Rider Profile
Wout van Aert
Visma-Lease a Bike
Personal Details:
Teams history:
- 2025 - Visma-Lease a Bike
- 2024 - Visma-Lease a Bike
- 2023 - Team Jumbo-Visma
- 2022 - Team Jumbo-Visma
- 2021 - Team Jumbo–Visma
- 2020 - Team Jumbo-Visma
- 2019 - Team Jumbo-Visma
- 2018 - Veranda's Willems Crelan
- 2017 - Veranda's Willems Crelan
- 2016 - Crelan-Vastgoedservice Continental Team
Biography:
Tour de France multiple stage winner and Classics champion Wout van Aert, born 15 September 1994 in Herentals, Belgium turned professional in 2013 with the Belgian Continental team Telenet-Fidea. He started his career in cyclocross, winning the World Championships in that specialty three times, in 2016, 2017 and 2018, as well as claiming his first professional road win, the prologue of the Tour of Belgium, in 2016.
After a controversial separation from the Vérandas Willems-Crelan team, Van Aert joined his current team, Jumbo-Visma, in March 2019. He quickly snapped up two stages of the Criterium du Dauphiné. This was followed by his first stage of his debut Tour de France that summer, in a bunch sprint, but he then abandoned, injured.
Established as a hugely versatile rider, Van Aert’s breakthrough season came in 2020 when his wins included the Milan-Sanremo Classic, Strade Bianche, two bunch sprint stages of the Tour de France and the Belgian National Time Trial title. Runner up spots in the Tour of Flanders and both the World Championships elite men’s Road Race and Time Trial events rounded off a stellar season.
Van Aert continued to display his all-round talents to devastating effect in 2021. He took wins in the Gent-Wevelgem and Amstel Gold Race Classics, stage victories in the Tour de France over the Mont Ventoux, in the final time trial and on the Champs Elysées 24 hours later.
In 2022, Van Aert once again acted as a key support on the climbs for Jonas Vingegaard in the Tour de France as his Danish teammate followed up his 2021 second place with the overall victory 12 months later. Simultaneously, Van Aert claimed three stage wins for himself, including the final time trial as well as the green points jersey.
The 2023 season saw Van Aert put his focus on cyclocross in the off-season and he claimed nine victories but could not beat Mathieu van der Poel at the world championships. He finished on the podium of Milan-San Remo, Gent-Wevelgem and Paris-Roubaix and won the E3 Saxo Classic. He dropped out of the Tour de France on stage 18 and went on to finish second behind Van der Poel at the Road World Championships.
In 2024, Van Aert won a stage at the Volta ao Algarve and Kuurne-Brussel-Kuurne but was involved in a crash at Dwars door Vlaanderen where he sustained fractures to his collarbone and ribs. He went on to three podium finishes in stages at the Tour de France, and then won three stages at the Vuelta a España at the end of the season but was involved in a crash on stage 16 at the Vuelta forcing him to abandon the race and end his season early due to a knee injury.
Van Aert signed 'unique' career-long contract extension with Visma-Lease a Bike. It is an indefinite deal that will take him to the end of his career.
Related Articles
'No fractures' – Wout van Aert assesses damage from overcooked corner at Tour de France
By Simone Giuliani published
News 'Afterwards it was quite painful on every downhill so I was a bit afraid for the arm' Visma-Lease a Bike rider told reporters after stage 11
'I need the Tour de France to find myself again' – Wout van Aert surprised at suggestions of early exit
By Patrick Fletcher published
News Belgian reflects on his state of form after the first week of the Tour
'Up until now, I've been sprinting purely on instinct. I'm afraid that will be more difficult' - Jasper Philipsen feels relegation will impact Tour de France campaign
By Peter Stuart published
News Speaking in his column in Het Belang van Limburg, Philipsen said he felt targeted by the penalty
'I want to win but not at costs to another rider’s safety' - Philipsen apologises to Van Aert after Tour de France relegation
By James Moultrie published
News 'I would never consciously ride in such a way that it endangered another rider' says Belgian on Instagram
‘A bad habit’ - Wout van Aert reacts angrily to Jasper Philipsen's Tour de France sprint manoeuvre
By Alasdair Fotheringham published
News Philipsen later relegated from second to 107th after stage 6 bunch sprint
Matteo Jorgenson on Tour de France stage 2 crash - ‘I expected to be much more hurt’
By Alasdair Fotheringham published
News American and Wout van Aert, also in same crash, feeling ‘ok’ before stage 3, team say
'I never expected to be here on this level' – Emotional Wout van Aert celebrates Tour de France opening stage podium
By Dani Ostanek published
News Belgian takes third in Rimini days after claiming 'I've never started the Tour de France in such poor form'
Wout van Aert ‘never started Tour de France before in such poor form’
By Alasdair Fotheringham published
News Belgian radically adjusting expectations after tough first half of 2024 season
Blogs
-
Nathan Haas blog: Has the UCI done enough for gravel pros at the Gravel World Championships?
Sponsored gravel riders appear to be losing interest in the rainbow jersey battle -
Lauren De Crescenzo and her tough decision to miss UCI Gravel World Championships
In her own words, the gravel star explains the complex picture of the Gravel World Championships for the US team -
A proper women's race – Historic day in Emporia at Unbound Gravel
Extended gaps around women's start end with unprecedented sprint finish though 'it’s still imperfect, but it’s the best we can do for now' -
Road prep and adapting to new rules as Life Time Grand Prix begins at Fuego XL mountain bike event
Lauren De Crescenzo uses The Growler for confidence boost ride ahead of prestigious off-road series -
'Untapped gold' in store for inaugural RADL GRVL in South Australia
Nathan Haas calls gravel course 'raw, fast, exciting' after pre-ride with co-founder Valtteri Bottas