Tour de France 2026 stage 8 live viewing and start time update

CYCLING-TDF-2026-STAGE 7

Stage 8 of the Tour de France 2026 gives the sprinters another chance, with the race heading 180.4km from Périgueux to Bergerac on Saturday 11 July.

The stage is officially flat, but it is not completely empty. There are two category 4 climbs in the second half, an intermediate sprint at Saint-Cyprien and another major green jersey opportunity before the route turns hilly again on stage 9. The neutralised start is scheduled for 13:15 CEST, which is 12:15 BST, with the finish expected between 17:20 and 17:43 CEST, or 16:20 to 16:43 BST.

For UK viewers, this is not a stage where you need to be in front of the screen from the first kilometre. The key live window starts around 15:00 BST, with the intermediate sprint, the second categorised climb and the final 40km all following from there.

Our full Tour de France 2026 stage 8 preview covers the route and favourites in more depth, while the wider race position is explained in our GC and jerseys after Tour de France 2026 stage 7.

Tour de France 2026 - Étape 3 - Granollers / Les Angles (195,9 km) - Liam Slock (Lotto Intermarché), Torstein Traeen (Uno-X Mobility), Joel Nicolau (Caja Rural-Seguros RGA), Louis Vervaeke (Soudal Quick-Step) et Thibault Guernalec (TotalEnergies)

Quick answer: what time does Tour de France stage 8 start and finish?

Tour de France 2026 stage 8 starts in Périgueux at 13:15 CEST / 12:15 BST on Saturday 11 July. The race proper is scheduled to begin at 13:25 CEST / 12:25 BST, with the finish in Bergerac expected between 17:20 and 17:43 CEST, which is 16:20 to 16:43 BST in the UK.

Stage detailInformation
StageStage 8
DateSaturday 11 July 2026
RoutePérigueux to Bergerac
Distance180.4km
Stage typeFlat
Elevation gain1,150m
Neutralised start13:15 CEST / 12:15 BST
Race start13:25 CEST / 12:25 BST
Intermediate sprintSaint-Cyprien
Expected finish17:20-17:43 CEST / 16:20-16:43 BST
Best UK viewing windowFrom around 15:00 BST
Likely finish typeBunch sprint

How to watch Tour de France stage 8 in the UK

UK viewers can watch stage 8 live on TNT Sports and HBO Max, with every stage of the 2026 Tour de France shown from start to finish through the TNT Sports broadcast package.

Channel 5 also has free-to-air highlights, giving UK viewers a non-live option later in the day.

For a wider breakdown of UK viewing options, see our guide on how to watch Tour de France 2026 in the UK and our Tour de France 2026 live stream guide by country.

Viewing optionUK availability
Full live coverageTNT Sports / HBO Max
StreamingHBO Max
Free-to-air live coverageNot the full live stage
Free-to-air highlightsChannel 5
Best time to tune inFrom 15:00 BST
Essential final phaseFrom around 15:30 BST
Stage 8: Périgueux to Bergerac

Stage 8 route: Périgueux to Bergerac

The official stage runs from Périgueux to Bergerac, covering 180.4km through Dordogne. The stage is classed as flat, with 1,150m of elevation gain and two categorised climbs: the Côte de Domme and the Côte du Buisson-de-Cadouin.

This should still be a sprint day. The climbs are not hard enough to make it a GC stage, and the final 40km after the CĂ´te du Buisson-de-Cadouin should give the sprint teams enough time to reorganise. But compared with a completely flat run-in, this route has just enough texture to make the chase and lead-out more awkward.

That is especially true after stage 7 in Bordeaux, where Tim Merlier won the sprint ahead of Søren Wærenskjold and Biniam Girmay, while Tadej Pogačar retained yellow.

Key stage 8 timings for UK viewers

PointDistance to finishLocal timeUK time
Périgueux neutralised start180.4km13:15 CEST12:15 BST
Race start180.4km13:25 CEST12:25 BST
Montignac-Lascaux140.4km14:17-14:22 CEST13:17-13:22 BST
Les Eyzies112.1km14:54-15:02 CEST13:54-14:02 BST
CĂ´te de Domme77.8km15:39-15:52 CEST14:39-14:52 BST
Saint-Cyprien sprint57.6km16:05-16:20 CEST15:05-15:20 BST
CĂ´te du Buisson-de-Cadouin40km16:28-16:46 CEST15:28-15:46 BST
Bergerac entry4.2km17:15-17:37 CEST16:15-16:37 BST
Bergerac finish0km17:20-17:43 CEST16:20-16:43 BST

The official finish window is built around three estimated average speeds, with the fastest schedule bringing the race into Bergerac at 17:20 CEST and the slowest at 17:43 CEST.

When should you actually start watching?

The best live viewing window is from around 15:00 BST.

That should bring viewers in just before the intermediate sprint at Saint-Cyprien, which comes with 57.6km remaining. It also gives time to see the CĂ´te du Buisson-de-Cadouin, the final categorised climb of the day, before the sprint teams begin the long set-up into Bergerac.

Viewers who only want the final sprint should aim for 16:00 BST onwards. That should cover the final 25-30km, depending on the pace, and should be enough to see the breakaway caught, the sprint trains form and the final fight for position.

The finish itself is expected between 16:20 and 16:43 BST.

Why the intermediate sprint matters

The intermediate sprint at Saint-Cyprien is one of the key moments of the day.

The stage finish offers the biggest points haul, but the intermediate sprint still matters because the green jersey race is now live. Mads Pedersen leads that competition after stage 7, but Biniam Girmay, Max Kanter, Tim Merlier and Jasper Philipsen are all still close enough for every sprint point to count.

Stage 8 therefore has two contests inside it. The first is the fight for points at Saint-Cyprien. The second is the likely bunch sprint in Bergerac.

That is why the race may become more active from around 15:00 BST, rather than waiting until the final 10km. Pedersen will want to keep collecting. Girmay and Merlier have just gained momentum. Philipsen needs a cleaner result after missing the win in Bordeaux.

Our Tour de France 2026 sprinters guide and analysis of whether Mads Pedersen can win green explain why these mid-stage points can shape the whole competition.

The climbs on stage 8

Stage 8 has two category 4 climbs.

ClimbLengthAverage gradientDistance to finishPoints
CĂ´te de Domme3.7km3.3%77.8km1 KOM point
CĂ´te du Buisson-de-Cadouin2.2km5.3%40km1 KOM point

Neither climb should trouble the main sprinters under normal conditions. The more important role is tactical.

The CĂ´te de Domme should begin the more active second half of the stage. The CĂ´te du Buisson-de-Cadouin is more interesting because it comes only 40km from Bergerac. If the breakaway still has a gap, that climb gives it one final chance to put pressure on the chase. If Lidl-Trek or another points-focused team want to make the finish harder, this is the obvious place to do it.

For the pure sprinters, the task is simple: stay in position, do not waste energy, and make sure the lead-out is still intact after the final climb.

Tour de France 2026 - Étape 6 - Pau / Gavarnie-Gèdre (186,2 km) - Toms SKUJINS (LIDL-TREK), Kamil GRADEK (BAHRAIN VICTORIOUS)Photo Credit: A.S.O./Charly López

Why stage 8 should end in a bunch sprint

Everything points towards a bunch sprint.

The stage is flat enough. The climbs are not selective enough. The final 40km are long enough for the sprint teams to chase. The finish offers 70 points to the winner, and the intermediate sprint offers another major haul. That gives the fastest teams a clear incentive to control the race.

The breakaway should still form early, because this is the Tour and television exposure matters. But unless the peloton hesitates badly, the move will probably be kept on a short leash and caught before Bergerac.

That makes this another important day for Merlier, Kooij, Philipsen, Girmay, Pedersen, Kanter and Wærenskjold. The race will soon become more difficult again, so the fast men cannot afford to let a day like this pass.

Tour-de-France-stage-7-LIVE-A-chance-for-the-sprinters-as-the-race-heads-to-Bordeaux

GC live context: Pogačar’s day should be quiet

The general classification should not change unless there is a crash, split or mechanical problem.

Pogačar starts stage 8 in yellow after his stage 6 attack on the Tourmalet and win at Gavarnie-Gèdre. He leads Jonas Vingegaard by 2:42, with Isaac del Toro third overall and also leading the white jersey competition. The stage 7 sprint did not change that hierarchy.

For UAE Team Emirates-XRG, stage 8 is about keeping PogaÄŤar safe and preserving energy. For Visma-Lease a Bike, Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe, Lidl-Trek and the other GC teams, it is the same. Nobody needs to fight for bonus seconds in a sprint finish. They need to get through the day before the race turns hilly on stage 9 and more demanding again later.

Our piece asking whether the Tour de France is already over after Pogačar’s Tourmalet attack looks at why the GC battle now sits in a waiting phase.

What happened on stage 7?

Stage 7 was the first sprint opportunity after the Tourmalet stage, and Merlier made it count.

He beat Wærenskjøld and Girmay in Bordeaux, while Philipsen faded to fifth after Alpecin-Premier Tech had worked to set up the finish. Pogačar retained yellow, and Pedersen strengthened his green jersey position despite finishing ninth on the stage.

That result matters for stage 8 because it changes the pressure.

Merlier now has a win. Philipsen needs a response. Girmay has moved closer in the points race. Pedersen can continue to play the long game. Kooij, who won in Pau, will want to reinsert himself after missing the stage 7 top 10.

The road to Bergerac therefore looks like another sprint stage, but not a relaxed one.

Riders to watch live

RiderWhy watch him
Tim MerlierWon stage 7 and can double up if the sprint is clean
Olav KooijStage 5 winner who needs to respond after missing out in Bordeaux
Jasper PhilipsenStill searching for the full sprint reward after another missed chance
Biniam GirmayMoved closer in green and suits a slightly messy finish
Mads PedersenLeads green and can score at both the intermediate sprint and finish
Max KanterConsistent enough to keep collecting points
Søren WærenskjoldSecond in Bordeaux and powerful if the sprint opens early
Tadej PogaÄŤarNot expected to attack, but still the race leader to watch for safety and positioning

Best live viewing plan

Type of viewerBest time to tune in
Full-stage viewer12:15 BST
Route and scenery viewer13:30 BST
Points classification viewer15:00 BST
Final 40km viewer15:30 BST
Sprint-only viewer16:00 BST
Last 10km onlyAround 16:10 BST
Finish16:20-16:43 BST

The safest option is to start watching at 15:00 BST. That gives you the intermediate sprint, the final climb and the full build-up into Bergerac. Watching only from 16:00 BST should still be enough for the decisive sprint phase, unless the stage is running unusually quickly.

Stage 8 in one sentence

Stage 8 from Périgueux to Bergerac is a 180.4km flat stage with two category 4 climbs, a key intermediate sprint at Saint-Cyprien and a likely bunch finish that should be essential viewing from around 15:00 BST.

FAQs

What time does Tour de France stage 8 start in the UK?

Stage 8 starts with the neutralised roll-out at 12:15 BST. The race proper is scheduled to begin at 12:25 BST.

What time will Tour de France stage 8 finish in the UK?

The stage is expected to finish in Bergerac between 16:20 and 16:43 BST.

What is the route for stage 8?

Stage 8 runs 180.4km from Périgueux to Bergerac. It is officially classed as flat, with 1,150m of elevation gain.

Is stage 8 a sprint stage?

Yes. Stage 8 should favour the sprinters, although the two category 4 climbs in the second half make it slightly more awkward than a completely flat run-in.

When is the best time to watch stage 8 live?

The best time to start watching in the UK is around 15:00 BST. That should cover the intermediate sprint, the final climb and the final 40km into Bergerac.

Where can I watch stage 8 in the UK?

Stage 8 is live on TNT Sports and HBO Max in the UK. Channel 5 has free-to-air highlights.

Who are the favourites for stage 8?

Tim Merlier, Olav Kooij, Jasper Philipsen, Biniam Girmay and Mads Pedersen are the main names to watch if the stage ends in the expected bunch sprint.