Tour de France Riders Trial Secretive New Lactate Energy Gels<br>Velo logoPowered by Outside
Tour de France Riders Are Using a Secretive New Fueling Solution That Could Blow Endurance Racing Apart<br>Velo speaks with founder of a world-first lactate energy gel that could mark as big a performance breakthrough as high-carb fueling.
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(Photo: Gruber Images)
Jim Cotton
Updated July 8, 2026 07:43AM
A new fueling revolution might be starting right now at the Tour de France.
Riders are trialing the first generation of a world-first lactate energy gel that’s got the potential to blow the limits of athletic performance.
Speaking with Velo on Tuesday, ExoLactate co-founder Aitor Viribay said his product could be as impactful as the first wave of the high-carbohydrate fueling revolution or the development of carbon-plated running super-shoes.
“I know this can be a game changer. And I’m a scientist, not a businessman trying to sell the product,” Viribay told Velo. “I’ve been working on this for seven years. Big researchers have chased this for decades before me.
“This is a real innovation that can be at the same level or bigger than the learnings about 120 grams of carbs [per hour],” he continued. “The difference though is that 120 grams might be the limit for carbohydrates. You can barely push more.
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“The only way to keep pushing the limits of performance with fueling right now is with exogenous lactate. That’s for sure.”
Viribay was unable to comment on which athletes and teams use ExoLactate due to commercial and sponsorship sensitivities.
However, Velo understands the product was in demand by multiple WorldTour teams ahead of the 2026 Tour de France.
The interest was so high, and the potential so groundbreaking, that one team is reported to have paid significant dollar to gain exclusive access.
A first-of-its-kind fueling solution enters the Tour de France
Riders using ExoLactate at the 2026 Tour de France report no GI issues, lower RPE, and improved fatigue resistance. (Photo: Gruber Images)<br>It seems that whichever Tour de France team – or teams – got early access to ExoLactate got lucky.
The development of ExoLactate is generating a small wave of hysteria across the sports science community and the endurance elite. There’s not been a WADA-compliant performance supplement to receive as much hype in decades.
“The first and most important thing the Tour de France riders are finding is that they are tolerating 20 grams of lactate per hour with no G.I. distress,” Viribay told Velo. “That’s absolutely insane. Until now, you could only ingest milligrams.
“So far, the anecdotal feedback is that riders are finding a lower rate of perceived exertion, and their durability is better. And we’re only at the start of discovering its potential.”
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ExoLactate gel has also been used by athletes this year at the Zegama Aizkorri mountain marathon and the Western States ultramarathon. They’re the Paris-Roubaix and Milan-San Remo of trail running.
The gel will also be used at the Tour de France of ultra-marathons, the Ultra-Trail du Mont Blanc (UTMB).
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Understanding lactate
But wait right there, isn’t lactate bad? Doesn’t it make you legs hurt?
No. That old thinking is founded on outdated science.
Lactate is the body’s prime fuel source.
It acts faster than carbohydrate, and is a key signaling molecule that boosts metabolic efficiency.
At higher workout intensities, lactate production promotes carbohydrate oxidation over fat oxidation to provide a crucial source of fast energy.
Viribay also believes there’s potential for exogenous lactate to boost recovery, although that’s yet to be proven.
This misunderstood molecule is at the center of exercise metabolism, and now, for the first time ever, it’s been bubbled into a gel. Rival brands are scrambling to catch up.
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ExoLactate is on the brink of releasing its gel to the mass European market.
A rollout across the U.S. will follow soon after.
ExoLactate: 5g lactate, 40g carbohydrates, and in use at the Tour de France
These ExoLactate gels could be the biggest breakthrough in sport nutrition in years. (Illustration: Courtesy ExoLactate)<br>Velo first covered the groundbreaking product in early June. At that point, details were scarce and under close wraps.
Viribay explained more to Velo on Tuesday on a call.
For context – Viribay is one of the most respected thinkers in fueling science.
The Basque researcher was one of the first to push theories about high-carb fueling and was a key voice in Velo’s breaking work on the “carbohydrate revolution.”
Viribay staffed with Ineos Grenadiers and is now head of performance at the Salomon ultra running team.
And as if he’s not busy enough, the “From Lab to Field” lactate research group he founded seven years ago has been painstakingly developing ExoLactate for more than three years.
Former...