Ineos Grenadiers have revealed a revamped jersey design for the 2025 Tour de France, marking the official arrival of TotalEnergies as a secondary sponsor. The updated kit, created by Gobik, incorporates a new white panel across the chest showcasing the TotalEnergies logo in a prominent central position.
The fresh look will be worn by the team starting from the Grand Départ in Lille on July 5, with riders including Carlos Rodríguez and Geraint Thomas set to debut the design on cycling’s biggest stage.
While TotalEnergies’ branding now features heavily on the jersey, the French energy company cannot be listed as a co-title sponsor due to UCI rules. The company remains title sponsor of their own ProTeam, also named TotalEnergies, through to the end of 2026. That restriction rules out any current possibility of renaming the British WorldTour team, even if the level of sponsorship implies a major financial backing.
Ready for the biggest stage 👊
— INEOS Grenadiers (@INEOSGrenadiers) July 3, 2025
Created by Gobik with @TotalEnergies, we’re excited to reveal a fresh look to debut at @LeTour 🖤❤️🤍🧡 pic.twitter.com/rR6cnwXtmc
Despite this, the logo’s size and positioning – and its presence on team vehicles and the Ineos bus in Lille – indicate how substantial the new partnership is for the team’s future. The agreement is expected to span not just the Tour de France but the remainder of the 2025 season.
The new look retains Ineos’ familiar deep black and red tones but is now bisected by a bold white block. This adds a visual link to TotalEnergies’ own Tour de France jersey, also revealed this week. That design, inspired by Peugeot’s classic checkerboard kits, honours the Vendée region’s racing history and Jean-René Bernaudeau’s past as a Peugeot rider.
Although each jersey is distinctive – Ineos bringing in orange and TotalEnergies sticking to clean white – both now share the unmistakable TotalEnergies mark. The result is a curious visual symmetry between two separate squads who, under current rules, are technically independent but increasingly connected.