The Scottish government has announced £9.25 million in funding for the Edinburgh Grand Départ of the Tour de France in 2027, ballooning the budget past initial estimates.
Documents from City of Edinburgh Council previously showed that the council would spend £1.7 million on hosting the build-up to the race and the opening stage, with the Scottish Government pledging to cover a similar amount for what was described as a “total estimated event cost” of £3.3 million, as reported by The Herald.
However, the signing of a “host agreement” was delayed by the council. Edinburgh’s Local Democracy Reporter subsequently reported that council planning for the event “did not follow best practice” and failed to inform councillors of the preparations being made. The Scottish Government’s latest funding announcement takes the costs of the race start over £10 million.

Scotland and Edinburgh will only host the opening stage before the race heads south, spending a stage each in both England and Wales before crossing to France. When Yorkshire hosted the Grand Départ in 2014, the event was budgeted at £26.5 million. Local councils contributed £10.6 million with a further £9.9 million funded by central government and £6 million from Transport for London (TfL).
The Grand Départ in London in 2007 cost £7.5 million, funded primarily between TfL and the London Development Agency, a now defunct office of the Mayor of London.
Funding for 2027 is also expected to be provided by the UK Government, its devolved Welsh equivalent, local authorities and commercial sponsors, though the route of the men’s and women’s Tour de France is not expected to be announced for several months.
The Department for Culture, Media and Sport only included funding for the men’s and women’s Tour de France as part of its wider Plan for Change that included the hosting of football’s European Championships in 2028, the European Athletics Championships in 2026, and a wider grassroots investment strategy. That figure was announced to be over £900 million, for which the Tour de France funding would comprise a very small fraction.

Speaking in the Scottish Parliament, Business and Tourism Minister Richard Lochhead said that “bringing the 2027 Tour de France Grand Départ to Edinburgh is a tremendous opportunity for our country.
“The Scottish Government will invest up to £9.25 million, which includes a contingency provision. This funding will help Scotland realise the full potential of the social and economic benefits the Tour de France will bring to our country, as well as ensure that the event is delivered safely, securely and successfully.”
Lochhead added that part of that funding would be “into a Scotland-specific social impact programme, which will seek to improve health by increasing cycling participation, supporting the Scottish Government’s wider active travel commitments, driving community cohesion and supporting economic growth.”
It is unclear at this stage what form this programme will take and whether the social impact project will be calculated in the final costings analysis, typically published after major events. A report following the 2023 Cycling World Championships in Glasgow found the event cost at least £63 million, significantly over budget. It also found that the championships generated £205 million of gross revenue, including £129 million in the city itself.

4 thoughts on “Scottish Tour de France Grand Départ budget trebles to over £10 million”
This funding will help
This funding will help Scotland realise the full potential of the social and economic benefits the Tour de France will bring to our country, as well as ensure that the event is delivered safely, securely and successfully.” Cutting through the highly meaningless verbiage, there is no ROI. Who cares, this is only taxpayers’ £££.
The official Grand Départ
The official Grand Départ 2027 website still says that we should watch out for more information in autumn 2025 ‘to discover if the races will visit a road near you’.
It’s disappointing that they haven’t been able to keep to their own timetable and announce the routes.
HarrogateSpa wrote:
Autumn 2026 might be more realistic. Probably waiting to see if the budget to fix the necessary roads can be raised! ?
(Could also have been a cut and paste from last year and actually *should* say 2026)
Edinburgh Council vastly
Edinburgh Council vastly underestimating the cost of something? It’s not as though they have form for for that. {cough} trams {cough}