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Live UCI World Tour TV & Streaming Schedule

Access our ultimate guide containing official television channels and digital live streaming schedules for all upcoming UCI World Tour fixtures in your territory.

UCI World Tour on TV Today

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Where to Stream UCI World Tour Live

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About UCI World Tour

The UCI World Tour is professional road cycling at its most brutal and beautiful. Thirty-six races across five continents, from the sun-baked roads of Australia to the cobbled chaos of northern France. The 2026 season kicked off in January and runs all the way to October, with 162 race days packed into a calendar that never stops moving. The Tour de France is the crown jewel, but the Monuments—Milan-Sanremo, Tour of Flanders, Paris-Roubaix, Liège-Bastogne-Liège, and Il Lombardia—are where legends are made. The season is fully underway, with the Giro d'Italia just around the corner and the Tour de France looming in July.

Top riders to watch

Tadej Pogačar sits at the top of the UCI rankings with over 2,700 points, as usual. The Slovenian from UAE Team Emirates wins everything he touches—Strade Bianche, the Tour, you name it. Right behind him are Wout van Aert and Mathieu van der Poel, the two most versatile riders in the peloton. Van Aert just took the Amstel Gold Race, while Van der Poel is always a threat on the cobbles. Remco Evenepoel has climbed to fourth after his own Amstel victory, and Isaac del Toro—the young Mexican sensation—rounds out the top five. Jonas Vingegaard is lurking in 13th, waiting to strike at the Tour de France like he always does.

The Grand Tours

Three weeks, three Grand Tours. The Giro d'Italia runs from May 8 to 31, starting for the first time ever in Bulgaria. Jonas Vingegaard is expected to lead the charge—he's won the Tour and the Vuelta, so the Giro is the only one missing from his collection. The Tour de France follows from July 4 to 26, starting in Barcelona and crossing the Pyrenees early. Defending champion Pogačar and his rivals will battle for yellow over three weeks of chaos. The Vuelta a España closes the Grand Tour season from August 22 to September 13, a final chance for climbers to prove themselves before the year wraps up.

Viewership

Cycling is a niche sport in North America but a religion in Europe. The Tour de France alone draws millions of viewers worldwide, with roadside crowds so thick you can barely see the road. The one-day Classics—especially Paris-Roubaix and Tour of Flanders—are appointment viewing for hardcore fans. In the US, viewership has grown steadily since streaming took over, but it's still nowhere near the numbers you'd see in Belgium or France. The people who watch cycling, though, watch every race. It's a loyal, obsessive fanbase.

Streaming options in the US

Here's the frustrating truth about watching the WorldTour in America: you need multiple subscriptions. There's no single home for cycling. Peacock is your must-have—it carries the Tour de France, Vuelta a España, Paris-Roubaix, Liège-Bastogne-Liège, and Paris-Nice. Plans run $10.99 to $16.99 a month. HBO Max is the new home for RCS Sport races—that means the Giro d'Italia, Milan-Sanremo, Strade Bianche, Tirreno-Adriatico, and Il Lombardia. You'll need the Standard plan at $18.49 a month or Premium at $22.99. FloBikes fills the gaps—Tour of Flanders, Gent-Wevelgem, Dwars door Vlaanderen, Tour de Suisse, and the late-season Tour of Guangxi. It's the priciest at $19.99 a month or $150 for the year. Most serious fans end up with all three.

TV options in the US and Canada

Cable is almost useless for cycling at this point. In the US, the only races that hit traditional TV are select Tour de France stages on NBC or CNBC during the final weekends. Everything else is streaming-only. Canada has it slightly better—FloBikes is the main home there too, and it actually carries the Tour de France for Canadian viewers (unlike in the US where that's Peacock-exclusive). If you're in Canada and only want one service, FloBikes gets you further than any single US option.

International viewing

Europe is spoiled for choice. In the UK, TNT Sports carries most WorldTour races, streamable through discovery+ (soon moving to HBO Max). Most European countries have access through Eurosport or local broadcasters. In Australia, 9Now and SBS cover the big races. In Asia, fans can catch coverage through Astro in Malaysia and various streaming partners in China like IQiyi and Bilibili. For countries without a broadcast deal, check the UCI's YouTube channel—some races stream there for free depending on where you live. A VPN can be your best friend if you know what you're doing.

Remaining 2026 season

As of May 2026, the spring Classics have wrapped up. Pogačar took Strade Bianche, Van der Poel won Milan-Sanremo, and the cobbled monuments delivered their usual chaos. Next up is the Giro d'Italia starting May 8—Vingegaard's big chance. The Tour Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes (formerly the Dauphiné) runs June 7-14 as the final warm-up for the Tour de France. Then it's the big one: Tour de France from July 4-26. After that, the Vuelta a España (August 22-September 13), the Canadian GPs in Quebec and Montreal (September 11-13), the final Monument Il Lombardia (October 10), and the season wraps with the Tour of Guangxi in China (October 13-18).