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TNT Sports to put cycling behind £30.99-a-month paywall, as Eurosport coverage to end and future of free-to-air Tour de France remains unclear

Viewers in UK and Ireland to see Eurosport content, including its extensive coverage of professional cycling, moved over to TNT Sports from end of February — and will have to pay significantly more to watch

Cycling fans in the United Kingdom and Ireland will no longer be watching races on Eurosport, as coverage is set to move over to TNT Sports as part of an integration between the two Warner Bros. Discovery-owned channels on February 28th — the move means those wanting to watch professional cycling will now have to pay for a "premium" £30.99-a-month subscription.

There will be no loss of rights as a result of the change and all races previously broadcast on Eurosport will be available on TNT Sports and streamed on discovery+. It means — aside from ITV's final year of Tour de France, Critérium du Dauphiné and Paris-Nice coverage before Warner Bros. Discovery becomes exclusive rights holder in 2026 — all men's and women's Grand Tours, plus in excess of 300 days of cycling action across the year will soon be broadcast on TNT Sports in the UK and Ireland.

Most notably, however, is the price hike. The discovery+ premium subscription with TNT Sports costs £30.99, significantly more than the previous £6.99 monthly subscription that cycling fans could pay to watch Eurosport. What's more, the premium subscription can only be paid monthly, at the £30.99 rate, meaning 12 months of cycling viewing will soon cost nearly £400 (£371.88).

2024 Tour de France peloton (ASO/Charly Lopez)

When news broke in the autumn of Warner Bros. Discovery's deal for exclusive coverage of the Tour de France from 2026 until "at least 2030", it raised concerns the race would not be shown on free-to-air television in the UK for the first time since the 1980s, potentially closing an accessible route for new viewers to discover the sport.

> "The Tour is the only race that matters. And that's gone now": Ned Boulting on the end of free-to-air Tour de France coverage in the UK

With today's announcement, TNT Sports has insisted it will bring "a strong free-to-air offer" to "broaden reach and increase exposure for cycling", including daily free-to-air highlights on Quest for the Giro d'Italia, Vuelta a España, as well as Paris-Roubaix this season.

However, the broadcaster has not disclosed any plans for 2026 when ITV will no longer show live coverage. Speaking to figures at TNT Sports, road.cc was not told directly of any free-to-air plans for 2026 but the broadcaster did explain how a free-to-air "proposition" will be delivered sooner to the time. TNT Sports said it could not confirm yet what this may entail as it is still a way off and production plans are being worked out.

The broadcaster was keen to highlight its hope that it can create new cycling fans by airing races on channels adjacent to bigger sporting events, such as Premier League football matches, albeit those viewers would still need to have bought a subscription to see it.

TNT Sports (credit: TNT Sports)

While that may not allay concerns about one of the UK's most beloved televisual sporting traditions of the summer coming to an end this year, the "strong free-to-air package" TNT Sports is promising includes a new weekly cycling show on its free channel Quest. 'The Ultimate Cycling Show' will be hosted by Orla Chennaoui and Adam Blythe and launches on February 27th, promising to cover "key parts of the season" and editorially "designed to cater to the seasoned fan, plus attract and engage new audiences".

TNT Sports has also promised an "increase in free-to-air highlights across men's and women's major races" in 2025 and confirmed that Eurosport would be continuing elsewhere in Europe.

For the cycling fan already subscribed and watching races on Eurosport, not much will change in terms of the actual cycling content. There will be a few new additions, but the content watched previously on one channel will simply move across to TNT Sports, and it will still be streamable on discovery+.

2024 Tour de France peloton (ASO/Charly Lopez)

TNT Sports will air in excess of 300 days of cycling coverage across the year and has added the women's Giro d'Italia to its rights, meaning 100 per cent of the UCI Men's and Women's WorldTour will be broadcast.

Of those races, TNT Sports has exclusive rights for 33 of 36, the three exceptions being the Tour de France, Critérium du Dauphiné and Paris-Nice, which will become exclusive after leaving ITV this summer.

Scott Young, Group SVP, Content, Production & Business Operations, for WBD Sports Europe, said: "Combining Eurosport and TNT Sports content in the UK and Ireland will enable us to offer a single, premium viewing experience for sports fans. This move in the UK and Ireland will also continue to best deliver value for our leagues and federation partners, as we continue our 35 years plus commitment to investment and championing of sport on our screens, which remains a fundamental part of the success of grassroots through to elite.

"TNT Sports will also continue to bring more content to fans on Warner Bros. Discovery's free-to-air channel Quest. In 2025, this will include broadcasting every MotoGP Sprint race, adding to existing live Bennetts British Superbikes coverage, a brand-new weekly cycling show covering all key moments of the season, continue highlights of the Giro d'Italia and La Vuelta a Espana, plus premiere a range of new sports documentaries."

All Eurosport's digital offering, on YouTube, TikTok, Instagram and other social media platforms will continue, just rebranded as TNT Sports Cycling.

TNT Sports also says it will help grow grassroots cycling through a new cycling club competition that will see the winner receive financial investment after a public vote during the Tour de France and Tour de France Femmes.

The announcement Eurosport, now TNT Sports, would be the exclusive broadcaster of the Tour de France from 2026 was met with disappointment in many quarters from those upset by the loss of free-to-air coverage of the world's biggest bike race.

2024 Tour de France peloton (ASO/Billy Ceusters)

ITV commentator Ned Boulting was one of those disappointed and told the road.cc Podcast the audience on free-to-air "completely eclipses subscription television" and bemoaning that "the Tour is going to go into a place where, in the UK media landscape, you normally find biathlon and hockey".

That last comment may no longer apply, the Tour de France and all other bike races to appear on TNT Sports channels adjacent to Premier League football, cricket, rugby and its other sports, but Boulting concluded nobody is to blame, just that "not enough of us cared".

"It's nobody's fault. The ASO have a right to monetise their event as they feel fit, and you cannot blame Warner Brothers for wanting exclusivity," he said. "That's their market. It seems quite strange to me that for a long time they were willing or contractually obliged to share the coverage with a much bigger broadcaster. Why would they allow that to persist?

"And from ITV's perspective, if they're losing money, they've got to get out. So none of these three parties, in my opinion, are to blame. But the primary reason why it’s gone is because not enough of us cared."

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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82 comments

Avatar
HarrogateSpa | 2 days ago
5 likes

The price hike from £6.99 to £30.99 is way too big.

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No Reply | 2 days ago
5 likes

Another here who is cancelling their subscription. I've had it for years, only watch cycling on it, nothing else. I refuse to pay a 450% increase, just to watch cycling. 

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Pedal those squares | 2 days ago
2 likes

How nice of WB.  I have just cannceld my subscription and it pops up telling me "You can get 7 months at 50% off, so ONLY £15.49 a month.  THEN £30.99 of course!

This wonderful offer to did make me stop walking away.

Avatar
Rendel Harris | 2 days ago
17 likes

Just nipped over there to cancel my subscription and to bid them a fond farewell…

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EM69 replied to Rendel Harris | 2 days ago
1 like

I'm with you on this one...

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alexuk replied to Rendel Harris | 1 day ago
3 likes

...the ONLY time I 100% agree with Rendel.

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Secret_squirrel | 2 days ago
2 likes

Ah well.  Lets hope the next cycling rights deal implodes for the ASO when TNT claim there is no market.

Common sense will no doubt return after a couple of seasons of revenue failures by TNT.

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Capt Sisko | 2 days ago
2 likes

Another one that just won't be paying nearly £400 a year just to watch the cycling. Sure, I'll get a lot more for my money than cycling, but I've no interest in tennis, golf or the world tiddlywink championships, so it'll be a goodbye from me, and will WBD care,  no. They know the money is in fans who just can't live without their football, rugby, F1 or whatever and are mug enough to pay through the nose to see it. Even then cycle sport viewing number just aren't in the same league the big guns and it wouldn't surprise me at all if they dropped broadcasting it completely at some point in the future.

The Wiggo bubble has well and truly burst.

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SimoninSpalding replied to Capt Sisko | 2 days ago
3 likes

I didn't realise that Eurosports still covered tiddlywinks. To be honest it has all been downhill since they stopped showing belt sander racing

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Capt Sisko replied to SimoninSpalding | 2 days ago
0 likes

Totally bonkers but an absolutely brilliant idea. Bring it on.

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Dan Jestico | 2 days ago
3 likes

Sod this. Sod you Warner Bros. Sod you Scott Young, group senior vice president of WBD Sports Europe and your ridiculous justification. Bring back GCN+

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Rendel Harris | 2 days ago
7 likes

Well colour me shocked, it was only a matter of time before greed got the better of Warner Brothers. Asset stripping at its finest, don't you just love capitalism? Oh well,  a year to brush up on French, Italian and Spanish and to install a good VPN to watch the GTs in their native languages. ETA and/or checking out the availability on P2P streaming networks, which generally one would regard as being morally dubious but in this instance I'd say Warner Brothers have stolen something from viewers who were prepared to pay a reasonable price and are trying to blackmail them into paying five times as much, so they deserve all they get.

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dubwise | 2 days ago
8 likes

So long Eurosport, it's been a blast.

And the bird to WBD, not that they care.

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stonojnr | 2 days ago
2 likes

"The primary reason why it’s gone is because not enough of us cared"

Great thanks Ned, just blame the audience (i thought the highlights show got good figures) not the people making vast sums of money out of it.

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espressodan | 2 days ago
3 likes

Fuck that.
Not only a basic shit sandwich, but the way it's disguised in the email from them as somehow a better deal for me make me want to puke.
US discover time warner masters have gone for the money. I think they'll get a shock.

Sorry Orla et al. I'm out.

If this is the way the license holder chooses to profit, bring on OneCycling, at least I'd know there was some benefit to teams from a price gouging subscription fee.

I believe this is purely profit motivated by DTW.

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Mr Blackbird | 2 days ago
1 like

Whatever happens, I am not prepared to pay any further subscription costs. There is so much cycling on telly, that I get bored watching it. Most stages of the TDF are pretty dull (apart from the scenery) until the last hour of racing, so hopefully highlights will remain free to air. I cancelled sky sports several years ago and don't miss it.

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squired | 2 days ago
2 likes

This is extremely disappointing news.  When considering our Sky package recently one of the things that kept us going was Discovery+ being bundled in.  At the same time we looked at dumping SkySports for TNT and decided against it due to the offering on TNT not appealing.

I keep reading articles in the press about people streaming illegally being arrested by the police, but I can't help thinking a move like this is only going to encourage more people down that path. 

I saw a quote elsewhere attributed to the group senior VP of WBD Sports Europe, which just made me laugh.  "There is going to be a price rise for this premium sports channel.  What we've looked at is creating value for money, taking the most premium sports properties as possible and creating the adjacency, creating a sports ecosystem where you get value".

So, enjoy your new sports ecosystem and marvel at the value you are getting....

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mikewood | 2 days ago
4 likes

Absolutely disgusting!

I actively avoid watching Football and do not want to support it in any way whatsoever. Even the Discovery+ thing wrankled a bit after GCN+ but I'm not up for the best part of £100 to VM + a further £30.99 to be able to watch on demand.

I do not want to HAVE to support the overhyped primadonnas that have ruined Football with all this falling over. For the price of one Wendyballer you can get a whole World Tour Team!

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the_mikey | 2 days ago
1 like

I was told by Discovery that my subscription couldn't continue and I'd need to change my subscription to include TNT sports without any explanation or detail about what I would get. But I'm not comfortable paying the increased costs, I had already unsubscribed from the Eurosport package during the off season and had only just resubscribed to see the Tour Down Under but this is forcing me to give it up entirely. I have also given up zwift, and veloviewer subs thanks to the cost of everything else going up.

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don simon fbpe | 2 days ago
3 likes

If I understand correctly from the email, my £3.99 subscription, which recently went up to £6.99, can continue but will include adverts but no cycling unless I upgrade to TNT Premium (which they neglect to mention the price) and appears to cost £30.99. 

I do love the increased level of choice that this free market economy is giving us!

Any ideas on what I can spend the extra £3.99 on each month?

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jpj84 replied to don simon fbpe | 2 days ago
3 likes

Yeah, I'm not sure this is (as the article suggests) as benign as just a rebrand. The small print here suggests that your two options are: £3.99 for a package containing naff all; or £30.99 for the sports package... which still has adverts.

So an extra £24/month for a worse service

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stonojnr replied to don simon fbpe | 2 days ago
1 like

I cant see anyone paying 30.99 per month to watch cycling content, and it's not even guaranteed to be on the broadcast channels which are full of repeats, it's stream it on your tablet/device.

Suspect WB will quickly find the UK market isn't as robustly willing to sign up to this as they think

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