
La Quebrantahuesos 2026 Complete Guide — The Pyrenean Gran Fondo Queen, 200 km, 4 Mountain Passes and How to Train For It
📖 30 min read 📝 8,500 words 🎯 Skim friendly

📖 30 min read 📝 8,500 words 🎯 Skim friendly
On Saturday June 20, 2026 at 07:00, somewhere between 10,000 and 13,000 cyclists will roll out from the sports hall in Sabiñánigo to take on the 35th edition of La Quebrantahuesos — the most prestigious amateur Gran Fondo in Spain and one of the great fixtures of the European amateur cycling calendar. 200 kilometres, 4 mountain passes and 3,500 metres of vertical gain through the heart of the Aragonese Pyrenees, with a brief crossing into France over the Col du Pourtalet. This isn't just any ride: since 1991, la Quebra has been where the Spanish road cyclist measures themselves against their own myth, where French, Italian, Belgian and British groups intersect, and where the Pedrera Awards reward those who collect editions like layers of varnish. This guide covers what the official site doesn't quite tell you: how the race breaks (spoiler — at the Pourtalet, kilometre 130), what to carry in the back pocket of your jersey, how to pace Yésero and Cotefablo so the Pourtalet doesn't swallow you whole, and why staying in Jaca might be a smarter idea than staying in Sabiñánigo.
| Data | Information |
|---|---|
| Date | Saturday June 20, 2026 (3rd Saturday of June) |
| Edition | 35th |
| Distance | 200 km (Quebrantahuesos category) · ~85 km (Treparriscos category) |
| Elevation | 3,500 m+ total positive gain |
| Passes | Yésero (1,400 m) · Cotefablo (1,425 m) · Marie-Blanque Spanish side · Col du Pourtalet (1,794 m) |
| Start / Finish | Sabiñánigo (Huesca, Aragón) — closed loop |
| Start time | 07:00 CET |
| Field size | ~10,000 (Quebrantahuesos) + ~3,000 (Treparriscos) |
| Minimum age | 18 with valid RFEC license |
| Organiser | PEDALA with support from the Sabiñánigo town council |
| Registration | quebrantahuesos.com |

La Quebrantahuesos is not a UCI race or a Vuelta stage. It's a Gran Fondo with individual chip-timing — competitive in spirit, but open to amateurs with a license. Since 1991, when a handful of fans from the PEDALA club in Sabiñánigo sketched the first 200 km route across the Aragonese Pyrenean passes, la Quebra has grown into the most attended amateur cycling event in Spain and one of the five great European Gran Fondos — alongside Italy's Maratona dles Dolomites, France's La Marmotte and L'Étape du Tour, and Austria's Ötztaler Radmarathon.
Is this ride for you?
La Quebrantahuesos is not a beginner event. The organiser assumes you arrive with:
If you've been on the road for 6 months or your longest ride doesn't exceed 100 km, la Quebra isn't your event yet. The alternative this season: the Treparriscos (~85 km, same day, joint lottery) — an excellent first contact with the atmosphere without committing to 200 km.

The Quebrantahuesos course is a closed loop from Sabiñánigo that loops in and out of the Aragonese Pyrenees with a symbolic crossing into France at the Col du Pourtalet. Four passes, three long descents, an 18 km downhill final stretch back to the finish. The profile looks like a child's drawing of four mountains, each bigger than the last — because that's exactly what it is.
Mass start at 07:00 from the sports hall. The first 20 km are flat on a wide road to Biescas, peloton terrain, where it's very easy to leave your body in an absurd chase after the lead group. Here is la Quebra's first tactical mistake: spending your first match staying with the wrong group.
From km 22 the Yésero climb (1,400 m) starts. 13 km of irregular gradient — 5–7 % average, ramps of 9 % at the start. Take this first climb at 80 % of your threshold heart rate (low zone 3), no more. If your monitor beeps zone 4, brake. There are 175 km to go.
Technical descent of Yésero through Hoz de Jaca — wide turns but uneven asphalt, watch out for winter potholes. Pass through Biescas again (km 50, first real feed station with banana, water, isotonic) and immediately tackle the N-260 to the Cotefablo pass (1,425 m).
Cotefablo is the trap pass. 12 km of climbing, 4–6 % average, looks like the easiest of the four and that's why you get cocky. Fast groups attack here because the tunnel at km 73 marks the summit. If you cross km 80 with your legs averaging 130 bpm, you've blown it. Stay with groups 30 seconds slower. There are 120 km to go.
Long descent of Cotefablo toward Broto and Sarvisé — 30 km of technical descent or false flat. Here the group reforms and the wind in the Ara valley can be favourable or adverse depending on the year.
Long rolling section through the Ara and Marboré valleys to the start of the Col du Pourtalet (km 120, ~900 m altitude). It's the deceptive transition: looks flat but you've gained 200 m of cumulative climbing and the midday sun rises fast — at 12:00 you'll be at 22–28 °C in an exposed area with no shade.
And then the Col du Pourtalet begins.
The Pourtalet is where La Quebrantahuesos breaks. 25 km of positive gradient with two distinct profiles: the first 17 km are false flat and gentle 3–5 % ramps, easy to be deceived and push the pace. The final 8 km have ramps of 7–10 % and the altitude (summit at 1,794 m) starts to bite. If you arrive at km 145 with empty legs, the final 23 km are a cross. The data is clear: 60 % of la Quebra's DNFs happen between km 130 and the Pourtalet summit.
Pourtalet strategy:
Pourtalet descent: 18 km of technical descent with tight turns in the first 5 km and then steady gradient down to Formigal and Sallent de Gállego. After the climb effort, your reflexes are 20 % below normal. This is no time to break your descent record. Progressive braking, keep the body low.
Repeat through Hoz de Jaca (km 188, this time downhill, easy) and the final 12 km flat to Sabiñánigo. Here the groups break apart for good and everyone finishes at their own pace. The finish arch is in front of the sports hall, where the cutoff closes at 17:00 (10 hours from the start). The organiser applies the cutoff with flexibility but don't get cocky.

La Quebrantahuesos was born in 1991 as a local PEDALA club ride from Sabiñánigo, with just 300 cyclists in its first edition. The name pays homage to the bearded vulture (Gypaetus barbatus), the bone-eating Pyrenean raptor that soars over the Aragonese valleys and is one of the emblems of the local fauna.
In three decades the event has grown from a provincial ride into a European phenomenon. The turning points:
The Pedrera Awards are a tradition: a special golden jersey for those accumulating 25 editions, silver for 20, bronze for 10. There are founding members already pushing 30 consecutive editions, greeted by the organisation as guests of honour every June.
| Phase | Dates |
|---|---|
| Registration opens | November 1, 2025 |
| Registration closes | January 15, 2026 |
| Bib lottery | February 3, 2026 (live in Sabiñánigo, streamed) |
| Confirmation payment | Before February 28, 2026 |
| Bib pickup | Friday June 19 + Saturday June 20 |
| Race | Saturday June 20, 2026 — 07:00 |
| Item | Price |
|---|---|
| Quebrantahuesos (200 km) | €85–110 |
| Treparriscos (85 km) | €55–75 |
| RFEC day license (if not federated) | €5–10 |
| Rider bag (included) | technical jersey + bib + chip |
| Companion at pasta party | €15–25 |
With ~30,000 applications for ~10,000 Quebra bibs, the probability per lottery is 30–40 %. Legal tricks to raise odds:
Sabiñánigo is in the Alto Gállego, 50 km from the French border. Not difficult to reach but requires planning:
| Origin | Distance | Time | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zaragoza Airport (ZAZ) | 130 km | 1h 30min | Few direct international flights, but good domestic option. Rental car essential. |
| Pamplona Airport (PNA) | 90 km | 1h 30min | More connections than Zaragoza from Madrid and Europe. Rental car. Often the better option. |
| Toulouse-Blagnac Airport (TLS, France) | 190 km | 2h 30min | Route via Tunnel de Bielsa or Somport. Good option from Italy / Central Europe. |
| RENFE train Zaragoza-Sabiñánigo | — | 2h direct | Useful if you live in Madrid/Barcelona and bring the bike disassembled in a soft case. |
| Drive from Madrid | 380 km | 4h 15min | Via A-2 + A-23, direct motorway to Huesca. |
| Drive from Barcelona | 380 km | 4h 30min | Via AP-2 + A-22. |
Tips:

The obvious option: you get off the bike at the finish and walk to the hotel. But there are few central hotels and they fill 6 months out:
Catch: prices double or triple race weekend. A double room that costs €70 in May costs €180–220 that weekend. Book with free cancellation until the bib is confirmed.
Jaca is prettier, has more hotel choice, better restaurants and is usually 30–40 % cheaper for the same category. It's our recommendation if you want to eat/dine well and sleep peacefully.
Catch: you must leave Jaca at 06:15 to reach Sabiñánigo in time to park and open the corral. Plan B: leave the car in Sabiñánigo on Friday after packet pickup and return by taxi (~€20).
Only if you'll do course reconnaissance in the days before. You're in the middle of the Pourtalet climb and can roll the passes at dawn.
Catch: on race day you leave Formigal at 05:30 toward Sabiñánigo. Double early start.
The weather on June 20 in Sabiñánigo and the Pourtalet summit is fairly predictable but has nuances that decide races:
| Section / hour | Altitude | Typical temp | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sabiñánigo 07:00 | 800 m | 8–14 °C | Arm warmers and packable wind jacket essential. |
| Yésero summit 09:00 | 1,400 m | 12–18 °C | Starts to warm. Lose the arm warmers. |
| Biescas km 50 11:00 | 850 m | 16–22 °C | Full valley heat. |
| Cotefablo summit 12:30 | 1,425 m | 18–24 °C | Thermal mid-point. |
| Pourtalet km 145 14:00 | 1,500 m | 22–28 °C | Hottest point of the day — no shade. |
| Pourtalet summit 15:00 | 1,794 m | 18–24 °C | If north wind blows, feels 4 °C cooler. |
| Sabiñánigo finish 16:00 | 800 m | 22–28 °C | Full heat at the finish. |
Risks:
Check the forecast 48–72 hours before at aemet.es or meteo-pyrenees.com.
La Quebrantahuesos isn't improvised. To reach the start with confidence you need at least 24 weeks (6 months) of specific preparation, assuming you start with a base of 3,000–4,000 km/year and have done at least one 100 km Gran Fondo in the previous 12 months.
General block distribution:
| Punto | Tiempo acumulado | Parcial |
|---|---|---|
| 5 km | 10:30 | 10:30 |
| 10 km | 21:00 | 10:30 |
| 15 km | 31:30 | 10:30 |
| Media (21,1 km) | 44:18 | 12:48 |
| 30 km | 1:03:00 | 18:42 |
| Meta | 7:00:00 | 5:57:00 |
Splits asumen ritmo constante. En carreras con desnivel real (La Quebrantahuesos) — banca 5–8 s/km en bajadas y pierde el mismo margen en subidas; el ritmo medio se mantiene.
| Target | Average pace | Yésero (km 35) | Cotefablo (km 80) | Pourtalet base (km 120) | Pourtalet summit (km 168) | Finish (km 200) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| sub-5h (elite) | 40 km/h | 0:53 | 1:55 | 2:55 | 4:10 | 5:00 |
| sub-6h | 33.3 km/h | 1:05 | 2:18 | 3:30 | 4:55 | 6:00 |
| sub-7h | 28.5 km/h | 1:15 | 2:40 | 4:00 | 5:45 | 7:00 |
| sub-8h | 25 km/h | 1:25 | 3:00 | 4:35 | 6:30 | 8:00 |
| sub-9h | 22.2 km/h | 1:35 | 3:25 | 5:10 | 7:20 | 9:00 |
| finish (10h) | 20 km/h | 1:45 | 3:45 | 5:45 | 8:10 | 9:50 |
The most common mental error of the amateur in la Quebrantahuesos is drawing the plan as if it were 4 independent 50 km races. They aren't. La Quebra is a single race with one key decision: how much energy you spend before the Pourtalet vs. how much you save for the Pourtalet.
Your personalised plan should answer 4 questions:
Mental template for the start:
"Yésero at 75 % of my threshold. Cotefablo at 80 %. Flat to Pourtalet without burning matches. Pourtalet at 85 % in the first 17 km, at 90 % in the final 8. Conservative descent. Final flat at the pace of whatever group I'm in."
| Hour | Action |
|---|---|
| 04:45 | Wake. Breakfast: 80–100g oats + honey + banana + coffee. Drink 500 ml of water. |
| 05:30 | Leave hotel toward Sabiñánigo (if sleeping in Jaca). |
| 06:15 | Arrive Sabiñánigo. Park, dress, bathroom, last gel 15 min before start. |
| 06:45 | In the corral. Activation: 3 minutes high cadence without effort. |
| 07:00 | Start! Conservative pace the first 5 km. |
| 07:50 | Yésero start (km 22). Low zone 3, no more. |
| 09:00 | Yésero summit. Lose arm warmers on the descent. |
| 10:00 | Biescas feed km 50. Drink, eat 1 banana, refill bottle. |
| 11:30 | Cotefablo summit km 73. Fast flats to Pourtalet. |
| 13:00 | Feed km 120 (Pourtalet base). Real food: sandwich + banana + 2 bottles. |
| 14:30 | Halfway up the Pourtalet. Gel every 30 minutes. |
| 15:30 | Pourtalet summit (km 168). Feed station. 5 minutes stopped. |
| 15:50 | Descent starts. Conservative. |
| 16:30 | Hoz de Jaca km 188. |
| 17:00 | Finish Sabiñánigo. Cross the arch. |
| 17:30 | Recovery: water + isotonic + banana + bar in the post-finish zone. |
| 20:00 | Finisher dinner. Tonight you've earned it. |
Quebra nutrition is probably more decisive than the last month of training. A 7-hour zone-3 ride burns between 4,500 and 5,500 calories depending on weight. You won't replace it all (physically impossible), but the goal is stable blood sugar without crossing into digestive collapse.
The 48 hours before:
Race day breakfast (3h before start):
During the race — target 80g carbs/hour:
| Section | km | Recommended intake |
|---|---|---|
| Start → Yésero | 0–35 | 1 bottle isotonic, 1 energy bar (40g). |
| Yésero → Biescas (feed) | 35–50 | Refill bottle. Eat 1 full banana + 1 gel. |
| Biescas → Cotefablo summit | 50–80 | 1 bottle isotonic + 1 gel mid-climb. |
| Cotefablo → Pourtalet base (km 120) | 80–120 | 1 bottle + 1 bar + 1 gel every 30 min on the false flat. |
| Pourtalet base → Pourtalet summit | 120–168 | Critical feed: sandwich (bread + ham), 1 banana, 2 bottles full. During the climb: 1 gel every 25 minutes. |
| Pourtalet summit → Finish | 168–200 | Coca-cola + 1 bar + 1 last gel 10 km from the finish. |
Quebra official feed stations:
They serve: water, isotonic, banana, watermelon, orange, sandwich (some), bars, Coca-Cola, nuts.
Hydration: target 600–800 ml/hour in standard conditions (22–28 °C). If hotter, raise to 1 L/h. Salts (electrolytes) every 60–90 minutes in capsule or fizz tube.
Common mistakes:
Bike:
Clothing:
Jersey back pocket:
Electronics:
Post-finish:
1. Can I ride la Quebrantahuesos without ever having done a Gran Fondo? Not recommended. La Quebra requires at least one 100–130 km Gran Fondo in the previous 12 months to safely manage the 7+ hours on the bike. If it's your first long event, choose la Treparriscos.
2. Is the RFEC or equivalent license mandatory? Yes. You need an annual license from the Spanish Cycling Federation (RFEC) or, if not federated, the day license which the organisation arranges at registration (~€5–10).
3. What if I don't get into the lottery? You have 3 alternatives: (1) sign up for la Treparriscos (~85 km, same day); (2) try again next year as a rollover (some editions enable it); (3) seek a bib via club allocation or accumulated Pedrera Award.
4. What's the cutoff time? 10 hours from the start — i.e. up to 17:00 official. The organiser applies it flexibly, but after 17:00 feed stations close and official timing ends.
5. Are there women's groups / women's categories? Yes. La Quebra has age and sex categories. Female participation has grown from 4 % in 2010 to 8 % today. The organisation has a dedicated registration desk and feed stations with products designed for all riders.
6. Can I switch from Quebrantahuesos to Treparriscos if I get injured before? Yes, up to 15 days before the event the organisation allows category changes at no cost. After that, it depends on availability and reason (typically flexible with medical certificate).
7. Is there an expo zone or pasta party like at other major Gran Fondos? Yes. The sports hall hosts the expo on Friday and Saturday with bike, kit, nutrition brands and the Friday-night pasta party (light dinner included with some registrations).
8. What if I can't tolerate altitude / feel ill on the Pourtalet? The organiser has 2 medical motorbikes, 2 ambulances and 4 broom wagons on course. If you feel ill, stop at any point and volunteers pass every 15–20 minutes. Don't hesitate to abandon if you have dizziness, vomiting or chest pain — la Quebra returns next year; your health doesn't.
| Event | Distance | Elevation | Passes | Month | Entry | Total cost ~ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| La Quebrantahuesos (Spain) | 200 km | 3,500 m | 4 | June | Lottery · €85–110 | €350–600 |
| Maratona dles Dolomites (Italy) | 138 km | 4,230 m | 7 | July | Lottery · €130 | €600–1,000 |
| La Marmotte (France) | 174 km | 5,000 m | 4 | July | Direct online · €120 | €500–900 |
| L'Étape du Tour (France) | 160–180 km | 4,000–4,500 m | 3–5 | July | Online · €130–160 | €600–1,000 |
| Ötztaler Radmarathon (Austria) | 227 km | 5,500 m | 4 | September | Lottery · €150 | €700–1,200 |
When to choose la Quebra? If you want a great European Gran Fondo without the French/Italian language barrier, with feed stations designed for the Spanish cyclist and a more reasonable total cost. La Quebra is the best toughness-experience-price ratio of the European amateur calendar.
When to choose alternatives? If you seek more altitude and climbing (Marmotte or Ötztaler), if Dolomite heat appeals (Maratona), or if you want to ride the same asphalt as the Tour days before (Étape).
Last updated: 2026-05-08. If you spot an error or have data from the 2026 edition, drop us a line at [email protected].
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