The village of Klanec in Slovenia is home to 343 residents, one of whom is now a four-time Champion of the world’s grandest cycle tour. On Sunday, TadejPogačar arrived at the Champs-Élysées fourth, which was good enough to hold on for a 4:24 win over Jonas Vingegaard. The yellow jersey wasn’t the Slovenian’s only prize; he also departed France wearing the polka dot jersey, but fell short in the points classification, leaving the green jersey for Jonathan Milan. Florian Lipowitz dominated the youngsters towards the back end of the race and crossed the line in Paris as the youth classification winner. All this and more in our 2025 Tour de France results recap below.
Wout van Aert kept relatively quiet this Tour, but saved the best for last. He broke away from none other than Pogi, inside the last four miles, on a wet Paris Sunday, and opened a 20-second gap on the yellow jersey group. The Belgian greeted the crowd on the Champs-Élysées alone to win the final stage of the 2025 Tour de France. He was joined moments later by Davide Ballerini in second, Matej Mohoric in third, and Pogačar in fourth. The result had no bearing on the podium positions in the GC.
General Classification
Pogačar has done it again, winning his fourth Tour de France. Cycling’s mega star now joins Chris Froome in a tie for the second most Tour triumphs in history. One more General Classification victory will tie him with Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, and Miguel Induráin as the winningest riders in cycling’s grandest race.
Fans hope the next edition will be more competitive, after second-placed JonasVingegaard was unable to combat Pogi’s antics throughout the 21 stages. The Dane was recovering from a wrist injury coming into the Tour, and hopefully, a full-fit Jonas will give the Slovenian a run for his money in 2026. Credit goes to Florian Lipowitz, who showed us what we can expect from him in the years ahead. The 24-year-old German took the final place on the podium this year, over a minute ahead of another youngster, Oscar Onley.
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Rider
Time
Tadej Pogačar
76:00:32
Jonas Vingegaard
+4:24
Florian Lipowitz
+12:12
King of the Mountains
One jersey wasn’t enough for Pogi this year, and rightfully so. He worked the climbs this edition, prevailing on two mountain and one hilly stage, notching up 119 points in the KOM classification.
There was a tight tussle between Lenny Martinez and the overall winner at one stage, but the Frenchman couldn’t hold on for any stage wins. He did well to snatch points in the category climbs, but he consistently leaked points at the end of the day. The result saw Pogačar run away with it, ahead of his nemesis Vingegaard, who earned 104 units throughout the Tour.
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Rider
Time
Tadej Pogačar
119
Jonas Vingegaard
104
Lenny Martinez
97
Points Classification
The points classification appeared to be another contest Pogi was desperate to win, but in the end, he turned to the yellow and the polka dots. That gave Jonathan Milan an opening to widen the gap at the top and complete the race on 372 points. He reached Paris 68 points ahead of the race champion, and 140 points ahead of third-placed Biniam Girmay.
After his stage win yesterday, Jonathan Milan got back on the bike and powered through the intermediate sprint, adding 20 more units to his tally. The Italian is now 75 points clear of Pogi in the green jersey contest with only three stages remaining.
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Rider
Time
Jonathan Milan
372
Tadej Pogačar
294
Biniam Girmay
232
Youth Classification
Finally, a contest that Pogačar didn’t feature in. The youth classification kept us entertained deep into the race. Initially, Remco Evenepoel looked poised to claim the white jersey, but he withdrew from the race and handed the reins to Florian Lipowitz, who never looked back.
There was one moment, after Thursday’s stage, where Oscar Onley was 22 seconds off the German’s pace, and we thought he could snatch the youth classification at the death. However, Lipowitz showed his class on Friday and fought back to widen the gap to 1:12, which is where it ended in Paris. Local lad Kévin Vauquelin rode consistently all race and was rewarded for his efforts with a third-place return in the youngsters’ race, albeit 11:35 off Lipowitz’s pace.
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Rider
Time
Florian Lipowitz
76:11:32
Oscar Onley
+1:12
Kévin Vauquelin
+11:35
Team Classification
The team classification looked promising for Team Visma | Lease a Bike, who took the lead after stage four and never relinquished it. They extended their lead to 16:45 after stage 10 and continued to chip away at their competitors all the way to Paris. Eventually, the Dutch team ended the race in 232:01:32, 24:26 ahead of their perennial rivals, UAE Team Emirates XRG. Red Bull–BORA–hansgrohe settled for the minor placing, 1:24:47 behind the victorious group.
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Rider
Time
Team Visma | Lease a Bike
232:01:32
UAE Team Emirates-XRG
+24:26
Red Bull - BORA - hansgrohe
+1:24:47
Tour de France Awards
Best Combative Rider – Ben Healy Best Domestique – Quinn Simmons
Irishman Ben Healy made a real name for himself this Tour, scoring a stage win and wearing the yellow jersey for two days. His efforts were rewarded with a top 10 Tour finish, and he departed France as the recipient of the Combativity award.
A big applause for US National Road Race Champion Quinn Simmons, who also rides away from the Tour with memorabilia. The American received the “best domestique” award for his contribution to Lidl–Trek and, in particular, Jonathan Milan’s efforts to win the green jersey. The Colorado native got more than he bargained for on Sunday afternoon, after his fiancée, Sydney Berry, accepted his proposal when he dropped to one knee on the famed Parisian avenue. Congratulations Quinn.
Italy has waited six years and 113 stages for a winner, but today, Jonathan Milan answered the desperate call from his nation. The last Italian to prevail was Vincenzo Nibali in 2019, but today Milan stole the show as he powered to the line ahead of Wout van Aert to snatch the Green Jersey, the …
Day two of the 2025 Tour de France appeared dull both in weather and action for a large portion of the proceedings, bar a few crashes and bike swaps. That all changed after the second climb on the route when the favorites made a charge to state their intentions. Mathieu van der Poel won the …
What a way to celebrate Bastille Day. The host nation bagged the polka dot jersey, and there’s another yellow jersey holder in the tour. Ireland leads the general classification for the first time since 1987, courtesy of Ben Healy. There is this and more to break down in our 2025 Tour de France Stage 10 …
Hautacam may be the venue where Tadej Pogačar won the grandest event in cycling for a fourth time. Of course, that suggestion is premature because anything can happen, but Pogi snatched the yellow jersey to open a substantial lead on his opponents. The Slovenian captures most of the headlines in our 2025 Tour de France …
2025 Tour de France Results: Tadej Pogačar Claims His Fourth Title
Table of Contents
The village of Klanec in Slovenia is home to 343 residents, one of whom is now a four-time Champion of the world’s grandest cycle tour. On Sunday, Tadej Pogačar arrived at the Champs-Élysées fourth, which was good enough to hold on for a 4:24 win over Jonas Vingegaard. The yellow jersey wasn’t the Slovenian’s only prize; he also departed France wearing the polka dot jersey, but fell short in the points classification, leaving the green jersey for Jonathan Milan. Florian Lipowitz dominated the youngsters towards the back end of the race and crossed the line in Paris as the youth classification winner. All this and more in our 2025 Tour de France results recap below.
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Stage Winner
Wout van Aert kept relatively quiet this Tour, but saved the best for last. He broke away from none other than Pogi, inside the last four miles, on a wet Paris Sunday, and opened a 20-second gap on the yellow jersey group. The Belgian greeted the crowd on the Champs-Élysées alone to win the final stage of the 2025 Tour de France. He was joined moments later by Davide Ballerini in second, Matej Mohoric in third, and Pogačar in fourth. The result had no bearing on the podium positions in the GC.
General Classification
Pogačar has done it again, winning his fourth Tour de France. Cycling’s mega star now joins Chris Froome in a tie for the second most Tour triumphs in history. One more General Classification victory will tie him with Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, and Miguel Induráin as the winningest riders in cycling’s grandest race.
Fans hope the next edition will be more competitive, after second-placed Jonas Vingegaard was unable to combat Pogi’s antics throughout the 21 stages. The Dane was recovering from a wrist injury coming into the Tour, and hopefully, a full-fit Jonas will give the Slovenian a run for his money in 2026. Credit goes to Florian Lipowitz, who showed us what we can expect from him in the years ahead. The 24-year-old German took the final place on the podium this year, over a minute ahead of another youngster, Oscar Onley.
swipe to see more
King of the Mountains
One jersey wasn’t enough for Pogi this year, and rightfully so. He worked the climbs this edition, prevailing on two mountain and one hilly stage, notching up 119 points in the KOM classification.
There was a tight tussle between Lenny Martinez and the overall winner at one stage, but the Frenchman couldn’t hold on for any stage wins. He did well to snatch points in the category climbs, but he consistently leaked points at the end of the day. The result saw Pogačar run away with it, ahead of his nemesis Vingegaard, who earned 104 units throughout the Tour.
swipe to see more
Points Classification
The points classification appeared to be another contest Pogi was desperate to win, but in the end, he turned to the yellow and the polka dots. That gave Jonathan Milan an opening to widen the gap at the top and complete the race on 372 points. He reached Paris 68 points ahead of the race champion, and 140 points ahead of third-placed Biniam Girmay.
After his stage win yesterday, Jonathan Milan got back on the bike and powered through the intermediate sprint, adding 20 more units to his tally. The Italian is now 75 points clear of Pogi in the green jersey contest with only three stages remaining.
swipe to see more
Youth Classification
Finally, a contest that Pogačar didn’t feature in. The youth classification kept us entertained deep into the race. Initially, Remco Evenepoel looked poised to claim the white jersey, but he withdrew from the race and handed the reins to Florian Lipowitz, who never looked back.
There was one moment, after Thursday’s stage, where Oscar Onley was 22 seconds off the German’s pace, and we thought he could snatch the youth classification at the death. However, Lipowitz showed his class on Friday and fought back to widen the gap to 1:12, which is where it ended in Paris. Local lad Kévin Vauquelin rode consistently all race and was rewarded for his efforts with a third-place return in the youngsters’ race, albeit 11:35 off Lipowitz’s pace.
swipe to see more
Team Classification
The team classification looked promising for Team Visma | Lease a Bike, who took the lead after stage four and never relinquished it. They extended their lead to 16:45 after stage 10 and continued to chip away at their competitors all the way to Paris. Eventually, the Dutch team ended the race in 232:01:32, 24:26 ahead of their perennial rivals, UAE Team Emirates XRG. Red Bull–BORA–hansgrohe settled for the minor placing, 1:24:47 behind the victorious group.
swipe to see more
Tour de France Awards
Best Combative Rider – Ben Healy
Best Domestique – Quinn Simmons
Irishman Ben Healy made a real name for himself this Tour, scoring a stage win and wearing the yellow jersey for two days. His efforts were rewarded with a top 10 Tour finish, and he departed France as the recipient of the Combativity award.
A big applause for US National Road Race Champion Quinn Simmons, who also rides away from the Tour with memorabilia. The American received the “best domestique” award for his contribution to Lidl–Trek and, in particular, Jonathan Milan’s efforts to win the green jersey. The Colorado native got more than he bargained for on Sunday afternoon, after his fiancée, Sydney Berry, accepted his proposal when he dropped to one knee on the famed Parisian avenue. Congratulations Quinn.
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Hautacam may be the venue where Tadej Pogačar won the grandest event in cycling for a fourth time. Of course, that suggestion is premature because anything can happen, but Pogi snatched the yellow jersey to open a substantial lead on his opponents. The Slovenian captures most of the headlines in our 2025 Tour de France …