The 2025 Vuelta a España is set to be a climber’s Grand Tour, with ten summit finishes, two time trials and barely a flat day across its three weeks. Beginning on Saturday, 23rd August in Turin, the 80th edition of the race ventures through Italy and France before heading to northern Spain and Andorra, where the red jersey battle will truly unfold.
The race ends in Madrid on 14th September, but only after a punishing route stacked with high-altitude challenges. The Angliru and Bola del Mundo headline the climbs, while a team time trial and a late individual time trial provide key tests for GC hopefuls. Jonas Vingegaard and Juan Ayuso start as big favourites, with João Almeida and Giulio Ciccone also expected to feature. For Spain’s Mikel Landa, this Vuelta is as much about testing his recovery and aiming for stage wins as it is about GC.
A demanding opening in Italy and France
The Vuelta begins with three hilly days in Piemonte. Stage 1 to Novara could see the sprinters fight for the first red jersey, but the terrain is not straightforward. Stage 2 to Limone Piemonte ends uphill, offering the first chance to see GC riders test each other, while stage 3 into Ceres features over 2,000m of climbing.
Stage 4 takes the peloton into France over the Col du Lautaret before finishing in Voiron. This will encourage breakaway specialists and all-rounders, while GC teams focus on conserving energy ahead of Spain. Once across the border, the first big test arrives with a 20km team time trial in Figueres on stage 5. Stronger, more balanced squads could take crucial seconds here, a risk for climbers backed by lighter teams.
Summit finishes to shape the GC
Stage 6 is the first real GC battle, ending atop Pal in Andorra, a 9.6km climb at 6.3%. The following day, stage 7, is one of the hardest of the entire race, with over 4,200m of elevation gain and a finish at Cerler. With the Port del Cantó and multiple steep climbs, this could expose weaknesses early.
Stages 9 and 10 bring further summit finishes at Valdezcaray and Larra Belagua, the latter a climb where Remco Evenepoel won in 2023. Stage 11 in Bilbao will be one for the puncheurs, featuring Alto del Vivero and Alto de Pike, climbs last used in the 2023 Tour de France Grand Départ. Riders like Tom Pidcock or Matteo Jorgenson could excel here.
Stage 13 brings the Angliru back into the race, one of the steepest climbs in pro cycling, followed immediately by another brutal mountain finish at La Farrapona on stage 14. These back-to-back stages will be decisive for riders like Vingegaard, Ayuso and Almeida.
The third week continues the climbing theme with the Alto de El Morredero on stage 17, a punishing ascent averaging 9.7%. Stage 18 in Valladolid is the only individual time trial: 27.2km of flat roads where time trial specialists like Almeida, Vingegaard and even Geraint Thomas could take big gains.
The race’s penultimate stage to Bola del Mundo on stage 20 is the ultimate sting in the tail. After five categorised climbs, riders face a brutal final 3km at over 12%, the highest point of the race. With the GC still in play, it could be the most decisive day of all.
Limited opportunities for sprinters
Sprinters will find few chances in this Vuelta. Stage 1, Zaragoza on stage 8, and Guijuelo on stage 19 are the main opportunities, plus the Madrid finale. Jasper Philipsen is expected to lead the sprint field, with Bryan Coquard, Elia Viviani, Ethan Vernon and Jake Stewart among his rivals. Mads Pedersen, riding an alternative season, will also target these rolling sprint stages, aiming to complete a rare Grand Tour points jersey hat-trick for Lidl-Trek.
Vuelta a España 2025 stages
Stage | Date | Start | Finish | Distance | Type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 23 Aug | Torino-Reggia di Venaria (Italy) | Novara | 186.1km | Hilly |
2 | 24 Aug | Alba | Puerto Limone | 159.6km | Hilly |
3 | 25 Aug | San Maurizio Canavese | Ceres | 134.6km | Hilly |
4 | 26 Aug | Susa | Voiron (France) | 206.7km | Hilly |
5 | 27 Aug | Figueres (Spain) | Figueres | 24.1km | Team time trial |
6 | 28 Aug | Olot | Pal (Andorra) | 170.3km | Mountains |
7 | 29 Aug | Andorra la Vella | Huesca | 188km | Mountains |
8 | 30 Aug | Monzón Templario | Zaragoza | 163.5km | Flat |
9 | 31 Aug | Alfaro | Estación de Esquí de Valdezcaray | 195.5km | Mountains |
10 | 2 Sept | Parque de la Naturaleza Sendaviva | El Ferial Larra Belagua | 175.3km | Mountains |
11 | 3 Sept | Bilbao | Bilbao | 157.4km | Hilly |
12 | 4 Sept | Laredo | Los Corrales de Buelna | 144.9km | Hilly |
13 | 5 Sept | Cabezón de la Sal | L’Angliru | 202.7km | Mountains |
14 | 6 Sept | Avilés | Alto de la Farrapona | 135.9km | Mountains |
15 | 7 Sept | Vegadeo | Monforte de Lemos | 167.8km | Hilly |
16 | 9 Sept | Poio | Mos | 167.9km | Hilly |
17 | 10 Sept | O Barco de Valdeorras | Alto de El Morredero | 143.2km | Mountains |
18 | 11 Sept | Valladolid | Valladolid | 27.2km | Individual time trial |
19 | 12 Sept | Rueda | Guijuelo | 161.9km | Flat |
20 | 13 Sept | Robledo de Chavela | Bola del Mundo | 165.6km | Mountains |
21 | 14 Sept | Alalpardo | Madrid | 111.6km | Flat |
A race for the climbers
The 2025 Vuelta a España is uncompromising: ten summit finishes, two crucial time trials, and relentless terrain that will reward the best all-round climber. Jonas Vingegaard will seek to add another Grand Tour to his palmarès, Ayuso will aim to claim Spain’s first home win since 2009, and Almeida, Ciccone and Bernal are all contenders for the podium.
With so many punishing climbs and a sting in the tail at Bola del Mundo, the race looks likely to remain undecided until the very last weekend in Madrid.