Farewell free-to-air: Inside ITV's final Tour de France

After four decades of free Tour de France coverage on British TV, the ITV team are on their final lap. Tom Davidson drops in on the roadside studio

Ned Boulting can’t remember the last birthday he celebrated at home. For the past two decades, he has spent the day – 11 July – working for ITV on the Tour de France. On his first few birthdays away from home, the production crew would hurriedly expense him a piece of Tour merch as a gift. “On the third or fourth occasion, I said, ‘If you ever give me another mug, I’m going to smash it in front of you’,” Boulting now laughs. “So that got nipped in the bud.” These days, the date passes “routinely and roundly ignored” – but this year, as his 56th birthday slips by, Boulting’s 23-year streak could finally come to an end.

Last autumn, it was announced that ITV had dropped the rights to broadcast the Tour from 2026. The package was instead sold exclusively to Warner Bros Discovery, the parent company of TNT Sports, in a deal that ended 40 years of free-to-air coverage of the race in the UK. British fans had enjoyed free Tour coverage since it first aired on Channel 4 in the 1980s. The news triggered uproar, and left Boulting and his colleagues feeling both nostalgic and mournful as they set out on their final lap of France.

ITV's gazebo at the 2025 Tour de France

Screens inside ITV's studio at the 2025 Tour de France

1985 - Channel 4 begins daily highlights of the Tour de France

2000 - Tour highlights get pushed to later slots to make way for test match cricket

2001 - Channel 4 relinquishes Tour de France rights. ITV pays £5m to take over live coverage

2003 - Ned Boulting makes Tour debut as an on-the-ground reporter, mistakenly calls the leader’s jersey ‘the yellow jumper’

2016 - Boulting replaces Phil Liggett as lead commentator, aided by David Millar

2024 - Warner Bros. Discovery announces exclusivity deal to show the Tour in the UK, ending free-to-air broadcasts

2025 - ITV sets out on farewell Tour

2027 - Tour set for UK Grand Départ (Edinburgh), potentially with no free-to-air option

Ned Boulting, David Millar and Marcel Kittel at the Tour de France