Add to My Favourites

2020 Vuelta a Espana visits the brutal slopes of the Tourmalet and the Angliru

Spanish Grand Tour takes in Netherlands, France, Portugal before final showdown in the run into Madrid

La Vuelta has unveiled the full 2020 route with the Grand Tour visiting the Netherlands with excursions into France and Portugal from Spain.

The race opens with a Team Time Trial on on August 14 in the Dutch city of Utrech in the Netherlands and two flat sprint stages before heading South to Spain.

The 2020 race is a total 21 stages and 3,245 kms of three thrilling weeks which culminates in Madrid on September 6.

As well as three Dutch stages the route also features cycling’s mythical Col de Tourmalet in France where Thibaut Pinot won a stage ahead of Julian Alaphilippe on the 2019 Tour de France.

The route also takes in two stages in Portugal for the first time since 1997.

Slovenia’s Primoz Roglic is the defending champion while runner up veteran Spaniard Alejandro Valverde is likely to race the Tour de France and the Olympics in July before retiring.

The 21-year-old Tadej Pogacar will be a focus of attention after winning three stages, the white jersey and finishing third overall on his breakout Vuelta last September.

A traditionally gruelling race, in its 75th edition, the route includes seven steep climbs, one fewer than last year, as well as 11 stages that feature medium to high mountains in Spain and France.

“La Vuelta remains faithful to its commitment to innovation and to its dedication to being international,” said the event’s director general Javier Guillen.

“In 2020, we will undoubtedly host be one of the most European sports events, visiting four EU countries: the Netherlands, Spain, France, and Portugal.

“Spain is still our home, the place that reminds us where we came from and where we are headed but it also pushes us to grow as a competition and to progress even further.”

There will be eight flat stages and 11 hilly and mountain stages, as well as one individual time trial and one opening team time trial.

Eight Uphill Finishes will Suit the Pure Climbers

Roglic dominated his rivals in the time-trials last year and the 2020 route should suit him.

With fearsome summit finishes posted at the Sanctuary of Arrate, Laguna Negra, Tourmalet, Moncalvillo, La Farrapona, Angliru, Mirador de Ezaro and La Covatilla, Roglic will have much to fear from the mountain climbers.

The flat stages in the Netherlands will favour the sprinters before the climbs begin in Spain’s Basque country on stage four, with an 18km ascent in stage six that will end at Laguna Negra.

Stage nine and 10 offer more mountain challenges, with the former posing a 19km climb of the Col du Tourmalet at a gradient of 7.4 per cent and the latter finishing at Moncalvillo after a 15km climb, the last eight kilometres at an unforgiving 9.2 per cent.

After some welcome respite for the sprinters, stage 15 perhaps presents the most formidable phase of the course, as a section of the Cuena les Cabres includes 3km at a lung-busting 23.5 per cent gradient.

Stage 18 will leave Spain for Portugal before the 20th stage brings the final summit finish at La Covatilla. The sprint to the line in Madrid will conclude at the Plaza de Cibeles at the end of stage 21.

2020 La Vuelta a Espana Stages

August 14 – Stage 1: Utrecht-Utrecht (TTT), 23.3km
August 15 – Stage 2: s’Hertogenbosch – Utrecht, 181.6km
August 16 – Stage 3: Breda – Breda, 193km~

August 17 – Rest Day

August 18 – Stage 4: Irún – Arrate, 169.5km
August 19 – Stage 5: Pamplona – Lekunberri, 151km
August 20 – Stage 6: Lodosa – La Laguna Negra de Vinuesa, 163.8km
August 21 – Stage 7: Garray – Ejea de los Caballeros, 190km
August 22 – Stage 9: Huesca – Sabiñanigo, 185.5km
August 23 – Stage 9: Biescas – Col du Tourmalet, 135.6 km

August 24 – Rest Day

August 25 – Stage 10: Vitoria – Villanueva de Valdegovia, 160.4km
August 26 – Stage 11: Logroño – Alto de Moncalvillo, 164.5km
August 27 – Stage 12: Castrillo del Val – Aguilar del Campo, 163.6km
August 28 – Stage 13: Castro Urdiales – Suances, 187.4km
August 29 – Stage 14: Villaviciosa – Alto de la Farrapona, 170.2km
August 30 – Stage 15:Pola de Laviana – Alto del Angliru, 109.2km

August 31 – Rest Day

September 1 – Stage 16: Muros – Ezaro (ITT), 33.5km
September 2 – Stage 17: Lugo – Ourense, 205.8km
September 3 – Stage 18: Mos – Porto, 178km
September 4 – Stage 19: Viseu – Ciudad Rodrigo, 177.7km
September 5 – Stage 20: Sequeros – Alto de la Covatilla, 175.8km
September 6 – Stage 21: La Zarzuela – Madrid, 125.4km

2020 Vuelta a Espana visits the brutal slopes of the Tourmalet and the Angliru

 
Tag: vuelta
 
Dec 20 2024 - NEWS: The 7 Key stages of a Vintage Vuelta ideal for Tadej Pogacar in 2025
Dec 03 2024 - NEWS: 2025 Vuelta a Espana to start in Turin
Oct 22 2024 - NEWS: 2025 Vuelta a España rumoured to be heading back to the Alto de l'Angliru
Sep 01 2024 - NEWS: Gutsy Pablo Castrillo wins tough Vuelta stage atop Cuitu Negru
Aug 30 2024 - NEWS: Woods wins stage as Roglic decimates O'Connor's lead
Aug 28 2024 - NEWS: Irish rider Eddie Dunbar wins Vuelta stage 11
Aug 27 2024 - NEWS: Van Aert claims third stage Victory at La Vuelta
Aug 25 2024 - NEWS: Yates attacks to win stage nine and revive Vuelta hopes
Aug 23 2024 - NEWS: Van Aert wins Vuelta stage seven sweltering suffer fest
Aug 22 2024 - NEWS: Ben O'Connor annihilates GC favorites with 5 min lead on Stage 6
Aug 21 2024 - NEWS: Czech Bittner pips Van Aert in sprint to win Vuelta stage five
Aug 20 2024 - NEWS: Roglic wins first mountain finish to take the red jersey at La Vuelta
Aug 19 2024 - NEWS: Wout van Aert outsprints Groves to remain in the Red Leader's Jersey
Aug 18 2024 - NEWS: Kaden Groves powers to sprint victory on Stage 2 of La Vuelta
Aug 17 2024 - NEWS: American Brandon McNulty pulls on the Red Jersey at the Vuelta Espana
Jun 30 2014 - RESULTS: Vuelta Keystone Gran Fondo
Aug 23 2025 - EVENT: 2025 La Vuelta Espana
Sep 06 2025 - EVENT: Vuelta Chapala