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L'Étape du Tour

12 July 2026French Alps, France

Distance

170km

Elevation

4500m

L'Étape du Tour is the world's largest cyclosportive and the ultimate bucket-list ride for any road cyclist: you ride a real stage of the Tour de France, on the same roads, with the same climbs, just weeks before the pros. The 170 km route through the French Alps includes over 4,500 m of climbing across some of the most legendary cols in cycling. This is not a race for the unprepared. The combination of distance, altitude and gradient demands months of structuréd training. You need a deep aerobic engine to sustain hours of climbing, the ability to pace yourself across multiple cols, and résilience to keep pushing when fatigue sets in on the final ascent. Your training plan should prioritize long climbing rides with progressive overload. Include sweet spot and threshold intervals on sustained gradients, back-to-back long days to build fatigue resistance, and altitude simulation if possible. Nutrition strategy for 6+ hours of effort is equally critical — practice fueling on training rides to dial in your race-day plan.

Official site
Thousands of amateur cyclists climbing an Alpine pass during L'Étape du Tour in France

How NUA prepares you for L'Étape du Tour

Builds your aerobic base

Trains race-specific efforts

Manages load & recovery

Fine-tunes the final weeks

Frequently asked questions about training for L'Étape du Tour

How long do I need to prepare for L'Étape du Tour?+
NUA builds your plan backwards from race day. For most gran fondos and similar distances, 12-16 weeks is the sweet spot — enough to build aerobic base, then sharpen race-specific efforts. With less than 8 weeks, NUA adapts the plan to focus on finishing strong rather than chasing peak performance.
What does NUA's training plan for L'Étape du Tour look like?+
A weekly mix of Z2 endurance, race-specific intervals (climbs, sustained efforts, attacks), and structured recovery. Each week adapts based on your readiness, completed sessions, and how the previous week went. The closer to race day, the more specific the work — tapering kicks in automatically in the final two weeks.
Can NUA help if it's my first time at this distance?+
Yes. During onboarding NUA asks about your weekly volume, experience, and goal (finish, finish strong, target time). First-timers get a base-building approach focused on completing the distance comfortably. Experienced riders get more aggressive interval work and race-day pacing strategy.
Does NUA's plan for L'Étape du Tour include indoor training?+
Yes. NUA prescribes both outdoor and indoor sessions based on your availability and weather. Indoor workouts export as ZWO files compatible with Zwift, Rouvy, TrainerRoad, and intervals.icu, and the full plan syncs to Garmin and Wahoo head units.
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