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To watch the Pyrenean stages of the 2026 Tour de France from a motorhome, you must be in position the evening before: the D921 Luz-Gavarnie road closes from 8am on 9 July, and the Solaison road closes at dawn on 19 July. Stage 6 (9 July, Pau > Gavarnie-Gèdre, 186.2 km) marks the first-ever Tour de France finish in this UNESCO-listed village of 350 inhabitants. Stage 15 (19 July, Champagnole > Solaison) is equally a first in 113 editions. Free spots available at the Tourmalet (GPS 42.9033, 0.1016) and Brizon/Solaison (46.0327, 6.4270). The core zone of the Pyrénées National Park: motorhomes strictly prohibited.

Two absolute firsts in the same edition — that’s what makes the 2026 Tour de France exceptional for cycling fans travelling by motorhome. On 9 July, the peloton will climb for the very first time in 113 years to Gavarnie-Gèdre, a village of 350 inhabitants nestled beneath the UNESCO-listed glacial cirque. Ten days later, on 19 July, riders will also discover the Plateau de Solaison in Haute-Savoie — another unprecedented finish. Two events no cycling fan should miss — provided you know the parking rules, validated spots and road closure times, which are strictly enforced.

Spectators lining a mountain road at the Tour de France
Photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash

The two must-see stages for motorhome travellers

Cycling peloton climbing a mountain pass at the Tour de France, Pyrenees
Photo by Rob Wingate on Unsplash

Stage 6 — Thursday 9 July 2026: Pau > Gavarnie-Gèdre (186.2 km)

186.2 km — 4,150 m elevation gain Caravan ~4:10pm, peloton ~5:20pm Col d’Aspin (1,489 m) + Tourmalet (2,115 m) FIRST-EVER historic finish in 105 years

According to TourDeFranceParcours, Stage 6 departs Pau at 12:25pm for 186.2 km of high mountain riding. After the Col d’Aspin (km 117.5, 12 km at 6.5%) and the legendary Col du Tourmalet (km 147, 2,115 m, 17.1 km at 7.3% — a climb that has shaped the careers of British champions from Robert Millar to Chris Froome), riders tackle the final ascent from Luz-Saint-Sauveur: 18.7 km at 3.7% on the D921 to reach Gavarnie-Gèdre at 1,380 m. It’s the first time in 113 editions of the Grande Boucle that the race has finished in this village of 350 inhabitants, nestled beneath the UNESCO World Heritage glacial cirque of Gavarnie — part of the Pyrénées-Mont Perdu site. The Gavarnie waterfall, one of Europe’s tallest at 422 m (1,385 ft), will be visible from the viewing areas. According to Vallées de Gavarnie, the publicity caravan is expected around 4:10pm and the peloton around 5:20pm.

Highlights for motorhome travellers

  • Three viewing spots in one day: Col d’Aspin, Col du Tourmalet, Gavarnie-Gèdre finish
  • Gavarnie D923 municipal aire (100 pitches, water + waste disposal, €10/24h) — closest to the finish line
  • Free shuttle buses Barèges > Grand Tourmalet (8:30am–5:30pm) to reach the col without moving your motorhome
  • Bivouac tolerated at the Tourmalet on the Barèges side (car park GPS 42.9033, 0.1016 — free)
Pixidia tip: To see both the Tourmalet and the Gavarnie finish, the optimal strategy is to park up J-2 (evening of 7 July) at the Tourmalet col on the Barèges side, then head down early on the morning of 8 July towards the Gavarnie D923 aire. The D921 closes from 8–9am on 9 July — it’s impossible to access it on race morning.
Regulations alert: Gavarnie-Gèdre borders the core zone of the Pyrénées National Park. All overnight motorhome parking is strictly prohibited in the core zone, including on car parks. The D923 municipal aire is outside the core zone — it’s the only official spot within 2 km of the finish. On-the-spot fines apply (wild camping fine: €1,500). Check the exact boundary at pyrenees-parcnational.fr.
Mountain road with hairpin bends on an Alpine pass in Haute-Savoie, France
Photo by Mizzi Westphal on Unsplash

Stage 15 — Sunday 19 July 2026: Champagnole > Plateau de Solaison (183.9 km)

183.9 km — HC summit finish Caravan departs Champagnole: 10:25am 11.3 km at 9.2% — altitude 1,508 m (4,948 ft) FIRST-EVER Tour de France finish at Solaison

According to LeDicoDuTour, Stage 15 links Champagnole (Jura) to the Plateau de Solaison in Haute-Savoie over 183.9 km, with a beyond-category (HC) summit finish of 11.3 km at 9.2% average gradient — steeper than Alpe d’Huez. The finish sits on the plateau itself at 1,508 m (4,948 ft). It’s the first time in Tour history that riders tackle this agricultural, Nordic-style plateau — known for cross-country skiing in winter and for recording -33.1°C on 3–4 January 2025, though far more welcoming in July. According to Tourisme Haute-Savoie, more than 20,000 spectators are expected for this unprecedented Alpine finale. The Tour Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes on 14 June 2026 served as a full logistics rehearsal for access planning.

Highlights for motorhome travellers

  • Brizon / Route de Solaison car park (GPS 46.0327, 6.4270) — free, 20 spaces, rated 4.47/5 on Park4Night
  • Thônes « Parking du Plot » (GPS 45.880, 6.321) — free, service point with waste disposal 600 m away, 18 km from Solaison
  • Mobility plan with shuttle buses planned by the Haute-Savoie département (details to be confirmed July 2026)
  • Access via Cluses suitable for standard motorhomes (route via Bonneville/Thuet not recommended for vehicles over 8 m)
Pixidia tip: Arrive at the Brizon/Solaison car park on the evening of 18 July. The access road will close at dawn on 19 July. For motorhomes over 8 m, use exclusively the Cluses > Scionzier > Mont-Saxonnex > Brizon route — the road via Bonneville/Thuet is narrow with rocky walls and tight bends.
2026 prefectural orders: as of 31 May 2026, the circulation orders for 9 and 19 July have not yet been published. They will appear in June–July on the websites of the hautes-pyrenees.gouv.fr (Stage 6) and haute-savoie.gouv.fr (Stage 15) prefectures.

Free and regulated spots: the complete GPS table

The spots below are validated by the Park4Night community and official sources. The rule common to all: arriving the evening before is non-negotiable for mountain-top stages. Gendarmes will move any vehicle parked on the roadway or in a prohibited zone on race day.

SpotGPSPriceFacilitiesP4N RatingStage
Tourmalet — Barèges (bivouac tolerated)42.9033, 0.1016FreeBarèges-Tourmalet shuttle3.94/5 (32 reviews)Stage 6
Col d’Aspin — D918 car park42.9433, 0.3353FreeNoneUnofficialStage 6
Gavarnie D923 municipal aire42.7383, -0.0195€10/24hWater + grey waste + black waste3.97/5 (305 reviews)Stage 6
Luz-Saint-Sauveur (Camping-Car Park)15 km from Gavarnie€16.06/nightWater + 6A electric + waste + WiFiOfficial CCP networkStage 6
Brizon — Route de Solaison46.0327, 6.4270FreeComposting toilet + water at La Fruitière gîte4.47/5 (15 reviews)Stage 15
Thônes — Parking du Plot45.88084, 6.32103FreeWaste disposal 600 m away (logistics base)MunicipalStage 15
Pixidia tip: Empty your grey water tanks and fill up on fresh water before heading up to altitude. Above 1,500 m (4,900 ft), no facilities are available. In the Hautes-Pyrénées, the most convenient service points before the climb towards Gavarnie are at Lourdes, Bagnères-de-Bigorre, Arreau (Camping-Car Park network) and Luz-Saint-Sauveur.

Rules and regulations: what you must know

Motorhome parked in an Alpine mountain car park, France
Photo by Alex Caza on Unsplash

ASO rules and prefectural orders

D921 closes from 8–9am 4–5h before caravan on cols Wild waste disposal fine: €1,500 Wild camping fine: €1,500

According to the ASO regulations published on N’PY Grand Tourmalet: « Circulation, stopping and parking on roads used by the Tour de France are prohibited to all vehicles from one hour before the publicity caravan until thirty minutes after the gendarmerie vehicle marked ‘end of race’ passes. » In practice, for a summit finish like Gavarnie, the col roads close 4 to 5 hours before the caravan — from 6:00am–9:00am. All four wheels of the motorhome must be completely off the road — any vehicle encroaching on the carriageway will be moved by the gendarmerie on race day.

What is strictly prohibited

  • Overnight motorhome parking in the core zone of the Pyrénées National Park, even on designated car parks (Decree 2009-406, Art. 15)
  • Wild waste disposal (grey water, toilet) on roads or in the wild — Art. R116-2 French Road Code, fine up to €1,500
  • Wild motorhome camping (3rd class offence, €1,500)
  • Accessing the D921 Luz-Gavarnie road after 8–9am on 9 July 2026 by motor vehicle

What is tolerated (no guarantee)

  • Discreet motorhome bivouac outside the National Park, all four wheels off the road, no fire, no litter
  • Tent camping in the National Park: permitted more than 1 hour’s walk from any motorised access, between 7pm and 9am (Decree 2009-406)
  • Parking on unmarked car parks outside the core zone, outside ASO perimeters on race day
Pyrénées National Park core zone: camping in a vehicle — including motorhomes and campervans — is strictly prohibited in the core zone, even on car parks and even for a single night. Gavarnie-Gèdre is partially within this zone. The D923 municipal aire is outside the core zone (confirmed). For any exceptional exemption request: [email protected].

On-the-ground logistics: arrive 2 days early, not on race day

The rule every motorhome forum repeats without exception: on mountain-top Tour stages, arriving the evening before is mandatory. For the most sought-after spots (Gavarnie, Alpe d’Huez), motorhomers position their vehicles 48 hours before the peloton rolls through. Here’s the recommended timeline for both Pyrenean stages.

Operational timeline — Stage 6 (Gavarnie, 9 July)

D-2: Tuesday 7 July D-1: Wednesday 8 July Race day: D921 closes from 8am Peloton: ~5:20pm
  • 7 July (D-2): arrive at the Col du Tourmalet on the Barèges side (GPS 42.9033, 0.1016) or Col d’Aspin (D918) for 2 nights. Take in the Tourmalet at your own pace, fill up on water and empty waste before heading up.
  • 8 July (D-1): by late afternoon at the latest, descend towards the Gavarnie D923 aire or Luz-Saint-Sauveur. Get settled for the night. Confirm the final road closure times on the Hautes-Pyrénées prefecture website.
  • 9 July (race day): the D921 closes from 8–9am. Stay in position. Pedestrian and cycle access until approximately 1 hour before the caravan (~3:10pm). Caravan at ~4:10pm, peloton at ~5:20pm. Road gradually reopens after 6pm.
  • After the race: allow 90 minutes to 2 hours for full road reopening and traffic to clear.
Pixidia tip: In July in the Hautes-Pyrénées, afternoon thunderstorms are common above 1,500 m (approximately 25% of days). Pack waterproofs, a fleece (8–14°C at the Tourmalet) and levelling blocks for uneven ground. Mobile signal is limited at Barèges and non-existent at parts of the col — download offline maps before heading up.

Operational timeline — Stage 15 (Solaison, 19 July)

D-1: Saturday 18 July Road closure: from dawn Access for >8 m via Cluses Cool nights (1,508 m / 4,948 ft)
  • 18 July (D-1): fill up on water and empty waste at Thônes or Annecy (30–40 km). Head up towards Brizon/Solaison in the late afternoon. For motorhomes over 8 m: use exclusively the Cluses > Scionzier > Mont-Saxonnex > Brizon route (the road via Bonneville/Thuet is narrow and unsuitable).
  • 19 July (race day): the access road will close at dawn. Stay in position. Check the Haute-Savoie département shuttle bus announcements (mobility plan in progress). Peloton expected to arrive late afternoon.
  • Overnight on site: altitude 1,508 m (4,948 ft), cool nights in July (pack extra blankets). The plateau is renowned as a cold pocket even in summer.
Pixidia tip: The Brizon/Solaison car park only has 20 spaces and already has strong motorhome reviews. For the Tour stage it’ll fill up well in advance — arrive as early as possible. As a fallback, Thônes (18 km) offers free parking with waste disposal 600 m away, more accessible for larger vehicles.
Estimated budget — 5 nights, 2 stages, 2 people
ItemEstimate
Fuel (~700 km / 435 miles)€140–€180
Paid aires (2–3 nights, Camping-Car Park network)€50–€65
Free spots (col bivouac)€0
Water and waste services€10–€20
Food (markets, local shops)€80–€120
Total€280–€400

To dig deeper into your route planning, check our guide to cycling the Pyrenean cols or our full feature on how to watch the Tour de France roadside. For the Alpine stages, our article on motorhoming in Haute-Savoie lists every service point in the massif.

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Frequently asked questions

Can you sleep in a motorhome at the Col du Tourmalet to watch the Gavarnie stage on 9 July 2026?

Yes, bivouacking is tolerated (unofficial) at the car parks on the Barèges side (GPS 42.9033, 0.1016) or La Mongie. You must arrive on the evening of 8 July. The Tourmalet road closes very early on 9 July (several hours before the caravan). All four wheels must be completely off the road — any vehicle encroaching on the carriageway will be moved by the gendarmerie. No facilities at altitude: empty waste and fill up on water before heading up. Source: Park4Night ID 7883.

Can you drive a motorhome to Gavarnie-Gèdre on race day (9 July)?

No. The D921 road between Luz-Saint-Sauveur and Gavarnie-Gèdre closes to traffic from 8:00–9:00am on the morning of 9 July 2026. You absolutely must arrive and be parked up the evening before. After closure, only pedestrians and cyclists can access until approximately 1 hour before the caravan (~3:10pm). The publicity caravan reaches Gavarnie at ~4:10pm, the peloton at ~5:20pm. Sources: N’PY, Vallées de Gavarnie.

Is the Plateau de Solaison accessible in a large motorhome (>8 m)?

The road via Bonneville/Thuet (D12) is narrow with rocky walls and tight hairpin bends: it is not recommended, and may be impassable, for motorhomes over 8 m. The recommended access for larger vehicles is via Cluses > Scionzier > Mont-Saxonnex > Brizon — a longer route but passable for standard motorhomes. A mobility plan with shuttle buses is planned by the Haute-Savoie département for Stage 15. Source: Park4Night ID 18323.

Can a motorhome park in the Pyrénées National Park core zone during the Tour?

No. Overnight motorhome parking is strictly prohibited in the core zone of the Pyrénées National Park, including on designated car parks. This is a permanent restriction, independent of the Tour de France (Decree 2009-406, Art. 15). Gavarnie-Gèdre is partially within this zone. The D923 municipal aire (GPS 42.7383, -0.0195) is the only official option outside the core zone within 2 km of the finish line. For an exceptional exemption request: [email protected]. Source: Pyrénées National Park.

Where can you empty your motorhome waste in the Hautes-Pyrénées before heading up to Gavarnie?

The best-placed service points before the climb to Gavarnie are at Lourdes (several aires in town), Bagnères-de-Bigorre, Arreau (Camping-Car Park network, €15.85/night) on the Col d’Aspin route, and Luz-Saint-Sauveur (Camping-Car Park, €16.06/night, with water, waste disposal and electricity). The Gavarnie D923 municipal aire also has on-site waste disposal. Wild waste disposal is prohibited and carries a fine of up to €1,500 (Art. R116-2 of the French Road Code). Sources: Camping-Car Park.

How much does a night in a motorhome cost for the Gavarnie-Gèdre stage?

From €0 (tolerated bivouac at the cols: Tourmalet on the Barèges side, Col d’Aspin) to €16.06/night at Camping-Car Park aires with full facilities (Luz-Saint-Sauveur or Pierrefitte-Nestalas). The Gavarnie D923 municipal aire — the closest to the finish line with water and waste disposal — costs €10/24h. To follow both Pyrenean stages over 5 nights, the total budget (fuel, aires, food) is estimated at €280–€400 for 2 people. Sources: campingcarpark.com, Park4Night.

Sources

Research conducted on 31 May 2026. Prefectural circulation orders for 9 and 19 July 2026 had not yet been published at that date — refer to hautes-pyrenees.gouv.fr and haute-savoie.gouv.fr from June–July 2026 for the final restrictions.

Ready to experience the 2026 Tour de France from the roadside?

Gavarnie-Gèdre and Solaison — two historic firsts in the same edition, a rare chance to see La Grande Boucle on stages no one has ever witnessed before. Start planning your motorhome route now and book your Gavarnie aire before all 100 pitches are gone.

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