HBO Max adds Tour de France multiview streaming feature
July 1, 2026 13.46 Europe/London By Julian Clover
Warner Bros. Discovery will introduce a new multiview feature on HBO Max for its coverage of this year’s Tour de France, allowing cycling fans to watch four live camera feeds simultaneously for the first time.
The enhanced viewing option forms part of a wider upgrade to WBD’s streaming coverage of the Tour de France and Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift, with every stage available live on HBO Max, Eurosport and TNT Sports across Europe.
The new multiview feature lets viewers choose between four live feeds, including Warner Bros. Discovery’s motorbike camera, helicopter pictures and host broadcaster ASO’s race coverage, while selecting the audio commentary from whichever feed they prefer. Other additions include timeline markers highlighting key moments within each stage, Dolby Vision and Dolby Atmos support, and commentary available in up to 21 languages.
Scott Young, EVP at WBD Sports Europe, said: “Cycling is part of our DNA and for more than 35 years, no other broadcaster has done more to bring the stories, strategy and emotion of the Tour de France to fans across Europe. That heritage matters because this is a sport built on knowledge, trust and passion, and our coverage is shaped by people who live and breathe cycling all year round.
“With every stage of the Tour de France and Tour de France Femmes available on HBO Max, Eurosport and TNT Sports, we are combining decades of cycling expertise with new product innovations that give fans more control, more context and more ways to follow every decisive moment.”
Warner Bros. Discovery will broadcast every stage of both the men’s race (4-26 July) and the women’s race (1-9 August), providing more than 100 hours of live coverage of the Tour de France and 27 hours from the Tour de France Femmes.
The broadcaster is also expanding its studio programming, with dedicated shows for audiences in the UK, France, Germany, Spain and the Netherlands. TNT Sports’ The Breakaway will once again be produced on location, broadcasting from London, Winchester, Alpe d’Huez and the Champs-Élysées during the race.
Warner Bros. Discovery holds pan-European rights to both the men’s and women’s Tour de France until at least 2032. In the UK and Ireland, this is the first year TNT Sports has exclusive live rights to the men’s race, while highlights continue to air free-to-air on 5.




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