Cycling in Yorkshire & Beyond
Stage 14 | Stage 15 | Stage 16
Stage 15 of the Tour de France 2025 is a 169.3km hilly stage from Muret to Carcassonne.
This is a hilly stage with 2,400m of climbing in the first part of the day, which means it could be one for a breakaway.
The end of the stage is downhill and flat with the possibility of crosswinds.
This is the race report for Stage 15 Tour de France 2025.
These are video highlights of Stage 15.
Race Details | Poll | Map & Profile | Timings | Videos | Food & Drink | Route Notes | Favourites
| Date | Sunday 20th July 2025 |
|---|---|
| Stage classification | Hilly |
| Distance | 169.3km |
| Intermediate sprint | Saint-Félix-Lauragais |
| Climbs | Côte de Saint-Ferréol (Cat. 3) Côte de Sorèze (Cat. 3) Pas du Sant (Cat. 2) |
| Total climbing | 2,400m |
Vote for one of the main contenders to win Stage 15.
This is a map showing the route of Stage 15, Tour de France 2025.
This is a zoom-able map of Stage 15 Tour de France 2025.
This is the profile of Stage 15 Tour de France 2025.
| Caravan | Fast Schedule | Slow Schedule | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Start Time (départ fictif) | 1120 |
1320 |
1320 |
| Start Time (départ réel) | 1130 |
1330 |
1330 |
| Saint-Félix-Lauragais Intermediate Sprint | 1253 |
1446 |
1453 |
| Côte de Saint-Ferréol Climb | 1313 |
1504 |
1513 |
| Pas du Sant Climb | 1421 |
1605 |
1621 |
| Finish Line (169.3km) | 1529 |
1708 |
1729 |
This is a video of the route of Stage 15 Tour de France 2025.
Stage 15 of the 2022 Tour de France took place on a very hot day. It finished in a sprint in Carcassonne which was won by Jasper Philipsen.
Stage 15 starts in Muret, close to Toulouse, and finishes in Carcassonne.
Food in Toulouse is dominated by meat and poultry. Cassoulet is a dish with white beans, pork, duck, lamb and Toulouse sausage. It is cooked slowly and served in a bowl.
Cassoulet is also a speciality of Carcassonne, as are truffles, which are sold on the local market.
Croustade aux pommes is an apple pie with apples flambéed in Armagnac.
Madiran is a local red wine made from Tannat and other grapes.
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The stage starts in Muret (départ fictif).
Muret is in the outskirts of Toulouse.
It has an association with flight because local man Clément Ader launched the first motorised aircraft, a machine he called the Eole.
The Tour de France started from Muret in 2015, when Greg van Avermaet won in Rodez, and again in 2021, when Tadej Pogacar won on the Col de Portet.
The racing starts on the D12 just south east of Muret (départ réel). The riders head south east through Eaunes, Lagardelle-sur-Lèze and Miremont to Auterive on the Ariège river.
You can visit the Museum of Old Tools at Auterive.
The race route continues east on the D622 to Nailloux, then to Gardouch. Here the riders cross the Canal du Midi and the Autoroute A61 to reach Villefranche-de-Lauragais.
From Villefranche, Stage 15 heads north east on the Route de Revel, through Vallègue and Lux to Saint-Félix-Lauragais. Here, there's the intermediate sprint.
The intermediate sprint at Saint-Félix-Lauragais appears to be uphill, and comes after 59.8km raced.
Green jersey competition: from 20 points for 1st place down to 1 point for 15th place.
Next on the route is Revel.
Revel is a ville bastide. The features of a bastide town are that it is built on a grid pattern around a central square where there was usually a church and a castle.
Revel was founded in 1342, which makes it one of the later ones. Local people built ramparts during the Hundred Years War.
Revel is known for producing the liqueur Get 27.
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The riders head south east out of Revel to Saint Ferréol and its lake.
There's a climb away from the lake, and this is the Côte de Saint-Ferréol.
The Côte de Saint-Ferréol is 1.7km at a gradient of 7%.
KOM competition: 2 points for 1st place and 1 point for 2nd place.
The race goes to Sorèze, then the next climb begins.
We're now in the Montagne Noire mountain range, and heading towards one of the summits, Montalric, on an ascent the race organisers are calling the Côte de Sorèze.
The Côte de Sorèze is 6.2km at an average 5.5%.
KOM competition: 2 points for 1st place and 1 point for 2nd place.
There's a descent to Dourgne, then the race continues to Verdalle where there's a château and its gardens, les Jardins de l'Ange.
At Saint-Affrique-les-Montagnes, there's a sharp turn to the south towards the village of Escoussens. Now comes the climb of the Pas du Sant.
The Pas du Sant is a pass in the Montagne Noire. It's 2.9km at an average 10.2% to a height of 610m. It's followed by another climb to the Col de Fontbruno, which is not categorised.
KOM competition: from 5 points for 1st place down to 1 point for 4th place.
The top of the Col de Fontbruno is at 880m, after 127.3km raced. From the col, there's around 34km of descent and 8km of flat left in the stage.
The riders descend past the Lac de Laprade Basse.
On the route are Caudebronde and Cuxac-Cabardès, before the village of Villegailhenc. We're into vineyard country now.
Next up is Villemoustaussou. The riders are now close to Carcassonne.
The peloton takes a right turn from the D118 to the D149, to cross the Fresquel river. Then there's a left turn to ride alongside the Canal du Midi on the Route Minervoise.
This brings the race to modern Carcassonne, where there's a right turn onto Boulevard Omer Sarraut which runs past the Square André Chénier. The canal port of Carcassonne is the other side of the square.
Stage 15's route then bends left onto the Boulevard de Varsovie. The finish line is in front of the Collège Varsovie.
Green jersey competition at the finish line: from 50 points for 1st place down to 2 points for 15th place.
Time bonuses at the finish line:
Carcassonne is a town of 46,724 people in the département of the Aude, on the river Aude and the Canal du Midi. It's dominated by the Medieval château surrounded by ramparts, la Cité de Carcassonne.
According to legend, it got its name from Carcas, the wife of a Saracen king. The Saracens in the city were besieged by Charlemagne. The king of the Saracens was captured and put to death. His wife, Carcas, continued to hold out. Her soldiers were dying of starvation, so she put scarecrows on the ramparts, and changed their hats every 2 hours, to make it look as though the sentries were changing over. Then she killed the last remaining pig, stuffed its belly with the last of the corn, and threw it over the walls. When it landed, the belly burst open to reveal the corn. Charlemagne's soldiers were amazed. They thought that even after the long siege, the Saracens were feeding their pigs with corn. Defeated, they packed up and began to leave. Carcas had the victory trumpets sounded, and Charlmagne's soldiers said 'Ecoutez, Carcas sonne' (listen, Carcas is sounding [the trumpets]). So the town got its name. Probably.
Carcassonne started as a Roman camp in the C1st AD. The Visigoths captured it as the Roman Empire crumbled, and it became part of the Visigoth kingdom of Toulouse. In 725, the Saracens took it from the Visigoths, and in 759, the Saracens were defeated by the Franks, under Pepin the Short.
Carcassonne belonged to the Counts of Toulouse, within the Frankish Empire, from the 800s to the 1200s. Peace and prosperity was disrupted from 1208, with the Albigensian Crusades. Catharism was a dualistic form of Christianity: according to the Cathars, there was a spiritual world ruled by God, and a material world governed by Satan. Cathars were regarded as heretics by the Roman Catholic church. When a Papal legate was assassinated in 1208, the Pope began a Crusade against the Cathars in the south west of France. In 1209, the Viscount of Carcassonne was defeated by Simon de Montfort.
The King of France exiled the inhabitants of Carcassonne for 7 years, and at the end of this time, he allowed them to build a fortified new town, or ville bastide, known as the Ville Basse (to the west of the river Aude), and to repair and strengthen the original fortress (to the east of the Aude). The fortress to the east of the river is what is known as la Cité de Carcassonne, and is the largest Medieval fortress in Europe. It was restored by Viollet-le-Duc in the C19th.
La Cité has a double curtain wall, with 14 towers on the outer wall, and 24 towers on the inner wall. Inside is the C12th Château Comtal, which was the home of the viscounts of Carcassonne, and the Basilique Saint-Nazaire, begun in 1096 in a Romanesque style, and completed in the 1200s and 1300s in a Gothic style.
Verse 1
Je me fais vieux, j'ai soixante ans ;
J'ai travaillé toute ma vie,
Sans avoir, durant tout ce temps,
Pu satisfaire mon envie.
Je vois bien qu'il n'est ici bas
De bonheur complet pour personne.
Mon voeu ne s'accomplira pas :
Je n'ai jamais vu Carcassonne.
Verse 2
On voit la ville de là-haut,
Derrière les montagnes bleues :
Mais pour y parvenir il faut,
Il faut faire cinq grandes lieues ;
En faire autant pour revenir !
Ah ! si la vendange était bonne !
Le raisin ne veut pas jaunir :
Je ne verrai pas Carcassonne.
Verse 3
On dit qu'on y voit tous les jours,
Ni plus ni moins que les dimanches,
Des gens s'en aller sur les tours,
En habits neuf, en robes blanches,
On dit qu'on y voit des châteaux
Grands comme ceux de Babylone,
Un évêque et deux généraux !
Je ne connais pas Carcassonne !
Verse 4
Le vicaire a cent fois raison.
C'est des imprudents que nous sommes,
Il disait dans son oraison
Que l'ambition perd les hommes.
Si je pouvais trouver pourtant
Deux jours sur la fin de l'automne...
Mon Dieu que je mourrai content,
Après avoir vu Carcassonne !
Verse 5
Mon Dieu, mon Dieu, pardonnez-moi
Si ma prière vous offense ;
On voit toujours plus haut que soi,
En vieillesse comme en enfance.
Ma femme avec mon fils Aignan,
A voyagé jusqu'à Narbonne :
Mon filleul a vu Perpignan.
Et je n'ai pas vu Carcassonne !
Verse 6
Ainsi chantait, près de Limoux,
Un paysan courbé par l'âge.
Je lui dis: 'Ami, levez-vous,
Nous allons faire le voyage'
Nous partîmes le lendemain ;
Mais - que le Bon Dieu lui pardonne -
Il mourut à moitié chemin.
Il n'a jamais vu Carcassonne.
Il ne verra pas Carcassonne.
Gustave Nadaud
Favourites for Stage 15 of the 2025 Tour de France could include breakaway specialists.
If it comes down to a bunch sprint, sprinters like Jonathan Milan (Lidl Trek) will be in with a shout.
Who do you think will win Stage 15 of the 2025 Tour de France?
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