Vuelta a España 2024
Latest News from the Race
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Angliru rumoured for 2025 Vuelta a España's December 19 route reveal
Rumours of return to La Farrapona and Andorra for 90th edition of Spanish Grand Tour, which will start in Italy -
Fresh details emerge about probable 2025 Vuelta a España start in Italy
First bunch sprint chance on stage 1, opening summit finish on stage 3, report local media -
'One crash too many' - Wout van Aert looks ahead after Vuelta a España accident and injury
Belgian still on crutches but hoping to race cyclocross this winter
Date | August 17-September 8 |
Start location | Lisbon, Portugal |
Finish location | Madrid |
Total distance | 3,304km |
Edition | 79th |
Vertical climbing total | 59,279m |
Previous edition | 2023 Vuelta a España |
Previous Edition - Winner | Sepp Kuss (USA) Jumbo-Visma |
Row 8 - Cell 0 | Row 8 - Cell 1 |
Vuelta a España results
Results powered by FirstCycling
Stage 21: Primož Roglič claims fourth GC title as Stefan Küng wins stage 21 time trial / As it happened
Primož Roglič won a fourth Vuelta a España title on Sunday evening, sealing his fifth Grand Tour title in six years with a second-place finish in the final stage time trial in Madrid.
One of only two riders to break the 27-minute barrier, Stefan Küng (Groupama-FDJ) won the final time trial with a blistering time of 26:28 on the 24.6km course. It marked the Swiss rider's first-ever stage victory in a Grand Tour after a string of second places in recent years.
Stage 20: Eddie Dunbar wins atop Picón Blanco as Primož Roglič holds lead / As it happened
Eddie Dunbar (Jayco AlUla) conquered the queen stage of the 2024 Vuelta a España, launching a move out of the group of GC favourites with 5km to go and powering solo to the line after catching and dropping lone attacking Pavel Sivakov (UAE Team Emirates).
Enric Mas (Movistar) managed second on the stage ahead of Primož Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), however, his time gain was minimal, only beating him by three seconds on the day and cutting the Slovenian's advantage by just nine seconds thanks to bonus seconds.
Stage 19: Primož Roglič seizes race lead with victory atop Alto de Moncalvillo / As it happened
Primož Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) made his decisive move in the race for the overall Vuelta a España on stage 19 as he took solo victory on the summit finish of Alto de Moncalvillo and moved into race lead. Attacking with 4.8km from the top of the climb, after powerful teamwork from Daniel Martinez and Alexandr Vlazov, Roglič soloed to the win by 46 seconds ahead of David Gaudu (Groupama-FDJ) and Mattias Skjelmose (Lidl-Trek).
Roglič now leads the overall GC by 1:54 ahead of overnight leader Ben O'Connor (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale), who was distanced on the climb and lost valuable time to Roglič, but remains in second place overall.
Stage 18: Urko Berrade takes solo win on stage 18 / As it happened
Urko Berrade (Kern Pharma) soloed in from the day's large breakaway to win a third Vuelta a España stage for his team on stage 18. The GC standings remained largely the same but Mikel Landa (T Rex-Quickstep) was dropped on the category 1 Puerto Herrera and slipped five places down into 10th. Ben O'Connor held onto his five-second lead over Primož Roglič.
Stage 17: Kaden Groves seizes third sprint victory on rain-soaked stage 17 / As it happened
Kaden Groves (Alpecin-Deceuninck) took his third sprint win at the 2024 Vuelta a España after a rain-soaked, nail-biting chase into Santander, beating Pavel Bittner (DSM-firmenich PostNL) and Vito Braet (Intermarché-Wanty).
The peloton caught what was left of an all-day breakaway of four in the closing kilometres, where Victor Campenaerts (Lotto-Dstny) then made a last-ditch attack for the win, but he too was caught in the final few hundred metres and finished in sixth.
Stage 16: Marc Soler erupts for win on stage 16's Lagos de Covadonga summit while O'Connor clings to red jersey / As it happened
After a trio of third-place finishes at this year's Vuelta a España, Marc Soler (UAE Team Emirates) earned the victory on stage 16. He rode away from Filippo Zana (Jayco-AlUla) and Max Poole (DSM-Firmenich PostNL) in the final 7km of the steep climb to Lagos de Covadonga, leaving Zana to take second and Poole third.
Race leader Ben O’Connor (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale ) fought hard on the climb and retained the red leader’s jersey by just five seconds. Points and mountains classification leader Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike) crashed with under 50km to go and withdrew from the race.
Stage 15: Pablo Castrillo holds off Vlasov to claim second stage win on Cuitu Negru / As it happened
Pablo Castrillo put in a stunning ride to win stage 15 atop the Cuitu Negru from a three-rider breakaway. Ben O'Connor survived the stage to keep the red jersey but lost 38 seconds to Primož Roglič and Enric Mas on the stage.
Stage 14: Kaden Groves tops Wout van Aert to win stage 14 / As it happened
The sprinters made a surprise return after a category 1 climb with 16km to go, with Kaden Groves out-sprinting Wout van Aert to win his second stage. The GC did not change.
Stage 13: Michael Woods conquers Puerto de Ancares summit finish as Roglič takes time on O'Connor / As it happened
While Michael Woods (Israel-Premier Tech) may not win often, when he does, he wins big. Today was no different at the Vuelta a España as he launched away from the remnants of the day’s breakaway 4.8km from the line to conquer the Puerto de Ancares summit finish solo on stage 13.
More than 10 minutes down the climb, Primož Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) attacked from the GC group and eventually dropped everyone, including race leader Ben O'Connor (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale), cutting his deficit down to just 1:21.
Stage 12: Pablo Castrillo holds off chasers and wins from the breakaway into Manzaneda / As it happened
Pablo Castrillo took the win of his life and of Equipo Kern Pharma’s existence on stage 12 of the Vuelta a España, emerging as the victor after launching a stunning attack from the breakaway 10km from the finish to Estacion de Montaña de Manzaneda.
Race leader Ben O’Connor (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale) safely crossed the line in the large group of GC favourites 6:29 down on Castrillo after letting the 10-man break of the day build the lead with 110km to go.
Stage 11: Eddie Dunbar solos to victory from the breakaway as Roglič takes time on O'Connor / As it happened
In a thrilling end to a breathless breakaway fight at the Vuelta a España, Eddie Dunbar (Jayco AlUla) outfoxed his fellow escapees with a perfectly-timed attack in the final kilometre to take victory on stage 11 in Padrón, his first at a Grand Tour.
Behind the break, Primož Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) attacked on the final climb and distanced Ben O'Connor (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale), with the race leader losing 37 seconds to a group containing many of his GC rivals.
Stage 10: Wout van Aert solidifies green jersey with stage 10 victory / As it happened
Wout van Aert claimed his third stage win of the 2024 Vuelta, this time getting into a breakaway and then riding his final companion - Quentin Pacher (Groupama-FDJ) off his wheel in the final kilometre. The win pushed him further into the lead of the points classification over Kaden Groves. Race leader Ben O'Connor finished in the peloton to hold onto the red jersey.
Stage 9: Adam Yates stamps authority on stage 9 solo victory / As it happened
Adam Yates (UAE Team Emirates) used a long-range attack across the two ascents of the Alto de Hazallanas for a solo victory on stage 9. The climbing demonstration launched him back into GC contention, moving 20 places up the standings to seventh overall. Richard Carapaz (EF Education-EasyPost) finished alone in second place and he also moved into the top 10.
Red jersey Ben O’Connor (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale) finished third, riding ahead of favourite Primož Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), and retained the race lead.
Stage 8: Primož Roglič powers to mountaintop win on stage 8 to cut into O'Connor's GC lead / As it happened
Primož Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) captured his second stage win of the week at the Vuelta a España, taking the stage 8 victory at the top of Sierra de Cazorla. He distanced more importantly, put nearly a minute into race leader Ben O’Connor (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale).
After taking bonus seconds on Friday to begin to claw back the near-five-minute deficit that had yawned open during O’Connor’s stage 6 raid, Roglič was rewarded with even greater inroads on stage 8 with another aggressive display.
Stage 7: Wout van Aert claims second win on stage 7 / As it happened
Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike) won the much reduced bunch sprint on stage 7 to Cordoba, out-sprinting Mathias Vacek (Lidl-Trek) and Pau Miquel (Kern Pharma) after the late climb of Alto Del obliterated the peloton.
Ben O'Connor (Decathlon-AG2R) remained in the race lead but lost six seconds to Primož Roglič in the time bonus sprint atop the Alto Del.
Stage 6: Ben O'Connor wins stage 6 and takes race lead / As it happened
Ben O’Connor (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale) soloed to victory across the final 26km on a mountainous stage 6 and vaulted into the GC lead at the 2024 Vuelta a España. Trailing in solo second was Marco Frigo (Israel-Premier Tech), while Florian Lipowitz (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) led a four-rider chase group for third. Primož Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) came across the finish in the peloton more than six minutes behind O'Connor, and is now second overall, 4:51 down.
Stage 5: Pavel Bittner swipes stage 5 victory ahead of Van Aert and Groves / As it happened
Pavel Bittner (DSM-Firmenich-PostNL) stunned the Vuelta a España on stage 5, beating green jersey holder Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike) in a photo-finish bunch sprint in Sevilla to take his third win of the season and the third win of his young career.
Primož Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) remains in the race lead after the stage with no changes to the top of the leaderboard.
Stage 4: Primož Roglič wins stage 4 to seize race lead / As it happened
Three-time winner and overall favourite Primož Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) scored his 13th career stage win atop Pico Villuercas to take over the race lead in the process. The Slovenian beat Lennert Van Eetvelt (Lotto-Dstny) in a close sprint at the finish of the race's first summit finish.
Roglič led home a seven-man lead group at the end of the 170.5km stage and now leads the GC by eight seconds from João Almeida (UAE Team Emirates) while Enric Mas (Movistar) lies in third place at 32 seconds. Reigning champion Sepp Kuss (Visma-Lease A Bike) finished in 11th place and now lies 1:14 off the race lead.
Stage 3: Wout van Aert wins stage 3 in bunch sprint / As it happened
Race leader Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike) reversed fortunes from one day ago and this time outsprinted Kaden Groves (Alpecin-Deceuninck) for the stage 3 victory. Jon Aberasturi (Euskaltel-Euskadi) sailed past Arne Marit (Intermarché-Wanty) to grab third place in the bunch finish in Castelo Branco.
The Belgian padded his GC lead to 13 seconds over Brandon McNulty (UAE Team Emirates) and 15 seconds over Mathias Vacek (Lidl-Trek). He also took the green jersey away from Groves, having finished fifth on the only intermediate sprint for 10 points and giving him eight more than the Australian.
Stage 2: Kaden Groves wins mass sprint on stage 2 as Wout van Aert seizes the leader’s jersey / As it happened
Kaden Groves (Alpecin-Deceuninck) sprinted to his first win this year on stage 2 in Ourém, crossing the line ahead of Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease A Bike) and Corbin Strong (Israel-Premiertech). By taking the bonus seconds for his second place, Van Aert takes over the general classification lead with three seconds on stage 1 winner Brandon McNulty (UAE Team Emirates), and five seconds on best young rider Mathias Vacek (Lidl-Trek).
Stage 1: Brandon McNulty storms to opening stage 1 time trial win, takes first leader’s jersey / As it happened
American TT champion Brandon McNulty (UAE Team Emirates) set the fastest time on the opening stage 1 time trial and claimed the first red jersey on Saturday. His time of 12:35 on the 12km route was two seconds faster that Czech TT champion Mathias Vacek (Lidl-Trek). Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease A Bike) took third, three seconds slower than the fastest time.
2024 Vuelta a España overview
The 2024 Vuelta a España celebrates its 79th edition this year with its first start in neighbouring Portugal since 1997 on Saturday, August 17 in Lisbon and finishing in the Spanish capital, Madrid on Sunday, September 8.
The route will cover 3,304 kilometres and contains 52,279 metres of vertical climbing over 21 days of racing.
Race organisers Unipublic have created a typically ultra-mountainous route with an opening and concluding time trial, nine summit finishes. With the exception of stage 9 through the mountains of Sierra Nevada, most of the toughest stages are concentrated in the second half of the race.
2023 champion Sepp Kuss (Visma-Lease a Bike) will be present in the 2024 Vuelta and is aiming for a repeat overall victory.
Other top names include - subject to confirmation - triple Vuelta a España winner Primoz Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), Adam Yates (UAE Team Emirates), 20216 Vuelta champion Nairo Quintana (Movistar), Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease a Bike), Ben O’Connor (Decathlon-AG2R La Mondiale), Aleksandre Vlasov (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) and João Almeida (UAE Team Emirates)
Cyclingnews will provide comprehensive coverage of the 2024 Vuelta a España, with live minute-by-minute coverage every day, full stage reports, as well as interviews, breaking news, race analysis, and the latest tech from our team around the world and on the ground in Spain.
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Vuelta a España route
Route news
Five key stages of the 2024 Vuelta a España
Vuelta a España 2024 route revealed - showcasing Lagos de Covadonga and finale time trial
Vuelta A España Contenders
Vuelta a España startlist
Data powered by FirstCycling
Vuelta a España 2024 Schedule
Date | Stage | Distance | Stage Times (WEST/CET) |
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Saturday August 17, 2024 | Stage 1: Lisbon - Oieras (ITT) | 12km | 16.23 - 19.30 (WEST) |
Sunday August 18, 2024 | Stage 2: Cascais - Ourém | 194km | 11.50 - 16.19 (WEST) |
Monday August 19, 2024 | Stage 3: Lousã - Castelo Branco | 195km | 11.50 - 16.18 (WEST) |
Tuesday August 20, 2024 | Stage 4: Plasencia - Pico Villuercas | 170.5km | 13.05 - 17.19 (CET) |
Wednesday August 21, 2024 | Stage 5: Fuente del Maestre - Sevilla | 177km | 13.25 - 17.19 (CET) |
Thursday August 22, 2024 | Stage 6: Jerez de la Frontera - Yunquera | 185.5km | 12.40 - 17.17 (CET) |
Friday August 23, 2024 | Stage 7: Archidona - Córdoba | 180.5km | 13.10 - 17.20 (CET) |
Saturday August 24, 2024 | Stage 8: Úbeda - Cazorla | 159km | 13.30 - 17.20 (CET) |
Sunday August 25, 2024 | Stage 9: Motril - Granada | 178.5km | 12.35 - 17.16 (CET) |
Tuesday August 27, 2024 | Stage 10: Ponteareas - Baiona | 159.6km | 13.30 - 17.19 (CET) |
Wednesday August 28, 2024 | Stage 11:Padrón - Padrón | 166.4km | 13.30 - 17.21 (CET) |
Thursday August 29, 2024 | Stage 12: Ourense - Manzaneda | 137.4km | 14.10 - 17.22 (CET) |
Friday August 30, 2024 | Stage 13: Lugo - Puerto de Ancares | 176km | 12.55 - 17.17 (CET) |
Saturday August 31, 2024 | Stage 14: Villafranca del Bierzo - Villablino | 200.4km | 12.25 - 17.16 (CET) |
Sunday September 1, 2024 | Stage 15:Infiesto - Cuitu Negru | 142.9km | 13.51 - 17.20 (CET) |
Tuesday September 3, 2024 | Stage 16: Luanco - Lagos de Covadonga | 181.5km | 12.50 - 17.18 (CET) |
Wednesday September 4, 2024 | Stage 17: Arnuero - Santander | 141.5km | 14.10 - 17.22 (CET) |
Thursday September 5, 2024 | Stage 18:Vitoria - Maeztu | 179.3km | 13.05 - 17.19 (CET) |
Friday September 6, 2024 | Stage 19: Logroño - Alto de Moncalvillo | 173.5km | 13.15 - 17.19 (CET) |
Saturday September 7, 2024 | Stage 20: Villarcayo - Picón Blanco | 172km | 13.00 - 17.17 (CET) |
Sunday September 8, 2024 | Stage 21: Madrid - Madrid (ITT) | 24.6km | 16:20 - 19.30 (CET) |
Vuelta a España Records
Most overall wins: Roberto Heras (four); Primoz Roglič, Tony Rominger, Alberto Contador (three).
Most stage wins: Delio Rodríguez (39); Alessandro Petacchi (20); Laurent Jalabert, Rik van Looy (18); Sean Kelly (16); Gerben Karstens (14); Tony Rominger, Freddy Maertens (13); Primoz Roglič, Alejandro Valverde (12).
Most mountain classification wins: Jose Luis Laguía (five); David Moncoutie, Jose María Jiménez (four); Julio Jiménez, Anthony Karmany, Andres Oliva (three).
Most points classification wins: Sean Kelly, Laurent Jalabert, Alejandro Valverde (four); Erik Zabel (three).
Most starts: Inigo Cuesta (17).
Youngest winner: Angelino Soler, 1961 (21 years and 167 days).
Oldest winner: Chris Horner, 2013 (41 years and 327 days).
Smallest margin of victory: Erik Caritoux, 1984 (six seconds).
Largest margin of victory: Delio Rodríguez, 1945 (30:08).
Fastest edition: 2001 (42.534kmh.)
Races
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Vuelta a España 202417 August 2024 - 8 September 2024 | Spain | WorldTour
Latest Content on the Race
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'This Vuelta has been pretty crazy' – Sepp Kuss still eyeing opportunities as race reaches midpoint
By Barry Ryan published
News Defending champion eight minutes off red jersey but unruly GC battle still wide open
UAE Team Emirates take cautious stance on Adam Yates' boosted Vuelta a España GC prospects
By Alasdair Fotheringham published
News Briton regained significant GC time with long-distance breakaway triumph in Sierra Nevada
'He can do everything' - Versatile Wout van Aert claims third stage at Vuelta a España
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News Belgian dominates points classification with multiple victories and placings
'It wasn't a day for GC guys to go for it' – Ben O'Connor calm and in control at Vuelta a España
By Barry Ryan published
News Australian on his Netflix reputation and his prospects of defending red until Madrid
Vuelta a España 2024 - Stage 10 preview
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Preview August 27, 2024: Ponteareas-Baiona, 160km
Antonio Tiberi out of Vuelta a España after 'heat stroke' during stage 9
By Laura Weislo published
News Italian did not finish after suffering in high heat in Sunday's stage
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By Peter Stuart published
News Australian rider doesn’t feel the pressure of his 'unexpected' red jersey as finishing atop the field becomes more plausible
Top News on the Race
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'There’s no excuses' – Sepp Kuss unsparing in assessment of Vuelta a España defence
Absence from Tour de France left American short of best in Spain -
From Madrid to Marbella: Luis Maté celebrates retirement with 650-kilometre ride home from Vuelta a España
From Madrid to Marbella: Luis Maté celebrates retirement with 650-kilometre ride home from Vuelta a España -
‘I don’t feel satisfied’ - Enric Mas wanted more than another Vuelta a España podium
Spaniard finishes third overall after aggressive race but ‘worst day of Vuelta’ in Madrid time trial
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'I had to finish it off' – Primož Roglič reveals he was affected by Red Bull illness at Vuelta a España
Slovenian seals record-equalling fourth overall victory on final stage in Madrid -
'Second is a win' - Ben O’Connor sees Grand Tour podium dream come true at Vuelta a España
Australian makes strong defence of second place overall in final Madrid time trial -
'I wouldn’t rule out Primoz Roglič wins a fifth Vuelta a España' - Roberto Heras
Four times Vuelta a España winner sees his all-time record equalled by Slovenian star
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Vuelta a España stage 21 time trial start times
Roglič looks to wrap up record-equalling fourth overall title in race against the clock -
‘I had unfinished business’ - Jay Vine on securing the KOM jersey after Vuelta a España stage 20
Australian states that teammate Marc Soler was helping despite confusing tactics -
'I should have a good run at it' – Brandon McNulty looks to bookend Vuelta a España with time trial wins
American eyes Zurich World Championships after overcoming dramatic crash on stage 13
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