UCI announces extra wildcard slot for 2025 men's Grand Tours

23 teams to take the start of the Giro d'Italia, Tour de France, and Vuelta a España, with three wildcard spaces up for grabs at each

featured-image

The UCI has approved the invitation of a 23rd team to the 2025 Grand Tours, ensuring that Tudor Pro Cycling, Uno-X Mobility, Q36.5 and TotalEnergies secure wild card places to the Tour de France or the Giro d'Italia . Last week, the UCI acknowledged that the majority of members of the Professional Cycling Council (PCC) were in favour of the decision and rubber-stamped it at a UCI Management Committee meeting on Monday.

"The arguments put forward for accepting this proposal were mainly based on the need to support second division teams (UCI ProTeams), while enabling organisers to strengthen the line-up for their race and giving riders from the additional teams the opportunity to compete in a Grand Tour," the UCI said in a statement. The Grand Tour organisers can now confirm their final wild card invitations. Israel-Premier Tech and Lotto earned automatic invites as the top two ProTeams of 2024.



After Lotto opted to forgo the Corsa Rosa, the Giro organisers could invite four wildcard teams. Tudor Pro Cycling and Q36.5 are the top contenders, along with Polti-VisitMalta and VF Group-Bardiani CSF-Faizanè.

For the Tour de France, there are three wild card invitations up for grabs, with TotalEnergies, Tudor and Uno-X Mobility the favourites as Q36.5 focus on the Giro with Tom Pidcock . The Vuelta a España organisers will have to decide between the Spanish ProTeams Kern Pharma, Euskaltel-Euskadi, Burgos BH-Burpellet and Caja Rural-Seguros RGA and Q36.

5 and Uno-X Mobility. The UCI reiterated its "commitment to the preservation of sporting equity and the primacy of sporting merit" and so asked the PCC to study increasing the number of compulsory invitations to the Grand Tours from two to three, while returning to two wild card invitations. This would mean future Grand Tours would include 23 teams each year.

The request for a 23rd team originally came from race organisers. There were some concerns about safety due to the increasing size of the peloton from 176 riders to 184, while some of the so-called 'super teams' were against the idea of letting smaller teams take part in the Tour de France despite having much smaller budgets. There were also concerns that allowing an additional team in the Grand Tours would impact the fight for UCI ranking points and so the places in the 2026 WorldTour and the 2026 Grand Tours.

.