Tour de France 2026 Classifications Update Stage 4 - Torstein Traeen takes historic yellow jersey for Uno-X as Pogacar drops down; Pedersen jumps into green jersey

Cycling
Tuesday, 07 July 2026 at 18:26
Captura de ecrã 2026-07-07 171402
The 2026 Tour de France classifications will shift across three weeks of racing, from the Grand Départ in Barcelona on 4 July to the final stage in Paris on 26 July. Across time trials, sprint stages, breakaway opportunities and the high mountains, each day can alter the shape of the race for yellow and the Tour’s other major jerseys.
This live classifications hub is updated after each stage of the 2026 Tour de France with the latest General Classification, Points Classification, Mountains Classification and Best Young Rider standings. As the race develops, it tracks the key movements in the fight for the yellow jersey, green jersey, polka-dot jersey and white jersey.
The General Classification remains the central battle of the Tour, but the wider standings often tell their own stories as the race moves through different terrain. Sprint stages can reshape the points competition, mountain days can transform the polka-dot jersey fight, and the white jersey battle can change quickly when young contenders are tested across repeated days of pressure.
With 21 stages and four major jersey competitions to follow, the Tour de France standings can change through time gaps, bonus seconds, breakaway moves, sprint points, mountain points and decisive race incidents. This page will follow those changes throughout the 2026 Tour de France.

General Classification Standings after Stage 4

The overall classification has changed completely. Torstein Traeen and Sean Quinn had only just over 5 minutes of deficit to Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard; but both have gained 12:59 minutes on the line. UAE did not try to chase down the breakaway and kept a calm pace all throughout the hilly day, allowing these two men to grow a sizeable gap which relieves Pogacar of his media and podium duties for the time being.
This is favourable in terms of recovery, now eliminating the slight advantage Visma and Jonas Vingegaard would get. They are now fourth and fifth in the overall classification, 7:53 minutes down on Traeen who had previously led the Vuelta a España due to a similar breakaway.
Sean Quinn sits second, only 28 seconds behind the Norwegian rider and within a shot of reaching the yellow jersey on stage 6 which will see the riders go through the mythical Col du Tourmalet. Mathias Vacek has ascended into third place in the overall classification, 3:50 minutes back. Ramses Debruyne also climbed into the Top10 aas a result of his move.
Rnk▼▲RiderTeamTime
1▲23 Træen TorsteinUno-X Mobility13:02:46
2▲24 Quinn SeanEF Education - EasyPost0:28
3▲28 Vacek MathiasLidl - Trek3:50
4▼3 Pogačar TadejUAE Team Emirates - XRG7:53
5▼3 Vingegaard JonasTeam Visma | Lease a Bike,,
6▲31Debruyne RamsesAlpecin - Premier Tech8:06
7▼4 Evenepoel RemcoRed Bull - BORA - hansgrohe8:16
8▼4 del Toro IsaacUAE Team Emirates - XRG8:17
9▼4 Ayuso JuanLidl - Trek8:20
10▼4 Seixas PaulDecathlon CMA CGM Team8:41
11▼4 Lipowitz FlorianRed Bull - BORA - hansgrohe8:46
12▼4 Martinez LennyBahrain - Victorious9:02
13▼4 Johannessen Tobias HallandUno-X Mobility9:04
14▼4 Van Wilder IlanSoudal Quick-Step9:10
15▼4 Carapaz RichardPinarello Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team9:15
16▼4 Pidcock TomEF Education - EasyPost9:38
17▼4 Van Eetvelt LennertLotto Intermarché9:40
18▼4 Skjelmose MattiasLidl - Trek9:43
19▼4 Piganzoli DavideTeam Visma | Lease a Bike10:08
20▼4 Arensman ThymenNetcompany INEOS10:12
21▼4 Jegat JordanTotalEnergies10:21
22▼4 Higuita SergioXDS Astana Team11:16
23▼4 Uijtdebroeks CianMovistar Team11:17
24▲19 Castrillo PabloMovistar Team11:22
25▲20 García Pierna RaúlMovistar Team11:34

Points Classification Standings after Stage 4

The points classification has changed meaningfully. With four days of racing in, there has not been a single bunch sprint. But in Foix, Mads Pedersen took an early and commanding lead over his rivals. Biniam Girmay and Jasper Philipsen, due to their efforts into being in the breakaway today and going for the intermediate sprint, managed to get into the Top 10. They have 39 and 30 points respectively.
However that is nothing compared to the 103 Pedersen now has, as a result of also winning the stage. The Lidl-Trek rider has ridden himself into a strong lead, and is now followed by Tadej Pogacar and Jonas Vingegaard.
RnkPrev▼▲RiderTeamPnt
14▲3 Pedersen MadsLidl - Trek103
21▼1 Pogačar TadejUAE Team Emirates - XRG55
32▼1 Vingegaard JonasTeam Visma | Lease a Bike44
4 Simmons QuinnLidl - Trek42
53▼2 del Toro IsaacUAE Team Emirates - XRG39
618▲12 Girmay BiniamNSN Cycling Team39
75▼2Remco EvenepoelRed Bull - BORA - hansgrohe33
86▼2 Johannessen Tobias HallandUno-X Mobility32
924▲15 Philipsen JasperAlpecin - Premier Tech30
107▼3 Seixas PaulDecathlon CMA CGM Team28

King of the Mountains Standings after Stage 4

Whilst there were some points to be attributed, the Tour's KOM points system means that the points being given out in its opening days are rather meaningless in the grand scheme of things. Despite being a very hilly day with two second category climbs, Alex Baudin's absence from the breakaway didn't change the outlook of the classification as the EF rider remains in the lead.
Rnk▼▲RiderTeamPnt
1- Baudin AlexEF Education - EasyPost12
2▲2 Molenaar AlexCaja Rural - Seguros RGA10
3▼1 Prodhomme NicolasDecathlon CMA CGM Team9
4▼1 García Pierna RaúlMovistar Team7
5 Tratnik JanRed Bull - BORA - hansgrohe5
6Frigo MarcoNSN Cycling Team5
7▼2Brandon McNultyUAE Team Emirates - XRG4
8▼2 Van Mechelen VladBahrain - Victorious4
9▼2 Pogačar TadejUAE Team Emirates - XRG3
10 Vacek MathiasLidl - Trek3

Youth Classification Standings after Stage 4

The white jersey has changed hands and teams. Juan Ayuso was the first leader of the classification early in the race, and after Isaac del Toro took hold of it, he has quickly lost it once again. Mathias Vacek, due to his efforts in the breakaway, has jumped directly into the white jersey. He leads Ramses Debruyne by 4:16 minutes and may maintain it for some days; whilst Isaac del Toro now sits third 4:27 minutes behind.
RnkPrev▼▲RiderTeamTime
110▲9 Vacek MathiasLidl - Trek13:06:36
211▲9 Debruyne RamsesAlpecin - Premier Tech4:16
31▼2 del Toro IsaacUAE Team Emirates - XRG4:27
42▼2 Ayuso JuanLidl - Trek4:30
53▼2 Seixas PaulDecathlon CMA CGM Team4:51
64▼2 Van Eetvelt LennertBahrain - Victorious5:12
75▼2 Martinez LennyLotto Intermarché5:50
86▼2 Piganzoli DavideTeam Visma | Lease a Bike6:18
97▼2 Uijtdebroeks CianMovistar Team7:27
1012▲2 Castrillo PabloMovistar Team7:32

Teams Classification Standings after Stage 4

With the winning group taking 13 minutes over the peloton and around 30 riders making it into the day's breakaway, today was an absolutely key day for the team's classification. UAE Team Emirates - XRG entered the stage in the lead, but they have lost over 30 minutes to Lidl-Trek - 39, to be precise.
The German team has jumped into a commanding lead with Mads Pedersen, Quinn Simmons and Mathias Vacek closing their times instantly. UAE, with no-one up front, dropped down to fifth place, now 32 minutes back. And the gaps are massive, with Red Bull - BORA - hansgrohe remaining second but now 19 minutes behind; whilst EF Education-EasyPost and Movistar Team have also climbed the standings dramatically.
RnkPrev▼▲TeamClassTime
13▲2 Lidl - TrekWT39:04:13
22- Red Bull - BORA - hansgroheWT19:12
35▲2 EF Education - EasyPostWT21:48
49▲5 Movistar TeamWT26:05
51▼4 UAE Team Emirates - XRGWT32:33
67▲1 Netcompany INEOSWT33:21
78▲1 Uno-X MobilityWT34:37
84▼4 Team Visma | Lease a BikeWT39:00
96▼3 Decathlon CMA CGM TeamWT41:39
1010- TotalEnergiesPRT48:02
You can check the full standings of each of the classifications at the 2026 Tour de France.
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