Program, historikk, startlister og resultater for alle etapper under årets Tour de Ski. Touren arrangeres fra 28. desember 2025 til 4. januar 2026 i henholdsvis Toblach og Val di Fiemme.
Tour de Ski 2025-2026
20. utgave
Dato
28. desember – 4. januar
På TV
Viaplay har rettighetene og rennene vil sendes direkte på Vsport 1 og Viaplay.
Rennene sendes også på Radio i NRK Sport.
Norske utøvere
Sluttstilling
Menn, topp 26

Kvinner, topp 26

Startlister alle dager
Etappe 1 – Søndag 28. desember
Toblach, Italia
- Kl 11.45: Sprint fri teknikk prolog
- Kl 14.15: Sprint fri teknikk finaler
Sammenlagtstilling Tour de Ski etter 1. etappe:
Etappe 2 – Mandag 29. desember
Toblach, Italia
- Kl 11.45: 10 km intervallstart klassisk menn
- Kl 14.45: 10 km intervallstart klassisk kvinner
Sammenlagtstilling etter 2. etappe:
Etappe 3 – Onsdag 31. desember
Toblach, Italia
- Kl 11.30: 5 km heat start fri menn
- Kl 14.30: 5 km heat start fri kvinner
Sammenlagtstilling etter 3. etappe:
Etappe 4 – Torsdag 1. januar
Toblach, Italia
- Kl 10.30: 20 km jaktstart klassisk menn
- Kl 12.30: 20 km jaktstart klassisk kvinner
Sammenlagtstilling etter 4. etappe:
Etappe 5 – Lørdag 3. januar
Val di Fiemme, Italia
- Kl 12.15: Sprint klassisk prolog
- Kl 14.45: Sprint klassisk finaler
Sammenlagtstilling etter 5. etappe:
Etappe 6 – søndag 4. januar
Val di Fiemme, Italia
- Kl 11.30: 10 km fellesstart fri menn «Monsterbakken»
- Kl 15.30: 10 km fellesstart fri kvinner «Monsterbakken»
- Mosjonsutgaven Rampa con i Campioni
Sluttstilling Tour de Ski
Sluttstilling sprintkonkurransen
Sluttstilling klatrekonkurransen
Den svenske tropppen til Tour de Ski
Terminliste og resultater alle verdenscuprenn i langrenn 2025-26
Alle resultater Tour de Ski 2024-2025
Alle resultater Tour de Ski 2023-2024
Værmelding
Forhåndsomtale
Menn
● The Tour de Ski has been held annually since the 2006/07 season. It started with five stages
in the first two seasons, was reduced to four stages until the 2018/19 season and then to
three stages until the 2023/24 season. Now it is held in just two stages to reduce the travel
time. Just like in the last season, the 2025/26 Tour de Ski will take place at the two Italian
venues of Toblach and Val di Fiemme.
● Dario Cologna (SUI) and Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) have won four Tour de Ski each,
so Klaebo could become the first athlete, man or woman, to win Tour five times. No other
active Men’s skier has won it more than once.
● Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) also holds the record of Tour de Ski stage wins, having
won 21 so far. Petter Northug (NOR) is second on 13 wins, and Sergey Ustiugov (RUS) third
with nine. Harald Oestberg Amundsen (NOR) is the active Cross-Country skier with the
second most stage wins, on four.
● Norwegian athletes have won four consecutive Men’s Tour de Ski titles, which is the
longest streak of wins for the same country in the Men’s Tour de Ski history. Norwegian
athletes have won the Men’s Tour de Ski eight times with four different athletes, all wins
having come in the last 12 seasons, after Norway did not win any of the first seven editions
of the Tour.
● Norway started the season winning all three Men’s events of the first and second World
Cup stages in Ruka and Trondheim. The streak was broken in Davos, where Lucas Chanavat
(FRA) won the Sprint. Norwegian skiers has won seven out of the eight Men’s World Cup
races held so far, and in all seven victories, the runner-up was also Norwegian.
● Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) won his 100th individual World Cup victory in his
hometown of Trondheim earlier this season. Klaebo became the first Men’s athlete to reach
this landmark, and second overall, joining retired compatriot Marit Bjoergen (NOR), who
claimed 114 World Cup wins before retiring in 2018.
● Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) has won the Overall World Cup title five times, between
2017/18 and 2024/25. If he wins the 2025/26 Overall Crystal Globe, he will equal his
countryman Bjoern Daehlie (NOR), who holds the record of six Overall titles, won between
1991/92 and 1998/99. Klaebo is tied with Gunde Svan (SWE) on five titles. No other active
Men’s Cross-Country skier has more than two Crystal Globes.
● Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) has held the record for most individual World Cup wins
in a single season since 2022/23, when he topped the podium 19 times. Klaebo’s 16 World
Cup victories in the 2023/24 season is the second-highest number of World Cup wins in a
single season. He has three individual wins this season so far.
● Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) also holds the record for most individual podiums in a
single season since 2022/23, when he made it to the podium in 23 individual World Cup
podiums. He currently has four individual podiums this season so far
● Lucas Chanavat (FRA) won the Sprint Freestyle in Davos, with Federico Pellegrino (ITA) in
second place and Oskar Opstad Vike (NOR) third. This was the fifth individual World Cup win
for Chanavat, who won his last World Cup race in the same track in Davos during the 2023/24
Tour de Ski.
● Einar Hedegart (NOR) won the 10km Interval Start Freestyle in Davos, with Harald
Oestberg Amundsen (NOR) in second place and Mattis Stenshagen (NOR) third, producing
another clean podium sweep for Norway – the fourth one in eight races this season. It was
the second World Cup win for Hedegart and the second consecutive one in this event.
● The race in Davos was just the fifth World Cup start for Einar Hedegart (NOR), just a few
weeks after announcing he was quitting biathlon to dedicate himself to Cross-Country skiing
full-time. He has a record of two wins and four podiums in five World Cup starts.
Kvinner
● The Tour de Ski has been held annually since the 2006/07 season. It started with five stages
in the first two seasons, was reduced to four stages until the 2018/19 season and then to
three stages until the 2023/24 season. Now it is held in just two stages to reduce the travel
time. Just like in the last season, the 2025/26 Tour de Ski will take place at the two Italian
venues of Toblach and Val di Fiemme.
● Justyna Kowalczyk (POL) and Therese Johaug (NOR) have won four Overall Tour de Ski
titles each. This record will not be broken or reached this year because no athlete has three
Tour de Ski wins. Jessie Diggins (USA) is aiming for her third win.
● Therese Johaug (NOR) holds the record of Tour de Ski stage wins, having won 16 stages.
No active Women’s athlete has more than 10 stage wins. Jessie Diggins (USA) has nine so
far.
● Only two athletes have won the Tour de Ski in two consecutive seasons: Heidi Weng (NOR)
who defended her 2016/17 title in 2017/18, and Justyna Kowalczyk (POL), who won the four
consecutive editions of the Tour between 2009/10 and 2012/13. This record will not change
this winter as last season’s Tour de Ski winner Therese Johaug (NOR) has since retired.
● Sweden have won six Women’s events so far this season; two out of three events at each
of the three World Cup stages held so far, and with five different athletes. Jonna Sundling
(SWE) is the only Women’s skier to win two individual World Cup races so far this season.
● Only five countries have been represented on this season’s World Cup podiums so far.
Sweden, Norway and the United States of America are the only three countries to finish first
or second. Switzerland and Germany have reached a third place each.
● Jonna Sundling (SWE) won the Sprint Freestyle in Davos, with Mathilde Myhrvold (NOR)
in second place and Nadine Faehndrich (SUI) third. It was the fourth individual World Cup
podium for Myhrvold, who is aiming for her first World Cup win. Out of Myhrvold’s five World
Cup podiums, four of them have been won in Switzerland. Sundling also won the Team Sprint
Freesyle in Davos, partnering with Maja Dahlqvist (SWE).
● Karoline Simpson-Larsen (NOR) won the 10km Interval Start Freestyle race in Davos, with
Moa Ilar (SWE) in second place and Astrid Oeyre Slind (NOR) third. This was the first ever
World Cup win for Simpson-Larsen, who had never made it onto a World Cup podium before.
Before Davos, she had just finished in the top-10 twice – both times in Ruka in the first stage
of the season.
● Jessie Diggins (USA) is the only active athlete with more than 20 individual World Cup
victories. She has won 28.
● Jessie Diggins (USA) has won three Overall World Cup titles, including two in the past two
seasons. If she wins a third consecutive Overall Crystal Globe this season, it would be her
fourth in total, placing her just behind Elena Vaelbe Trubitsina (RUS), who won five titles
between 1988/89 and 1996/97.
● Jessie Diggins (USA) has also won the last two Distance titles. If she wins a fourth Distance
title this season, it would tie her with Justyna Kowalczyk (POL), just behind the all-time best
Therese Johaug (NOR), who has won it five times.
● Jasmi Joensuu (FIN) won the Sprint World Cup title in 2024/25; her first World Cup title.
She did not win an individual race throughout the season and was on the podium in one
Sprint race – a second place in Toblach (ITA). She has yet to claim her first World Cup podium
this season.
● Sweden dominated the Women’s side of last season’s FIS Nordic World Ski Championships
in Trondheim, Norway, winning all six events, with Jonna Sundling (SWE) and Ebba
Andersson (SWE) claiming three gold medals each. Sundling will not compete in Tour de
Ski.
Om Tour de Ski
Tour de Ski er langrennsløpernes motstykke til syklistenes Tour de France og skihoppernes hoppuke. Tour de Ski er blitt arrangert årlig siden oppstarten i 2006/07-sesongen.
Det arrangeres seks til ni renn i løpet av cirka ti dager rundt årsskiftet, og felles for alle sesongene er at siste etappe avsluttes opp slalåmbakken i Val di Fiemme. Tour de Ski inngår i verdenscupen i langrenn.
Før 2022-23 utgave av Tour de Ski ble det innført et nytt poengsystem som gjorde at vinneren mottok færre verdenscuppoeng enn tidligere.
Dette er det nåværende poengsystemet:

Som tidligere vil det gis 50 poeng til vinneren av hver enkelt etappe.
Premiepenger
Sammenlagtvinneren får 80 000 sveitsiske francs (tilvarende 953 520 norske kroner med dagens valutakurser).
Andreplass får 60 000 sveitsiske francs
Tredjeplass får 40 000.
Fjerdeplass får 30 000
Femteplass 25 000
Sjetteplass 20 000
Sjuendeplass 15 000
Åttendeplass 10 000
Niendeplass 8 000
10. plass 7 000
11.plass 6 000
12. plass 5 000
13. plass 4 000
14. plass 3 500
15.plass 3 000
16. plass 2 500
17.plass 2 000
18.plass 1 750
19.plass 1 250
20.plass 1 000
«Monsterbakken» – Alpe Cermis
Siste etappe avsluttes opp slalåmbakken i Cavalese. Den ligger i fjellet Alpe Cermis, 2250 moh., og er den bratteste motbakken som noen gang er tatt med i verdenscupen i langrenn. Etappen går i fristil. Hele etappen er ti kilometer lang, mens selve bakken er 3,6 kilometer.
Utøverne klatrer 420 meter i høyde, med gjennomsnittlig stigning på 11,6 prosent og en maksimal helling på 28 prosent.
I slalåmbakken blir det plassert porter, som utøverne følger opp gjennom bakken. Disse går i svinger, så utøverne går ikke korteste vei til toppen. Etappen ble de 13 første tourene avholdt med jaktstart med startintervall etter sammenlagtstillingen etter foregående etapper. Dersom dette førte til for store tidsmessige avstander kunne juryen velge å bruke en «bølgestart».
I det første året av Tour De Ski (2006/2007) vurderte flere utøvere, blant annet en rekke norske, å legge feller på skiene når de kom inn i bakken. Dette satte FIS en stopper for på kvelden før etappen.
I de 13 første utgavene av Tour de Ski ble etappen avviklet med jaktstart slik at første person i mål også var vinner av touren sammenlagt. I 2019 ble det innført fellesstart på denne etappen.
Etappevinnere og tider opp Monsterbakken:
Resultater 2024: Kvinner – Menn
| År | Navn | Nasjon | Tid |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | Sergej Sjirjajev | 32.07,8 | |
| 2008 | René Sommerfeldt | 32.59,0 | |
| 2009 | Ivan Babikov | 33.51,2 | |
| 2010 | Lukáš Bauer | 33.43,4 | |
| 2011 | Lukáš Bauer | 30.28,3 | |
| 2012 | Aleksandr Legkov | 30.38,2 | |
| 2013 | Marcus Hellner | 29.59,6 | |
| 2014 | Chris André Jespersen | 31.58,8 | |
| 2015 | Roland Clara | 29.13,0 | |
| 2016 | Martin Johnsrud Sundby | 30.47,0 | |
| 2017 | Maurice Manificat | 29.20,0 | |
| 2018 | Martin Johnsrud Sundby | 28.36,4 | |
| 2019 | Sjur Røthe | 30.32,0 | |
| 2020 | Simen Hegstad Krüger | 30.55,8 | |
| 2021 | Denis Spitsov | 32.41,0 | |
| 2022 | Sjur Røthe | 31.42,1 | |
| 2023 | Simen Hegstad Krüger | 31.20,4 | |
| 2024 | Jules Lapierre | 33.00,7 |
| År | Navn | Nasjon | Tid |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | Kateřina Neumannová | 34.24,5 | |
| 2008 | Valentyna Sjevtsjenko | 34.06,2 | |
| 2009 | Therese Johaug | 35.07,7 | |
| 2010 | Kristin Størmer Steira | 35.49,8 | |
| 2011 | Therese Johaug | 33.14,4 | |
| 2012 | Therese Johaug | 34.17,7 | |
| 2013 | Therese Johaug | 34.12,4 | |
| 2014 | Therese Johaug | 34.19,8 | |
| 2015 | Therese Johaug | 32.16,4 | |
| 2016 | Therese Johaug | 33.14,8 | |
| 2017 | Heidi Weng | 33.34,3 | |
| 2018 | Heidi Weng | 32.11,5 | |
| 2019 | Ingvild Flugstad Østberg | 35.15,0 | |
| 2020 | Therese Johaug | 34.21,6 | |
| 2021 | Ebba Andersson | 36.45,6 | |
| 2022 | Heidi Weng | 35.41,2 | |
| 2023 | Delphine Claudel | 36.35,4 | |
| 2024 | Sophia Laukli | 38.16,5 |
Tidligere vinnere av Tour de Ski:
Kvinner:
Menn:
Flest etappeseire i Tour de Ski:
Menn:
| Plass | Navn | Seiere |
| 1 | 17 | |
| 2 | 13 | |
| 3 | 9 | |
| 4 | 7 | |
| 6 | 6 | |
| 8 | 5 | |
| 9 | 4 | |
| 10 | 3 | |
| 13 | 2 | |
Kvinner:
| Plass | Navn | Seiere |
| 1 | 14 | |
| 3 | 11 | |
| 5 | 7 | |
| 7 | 6 | |
| 10 | 5 | |
| 11 | 4 | |
| 14 | 3 | |
| 15 | 2 | |
Arrangørsteder Tour de Ski:
| År | Dato | Etapper | Arrangørsteder |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2006/07 | 31. desember 2006–7. januar 2007 | 6¹ | München, Oberstdorf, Asiago og Val di Fiemme |
| 2007/08 | 28. desember 2007–6. januar 2008 | 8 | Nové Město, Praha, Asiago og Val di Fiemme |
| 2008/09 | 27. desember 2008–4. januar 2009 | 7 | Oberhof, Praha, Nové Město og Val di Fiemme |
| 2009/10 | 1. januar 2010–10. januar 2010 | 8 | Oberhof, Praha, Cortina d’Ampezzo, Toblach og Val di Fiemme |
| 2010/11 | 31. desember 2010–9. januar 2011 | 8 | Oberhof, Oberstdorf, Cortina d’Ampezzo, Toblach og Val di Fiemme |
| 2011/12 | 29. desember 2011–8. januar 2012 | 9 | Oberhof, Oberstdorf, Toblach, Cortina d’Ampezzo og Val di Fiemme |
| 2012/13 | 29. desember 2012–6. januar 2013 | 7 | Oberhof, Val Müstair, Cortina d’Ampezzo, Toblach og Val di Fiemme |
| 2013/14 | 28. desember 2013–5. januar 2014 | 7 | Oberhof, Lenzerheide, Cortina d’Ampezzo, Toblach og Val di Fiemme |
| 2015 | 3. januar 2015–11. januar 2015 | 7 | Oberhof, Val Müstair, Toblach og Val di Fiemme |
| 2016 | 1. januar 2016–10. januar 2016 | 8 | Lenzerheide, Oberstdorf, Toblach og Val di Fiemme |
| 2016/17 | 31. desember 2016–8. januar 2017 | 7 | Val Müstair, Oberstdorf, Toblach og Val di Fiemme |
| 2017/18 | 30. desember 2017–7. januar 2018 | 62 | Lenzerheide, Oberstdorf og Val di Fiemme |
| 2018/19 | 29. desember 2018–4. januar 2019 | 7 | Toblach, Val Müstair, Oberstdorf og Val di Fiemme |
| 2019/20 | 28. desember 2019–5. januar 2020 | 7 | Lenzerheide, Toblach og Val di Fiemme |
| 2021 | 1. januar 2021–10. januar 2021 | 8 | Val Müstair, Toblach og Val di Fiemme |
| 2021/22 | 28. desember 2021–6. januar 2022 | 6 | Lenzerheide, Oberstdorf og Val di Fiemme |
| 2022/23 | 31. desember 2022–8. januar 2023 | 7 | Val Müstair, Oberstdorf og Val di Fiemme |
| 2023/24 | 30. desember 2023–7. januar 2024 | 7 | Toblach, Davos og Val di Fiemme |
