Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Cycling Weekly
Cycling Weekly
Sport
Tom Davidson

Women's peloton to face 'inhumane' Spanish climb for first time at Vuelta Femenina

Angliru stage 13 Vuelta a Espana 2025.

The women’s peloton will tackle Spain’s Alto de L’Angliru, a climb described as “inhumane” by multiple professional cyclists who have ridden it, for the first time this May.

The Asturian mountain, 12.4km-long and pitched at an average gradient of 9.7%, will host the finale of the Vuelta Femenina by Carrefour.es on 9 May.

The Angliru is known as one of the hardest climbs in global cycling, due to its unrelenting gradient which features ramps up to 23%. It is located in Spain’s mountainous north, and was originally built as a goat path, paved only two years ahead of the Vuelta a España’s first visit there in 1999.

“We have had a few doubts about [whether] to [include it in the Vuelta Femenina route] or not,” the race’s technical director Kiko García told Cyclingnews.

“A few teams say, ‘Yes, it’s a good idea to do it’, and other ones say, ‘maybe it’s too early, maybe just wait a couple of years’ because we were still building women’s cycling.

“After many consultations with the teams and with athletes, we considered that it was the right moment to do it.”

The climb will come at the end of day seven of the Vuelta Femenina, a stage that the organisers have hailed as “the hardest in the history of the race”. Over 132km, the peloton will ascend more than 3,200m of elevation, around half of which will come on the Angliru.

The climb has featured 10 times at the men’s Vuelta, most recently in 2025, when João Almeida (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) held off Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) at its summit.

In 2002, on its third appearance in the Spanish Grand Tour, British rider David Millar famously stopped half a metre short of the Angliru’s finish line and ripped off his race number in protest, announcing: “We’re not animals and this is inhuman.”

Millar’s words were echoed by Óscar Sevilla, the race’s eventual fourth-place finisher, who described the climb as “inhumane”. Sevilla’s Kelme team manager, Vicente Belda, also said: “What do they want? Blood? They ask us to stay clean and avoid doping and then they make the riders tackle this kind of barbarity.”

The current Strava KOM on the climb is held by Almeida, following his stage win in 2025, when he rode the segment in a time of 42:15. The best women’s time, the QOM, belongs to British hill-climber Illi Gardner, who clocked 52:56 last June. Only 556 women have completed the climb on Strava.

The seven-day Vuelta Femenina will take place entirely in Spain’s north-western corner, starting in the Galician seaside town of Marín. It will finish with two summit finishes, the first to Les Praeres, with a maximum gradient of 27%, on stage six, before the Angliru finale.

Details of the full race route are below.

Vuelta Femenina 2026 route

(Image credit: ASO)

Stage

Date

Start

Finish

Distance

Type

1

Sunday 3 May

Marín

Salvaterra de Miño

113km

Hilly

2

Monday 4 May

Lobios

San Cibrao das Viñas

109km

Hilly

3

Tuesday 5 May

Padrón

A Coruña

121km

Hilly

4

Wednesday 6 May

Monforte de Lemos

Antas de Ulla

115km

Hilly

5

Thursday 7 May

León

Astorga

119km

Flat

6

Friday 8 May

Gijón/Xixón

Les Praeres. Nava

106km

Mountain

7

Saturday 9 May

La Pola Llaviana/Pola de Laviana

L'Angliru

132km

Mountain

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.