With the routes for the 2027 Tour de France Femmes’ UK Grand Départ now official, Derbyshire County Council has insisted it “will do our utmost” to ensure Snake Pass is safe to be raced up, with works ongoing to address numerous active landslips on the iconic Peak District climb.
Back in January when first details about the three stages in England were announced, including the promise of Snake Pass on stage two through the Peak District from Manchester to Sheffield, we reported that the organisers have a contingency in place in case landslips mean the climb cannot be used next summer.
At the time, Derbyshire County Council admitted to us “it’s not possible to say if work will be completed” in time for the women’s Tour de France’s maiden visit to British soil in 2027, the men’s race also starting with three stages in Scotland, England and Wales next year.

However, speaking to road.cc this morning following yesterday’s reveal of the full stage routes, Derbyshire County Council’s highways chief Charlotte Hill told us they are delighted Snake Pass has been chosen for inclusion and the local authority will “do our utmost to ensure that the Tour de France Femmes Avec Zwift has safe passage along the route”.
“We are delighted that the Snake Pass is going to form part of the Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift 2027 route,” Councillor Hill told us. “It is an iconic stretch of road within Derbyshire, that will present a real challenge to the cyclists and make for an interesting stretch of the race.
“Due to its underlying geology, the Snake Pass also presents us at Derbyshire County Council, as highways authority, with several challenges. Snake Pass has got numerous active landslips that we manage year on year, and we will do our utmost to ensure that the Tour de France Femmes Avec Zwift has safe passage along the route. Longer term solutions are required, and we are working with the East Midlands Combined County Authority to explore all opportunities to secure the long-term viability of the A57.”
Back in January, with sections of the road subject to temporary traffic lights amid landslip repairs, Hill accepted it was “not possible to say if the work on these two landslips will be completed by July 2027”, however today’s assessment appears more positive.
There is, of course, plenty of time and attritional Peak District weather to come before the visit of the world’s best cyclists next summer, the picture on Snake Pass’s viability for inclusion likely to be clearer once next winter is out the way.

In January, a spokesperson for the Grand Départ GB 2027 told us contingencies were in place should the climb be unfit for racing, a message echoed by the organisation’s project director Lucy Jones at yesterday’s route announcement.
“We have contingencies in place for all of our stages and if we have to implement them we will,” she explained to Channel 4’s TV news broadcast. “But we’re really confident that we’ve got 15 months to work with our partners to bring this race to life and we’re really confident in our collective ability to do that.”
The Snake Pass stage looks to be as brutal a Grand Départ stage as we have seen at the Tour de France Femmes, stage two taking the riders from Manchester to Sheffield via 154km and 2,750m of Peak District climbing. While the talk of this article has been Snake Pass, it is Winnats Pass which will likely be the star attraction of the stage, the peloton to climb the brutally steep slopes earlier on in the day.

Once closer to Sheffield, there will be several shorter, but still brutally steep ascents, before a revisit to Jenkin Road where, in 2014 when the men’s race visited, Vincenzo Nibali descended to victory.
“There won’t be a metre of flat,” Rousse said during yesterday’s press conference. “This will be a battle. This second stage will be hard fought with some spectacular climbs.”
Stage three is a team time trial in London, the sightseeing 18km route including views of the Houses of Parliament, the London Eye, and Tower Bridge before finishing on the Mall in front of Buckingham Palace.
“We made this choice for a number of reasons,” Rousse said yesterday. “One is because it’s a huge honour for us to come to a capital city such as London, and it’s a huge moment in the history of the race. What we wanted to do was create something that would allow us to spend the whole day in the city, and allow us to visit and revisit the same landmarks.
An iconic stage deserves an iconic stage 😍@LeTourFemmes Stage 3: London, 1 August 2027 📅 pic.twitter.com/QI6yfd4Xms
— Le Tour de France GB (@letour_uk) April 20, 2026
“The reason that we’re able to have the time trial here is that London has been on board and wanted to facilitate this with us. Actually, it’s easier to organise a team time trial on roads in a busy city than it is for the whole peloton to arrive in one go. It’s a huge opportunity.”
