by stage, so it is still worth checking the relevant app or TV guide on the morning of the race. For a country-by-country breakdown, use our Tour de France 2026 live stream guide by country.
For a daily overview of timings across the race, our Tour de France 2026 TV schedule and daily start times keeps the full viewing picture in one place.
Stage 4 route: Carcassonne to Foix
Stage 4 starts in Carcassonne and finishes in Foix, taking the peloton through the foothills after Monday’s first major mountain test. The day is officially classified as hilly rather than mountainous, but the climbing is steady enough to make control difficult.
At 181.9km and 2,700m of elevation gain, it is a stage where the breakaway should believe it has a real chance. It also fits into the opening Pyrenean block of the race, which is covered in more detail in our Tour de France 2026 Pyrenees guide.
The route includes four categorised climbs:
| Climb | Position in stage | Length / gradient | Category |
|---|---|---|---|
| Col de Bedos | 48.2km | 3.4km at 4.4% | Category 4 |
| Col du Paradis | 64.9km | 5.9km at 4.1% | Category 3 |
| Col de Coudons | 104.9km | 10.8km at 5.5% | Category 2 |
| Col de Montségur | 146.7km | 6.9km at 6.6% | Category 2 |
The final categorised climb, the Col de Montségur, comes with around 35km still to race. That gives attackers a launchpad, but not a summit finish. It should create a more tactical finale, with riders needing to judge whether to attack on the climb, wait for the descent or gamble on a reduced sprint in Foix.

Race situation after stage 3
The race enters stage 4 with Tadej Pogačar in the yellow jersey after his victory at Les Angles. Pogačar beat Jonas Vingegaard on the uphill finish, taking the stage and moving into the overall lead, although the two are level on time in the general classification.
That result has already given the 2026 Tour its first major GC reference point. Our stage 3 race report covers how Pogačar took yellow and why Vingegaard still looked fully in the fight.
The situation changes the tone of stage 4. UAE Team Emirates XRG now carry the race lead, but this is not necessarily a day where they need to control every kilometre. The terrain is hard enough to invite a strong breakaway, and the GC teams may decide that a controlled but flexible approach makes more sense after the effort of stage 3.
Still, the yellow jersey battle is close enough that no favourite can fully relax. Bonus seconds are available at the finish, and the profile is awkward enough for a well-timed move to cause trouble.
What kind of stage is it?
This looks like a classic Tour de France “in-between” stage. It is probably too hard for the pure sprinters, not selective enough for a full GC showdown, and attractive enough for breakaway specialists, puncheurs and strong climbers who have already lost time overall.
The key question is whether the breakaway contains riders who are close enough on GC to worry UAE Team Emirates XRG and Visma-Lease a Bike. If the move is safe, the peloton may allow it room. If a dangerous rider gets into the front group, the day could become far more controlled.
The second-category climbs of Col de Coudons and Col de Montségur should do most of the damage. Coudons can thin the race before the final third, while Montségur offers the best obvious point for decisive attacks.
It is exactly the type of stage highlighted in our guide to the best breakaway days on the Tour de France 2026 route. The stage has enough difficulty to split the field, but enough distance after the last climb to make timing and cooperation just as important as climbing strength.
When to tune in
Viewers who want the full stage should be ready from the official start at 12:10 BST.
For those watching around work or other commitments, the most important window should be from around 15:30 BST onwards, when the race should be moving through the final climbs and towards Foix. The finish is forecast between 16:23 and 16:47 BST, so tuning in for the final 60 to 90 minutes should catch the main selection, the last climb and the run-in to the line.
That final section should tell us whether the breakaway has been given enough rope, whether UAE want to defend yellow aggressively, and whether any GC rider sees a chance to test the others before the race heads towards Pau and Gavarnie-Gèdre later in the week.
Stage 4 at a glance
| Detail | Stage 4 |
|---|---|
| Date | Tuesday 7 July 2026 |
| Route | Carcassonne to Foix |
| Distance | 181.9km |
| Stage type | Hilly |
| Elevation gain | 2,700m |
| Neutralised start | 13:10 CEST / 12:10 BST |
| Expected finish | 17:23-17:47 CEST / 16:23-16:47 BST |
| Key climb | Col de Montségur |
| Likely contenders | Breakaway riders, puncheurs, climbing all-rounders |
| UK live coverage | TNT Sports / HBO Max |
| UK highlights | 5 at 7pm |
Why stage 4 matters
Stage 4 may not have the headline summit finish of Les Angles, but it could be one of the more tactically interesting early stages of the 2026 Tour.
The route is difficult enough to prevent an easy sprint, but not so severe that the yellow jersey favourites are guaranteed to take over. That makes it a day of competing interests. Breakaway riders will see a real chance. Sprint teams will wonder whether they can survive. GC teams will want calm, but may not get it.
With Pogačar newly in yellow, Vingegaard level on time and the race still settling after the first mountain test, Carcassonne to Foix has the feel of a stage where the breakaway can win and the overall contenders still need to stay sharp.
For the wider race context beyond stage 4, see our Tour de France 2026 full route guide.







