Col du Portalet (South side, Aragón)
Col du Portalet is a mountain pass in the Pyrenees, situated on the border between Spain and France at an elevation of 1,794 meters. It connects the Ossau Valley to the north (France) with the Tena Valley to the south (Spain). Geographically, the pass is framed by the Cirque d’Anéou and sits beneath the distinctive silhouette of the Pic du Midi d’Ossau to the northwest. Historically, the pass served as a vital trade and migration route through the central Pyrenees, reinforced by the presence of a stone marker at the summit and the remains of a 19th-century customs house. The surrounding terrain is characterized by high alpine pastures and limestone formations, maintaining a functional role in trans-Pyrenean transit since antiquity.
The pass is a frequent feature in professional road racing, most notably in the Tour de France and the Vuelta a España. Its inclusion in these events typically serves as a long-duration endurance test, linking the high-altitude terrain of the French Pyrénées-Atlantiques with the Aragonese Pyrenees. During the 2016 Vuelta a España, the climb played a strategic role in the stage to Formigal, contributing to a significant tactical shift that impacted the general classification. In the 2023 Tour de France, the peloton traversed the col during the early mountain stages, utilizing the pass to facilitate the transition between the Aubisque and the Spanish border. Professional teams utilize the route for its steady pacing requirements, often positioning it as a structural link within multi-climb mountain stages.
Region: Aragón
City: Sallent de Gállego
Distance: 16.71 km
Elevation Gain: 626 m
Elevation Loss: 202 m
Difficulty: 420 (Moderate)
FIETS Index: 2.82 FIETS
Avg Grade: 4.58 %
Max cat climb: 2
Min elevation: 1182 m
Max elevation: 1797 m
Ride Category: Climb