The 14 Stages of the Camino Frances by Bike: Distances, Profile and Planning

Tournride Team

The Camino Frances is the most popular Jacobean route and, almost without debate, the most complete one to ride by bike. It is roughly 762 km of net pedaling between Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port and Santiago de Compostela, traditionally split into 14 stages designed for cyclists. In this post you will find a summary table with distances and elevation, a region-by-region overview with the key landmarks of each block, a quick guide on how many days you need depending on your fitness, bike recommendations, the cartographic resources available, and an FAQ with the questions we get most often at Tournride. We have been renting bikes for the Camino for over twenty years, so the data you are about to read comes from actually riding it, not just looking at the map.

Planning your route? Read our complete guide to cycling the Camino de Santiago — routes, days needed and which bike to choose.

Summary table: the 14 cycling stages at a glance

Before we dive into each block, this is the full picture of the route. Approximate distances and elevation, validated against the individual stage pages. The “Recommended bike” column shows the bike type that makes each stage most comfortable, not the only one possible.

Stage Section Km Elevation Difficulty Recommended bike Detail
1Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port → Roncesvalles26 (Cize) / 28 (Valcarlos)+1,250 / +900 m⛰️ Very highE-bike / GravelSee Stage 1
2Roncesvalles → Pamplona48Mostly downhill🟢 Low-mediumAnySee Stage 2
3Pamplona → Estella44+480 m (Alto del Perdón)🟡 MediumAnySee Stage 3
4Estella → Logroño49+200 m🟢 LowAnySee Stage 4
5Logroño → Santo Domingo de la Calzada47+250 m🟢 LowAnySee Stage 5
6Santo Domingo → Burgos69+400 m🟡 MediumAnySee Stage 6
7Burgos → Carrión de los Condes85+50 m🟡 Medium (length)AnySee Stage 7
8Carrión → León95Flat🟡 Medium (length)AnySee Stage 8
9León → Astorga50+250 m🟢 Low-mediumAnySee Stage 9
10Astorga → Ponferrada54+850 m (Cruz de Ferro)⛰️ HighE-bike / GravelSee Stage 10
11Ponferrada → O Cebreiro52+1,100 m⛰️ Very highE-bike / GravelSee Stage 11
12O Cebreiro → Sarria40Galician descent🟢 Low-mediumAnySee Stage 12
13Sarria → Melide50+400 m (rolling)🟡 MediumAny (technical)See Stage 13
14Melide → Santiago de Compostela53+200 m (Monte do Gozo)🟢 Low-mediumAnySee Stage 14
TotalSaint-Jean → Santiago~762 km+5,000 m cumulative approx.

At a glance, two figures worth remembering: the longest stage is Stage 8 (Carrión → León, 95 km) and the toughest one is Stage 1 (the Pyrenees), closely followed by Stage 11 (Ponferrada → O Cebreiro). Add up the net pedaling and you get the ~762 km mentioned above; the figure of “785 km to Santiago” you will see in some guidebooks includes connections between stops and detours through urban centers. For a more narrative overview you can lean on the Camino Frances introduction and planning guide, which complements this table with historical context.

Stages by regional block

Although the 14 stages are ridden in sequence, the Camino Frances feels like three linked journeys. Terrain, weather and even food culture change. Grouping them this way helps you understand where to bring your body up to speed, where to recover and where to save energy.

Pyrenees and Navarra (Stages 1-3): the most physical opening

The first three days are the fitness filter of the Camino. Stage 1 offers two options to cross the Pyrenees: the classic Napoleon route over the Cize passes (26 km, +1,250 m, technical and with a dirt descent that punishes the wheel) or the Valcarlos alternative (28 km on tarmac, slightly easier). On a bike we tend to recommend Valcarlos by default, especially in the rain: the descent from Lepoeder is treacherous in the mud. After sleeping in Roncesvalles, Stage 2 to Pamplona (48 km) drops down the Arga river valley, with the Alto de Erro as the only break. Stage 3 to Estella (44 km) delivers the iconic Alto del Perdón, with its iron pilgrim silhouettes. If you are torn between a traditional or electric bike, this block tilts the balance: the start from Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port is where the assistance is most noticeable.

La Rioja, Burgos and the Meseta (Stages 4-8): mileage and open horizons

Here the difficulty shifts: it is no longer mountain passes, it is endurance. Stage 4 (Estella → Logroño, 49 km) enters La Rioja through the vineyards, with the Irache wine fountain as a must-stop. Stage 5 (47 km) crosses the Najerilla and reaches Santo Domingo de la Calzada, already in Castilian territory. Stage 6 (69 km to Burgos) is the first truly long day, rewarded by the visual treat of Burgos cathedral at sunset. From there the Meseta begins: Stage 7 (Burgos → Carrión, 85 km) and, above all, Stage 8 (Carrión → León, 95 km and almost entirely flat) are the longest days of the Camino. The challenge is as psychological as it is physical: endless horizons, little shade and services spaced apart. If you want to plan them with a margin, what to pack in your panniers will save you unnecessary stops.

León, Bierzo and Galicia (Stages 9-14): shifting landscapes to the finish

The second half of the route is the most varied. Stage 9 (León → Astorga, 50 km) leaves the León city center and crosses the Páramo. Stage 10 (Astorga → Ponferrada, 54 km) climbs through Foncebadón up to the Cruz de Ferro, the symbolic point where pilgrims leave a stone brought from home, and then drops into the Bierzo. Stage 11 (Ponferrada → O Cebreiro, 52 km) is the second big climb of the Camino and the official entry into Galicia. From O Cebreiro, the Galician descent of Stage 12 (40 km to Sarria) is one of the most enjoyable sections of the whole route. The last two, Stages 13 and 14, cover the famous final 100 km: from Sarria to Melide the terrain is rolling and punchy (constant ups and downs along corredoiras and dirt tracks) and ends in Portomarín after crossing the Belesar reservoir. Stage 14 (Melide → Santiago, 53 km) closes with Monte do Gozo and the entry through the San Lázaro neighborhood up to the Obradoiro square.

How many days do you need?

There is no single right schedule. It depends on the time available, the level of your travel companions and how much you want to stop to eat and visit. These are the three plans we get asked about most at Tournride:

Plan Days Avg km/day Best for More info
Full and comfortable14 days55 kmRegular cyclists with time14-day plan
Intermediate10-11 days70 kmGood fitness, longer stages
Express (from Sarria)6 days50 km (final 200 km)Tight on time, first CaminoThe Camino in 6 days

A practical rule we share with anyone hesitating: if you have never ridden a full week back to back, multiply your long Sunday ride by 1.2 and check whether it lines up with the average km/day of each plan. There is usually room even in high season, but it is worth reading when to book your bike before buying flight tickets.

Which bike to choose for these stages

The Camino Frances by bike tolerates several bike types, but they do not all handle every section equally well. Quick summary:

  • MTB or Gravel: the most versatile option. They handle everything, including the Galician corredoiras and the dirt descents in the Pyrenees.
  • E-bike: shines on the climbs. It cuts down accumulated fatigue and lets you enjoy the landscape rather than stare at the handlebars. It is the most popular choice among riders doing their first Camino, those coming from road cycling, or groups with mixed fitness levels.
  • Road bike: not recommended. There are unpaved sections, especially in Galicia, that punish a road bike and force you to detour onto secondary roads, losing the spirit of the Camino.

If you want to dig deeper into the decision, this post compares with real data electric versus traditional bike. And if you lean towards assistance, here is the full spec sheet of the Yamaha Crosscore RC we use to cover most of our Caminos.

Maps, GPX and tools

Each stage in the table above has its own interactive map embedded in the corresponding page, with the route, service points and optional detours. For deeper cartographic work, the Xunta de Galicia publishes the official GPX files for the Galician section, useful if you want to export them to your GPS or bike computer. If you want to compare the Frances with less crowded alternatives, you can also explore all the routes and stages we cover, including the Portuguese, the Northern and the Primitive.

Frequently asked questions about the Camino Frances cycling stages

How many kilometers does the Camino Frances by bike cover?

Roughly 770 km by bike from Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port to Santiago de Compostela, split into the 14 classic cycling stages. If you start in Roncesvalles, subtract about 25 km (Stage 1).

Which is the longest stage?

Stage 8 (Carrión de los Condes → León) at 95 km. It is also the flattest, deep into the Meseta: the challenge is the length and sun exposure, not the elevation.

Which are the toughest stages?

Stage 1 (Saint-Jean → Roncesvalles, +1,250 m of cumulative elevation across the Pyrenees) and Stage 11 (Ponferrada → O Cebreiro, +1,100 m). On both we recommend an e-bike for untrained cyclists, especially when traveling with luggage in panniers.

Can the Camino Frances be done on an e-bike?

Yes, and it has become the most popular choice in recent years. The Yamaha Crosscore RC we rent has four assist modes and good range for one daily stage, and you leave it charging at your accommodation overnight. One important nuance if you are after the Compostela: the motor helps with fatigue, it does not shorten the day. The Pilgrim’s Office requires verifiable, reasonable stages.

What are the official last 100 km for the Compostela?

Stages 13 and 14 (Sarria → Melide → Santiago, around 100 km) cover the minimum distance required for walking pilgrims. For cyclists, however, the Pilgrim’s Office requires having ridden the last 200 km, which on the Camino Frances means starting from Ponferrada (Stage 11).

Where can I rent a bike for each stage?

Tournride delivers bikes in Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port, Roncesvalles, Pamplona, Burgos, León, Astorga, Sarria and Santiago de Compostela. You can start and finish at any of those points, with no extra cost for pickup at the end of your trip.

Start your Camino Frances with the right bike

Three decisions shape your Camino Frances by bike: how many days you have, which type of bike fits your level, and where you start from. If you want extra reading before locking in your plan, the 7 tips for cycling the Camino and the guide on types of accommodation on the Camino are a good complement. Once you have it clear, compare models and book with free cancellation.