
NASCAR rolled out its 2026 national series schedules Wednesday, and in typical fashion, it’s equal parts innovation, nostalgia, and “what on earth are they thinking?” Depending on which corner of the fanbase you listen to, this is either the most radical idea since they turned the Clash into a Los Angeles street fight inside a football stadium or the latest example of NASCAR playing Jenga with tradition while blindfolded.
At the center of it all is NASCAR San Diego, a brand-new street race at Naval Base Coronado that doubles as a celebration of the U.S. Navy’s 250th anniversary. For three days in June, stock cars, trucks, and the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series will roar around an active military base — the first time in history NASCAR has pulled that off. The Cup race will be broadcast on Prime Video, but we already knew this of course, and if nothing else, it guarantees a backdrop of warships, palm trees, and confused seagulls. If you ever wanted to see 3,400-pound race cars storming a base that normally launches aircraft carriers, your dream just came true.
But San Diego isn’t the only big swing. Chicagoland Speedway is back on the Fourth of July weekend after being mothballed since 2019. Yes, the same Joliet oval that was left for dead in the weeds of NASCAR’s shifting priorities gets a second act, this time with the Next Gen car. It’s part fireworks, part resurrection, and while it won’t silence the people still grumbling about the Chicago Street Course experiment, it at least throws Midwestern fans a bone.
And then there’s North Wilkesboro. After a 30-year absence from the Cup Series points schedule, the historic short track returns on July 19, tucked neatly into the TNT broadcast window. The last time Wilkesboro hosted a points race, Bill Clinton was still in his first term and Jeff Gordon was winning his way into the Hall of Fame, which hadn’t even been thought of yet. Since then, the place has been everything from abandoned relic to miraculous comeback story. Now it gets to matter again, and you can bet the grandstands will creak under the weight of every nostalgia-driven fan east of the Appalachians.
Not to be outdone, Dover Motor Speedway has grabbed the All-Star Race. That’s right — the Monster Mile, once derided for losing one of its points dates to Nashville, now gets to host NASCAR’s million-dollar exhibition. It’s the first time the All-Star has ever landed in the Northeast, and the governor of Delaware couldn’t resist crowning the moment with a Talladega Nights quip: “If you’re not first, you’re last.” Somewhere, Ricky Bobby is smirking, and the rest of us are wondering if our elected officials should have their DVD players confiscated.
The postseason picture also gets a reshuffle. Phoenix Raceway, which spent six years as the host of Championship Weekend, gets demoted to the Round of 8, while Homestead-Miami Speedway reclaims the finale it last held in 2019. It’s a fitting homecoming. Homestead always felt like the natural end to a season — tropical sunsets, unpredictable racing, and a track surface as treacherous as a Florida thunderstorm. NASCAR’s return there in 2026 feels less like change and more like course correction.
Elsewhere on the schedule, the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series and Trucks are busy making history of their own. The Trucks, in particular, are being thrown into the deep end with not one but two street races — first in St. Petersburg, Florida, on the same weekend IndyCar opens its season, and then again at Coronado. Watching those boxy beasts muscle around temporary street circuits will either be comedy gold or an engineering triumph. Picture a linebacker trying to tango — awkward, maybe disastrous, but you can’t look away.
Rockingham returns on Easter weekend. Iowa Speedway makes a comeback in August. Lime Rock Park gets another Truck date. And for anyone worried the playoffs were growing stale, Kansas, Las Vegas, and the Charlotte ROVAL have all been rearranged just enough to keep crew chiefs awake at night.
Of course, the Daytona 500 still kicks things off on February 15, as it has for decades, and yes, it’s still the sport’s biggest day of the year. The rest of the spring schedule mixes up old favorites — Darlington in March, Texas on Cinco de Mayo, Watkins Glen on Mother’s Day. The TV partners continue to shuffle as well, with FOX, Prime Video, TNT, and NBC each grabbing chunks of the calendar. For fans, it means finding the right channel or streaming service has officially become part of the pre-race ritual.
Critics will, as always, line up to complain. They’ll argue NASCAR is abandoning tradition, chasing TV deals, or trying too hard to reinvent the wheel. But the reality is this: the schedule is no longer a monument carved in stone. It’s more like a whiteboard in a kindergarten classroom, constantly erased, redrawn, and covered in fingerprints. One year it’s dirt at Bristol. The next it’s Cup cars in downtown Chicago. Now it’s Coronado, Chicagoland, and Wilkesboro. Love it or hate it, NASCAR has embraced chaos, and the sport is arguably more interesting for it.
The 2026 calendar is proof. Old tracks rise from the ashes, military bases become racetracks, and the Trucks are thrown into street fights that no sane person asked for but everyone will watch. And through it all, Dover’s governor is out there channeling Ricky Bobby. You don’t have to love every decision NASCAR makes — but if you’re not first, you’re last.
2026 NASCAR CUP SERIES SCHEDULE
Date | Event / Racetrack |
Sunday, February 1 | Clash (Bowman Gray Stadium) |
Sunday, February 15 | DAYTONA 500 |
Sunday, February 22 | EchoPark Speedway (Atlanta) |
Sunday, March 1 | Circuit of the Americas (Austin) |
Sunday, March 8 | Phoenix Raceway |
Sunday, March 15 | Las Vegas Motor Speedway |
Sunday, March 22 | Darlington Raceway |
Sunday, March 29 | Martinsville Speedway |
Sunday, April 12 | Bristol Motor Speedway |
Sunday, April 19 | Kansas Speedway |
Sunday, April 26 | Talladega Superspeedway |
Sunday, May 3 | Texas Motor Speedway |
Sunday, May 10 | Watkins Glen International |
Sunday, May 17 | All Star (Dover Motor Speedway) |
Sunday, May 24 | Charlotte Motor Speedway |
Sunday, May 31 | Nashville Superspeedway |
Sunday, June 07 | Michigan International Speedway |
Sunday, June 14 | Pocono Raceway |
Sunday, June 21 | San Diego (Naval Base Coronado) |
Sunday, June 28 | Sonoma Raceway |
Sunday, July 5 | Chicagoland Speedway |
Sunday, July 12 | EchoPark Speedway (Atlanta) |
Sunday, July 19 | North Wilkesboro Speedway |
Sunday, July 26 | Indianapolis Motor Speedway |
Sunday, August 9 | Iowa Speedway |
Saturday, August 15 | Richmond Raceway |
Sunday, August 23 | New Hampshire Motor Speedway |
Saturday, August 29 | Daytona International Speedway |
Sunday, September 6 | Darlington Raceway |
Sunday, September 13 | World Wide Technology Raceway (St. Louis) |
Saturday, September 19 | Bristol Motor Speedway |
Sunday, September 27 | Kansas Speedway |
Sunday, October 4 | Las Vegas Motor Speedway |
Sunday, October 11 | Charlotte ROVAL |
Sunday, October 18 | Phoenix Raceway |
Sunday, October 25 | Talladega Superspeedway |
Sunday, November 1 | Martinsville Speedway |
Sunday, November 8 | NASCAR Championship (Homestead-Miami Speedway) |
2026 NASCAR O’REILLY AUTO PARTS SERIES SCHEDULE
Date | Event / Racetrack |
Saturday, February 14 | Daytona International Speedway |
Saturday, February 21 | EchoPark Speedway (Atlanta) |
Saturday, February 28 | Circuit of the Americas (Austin) |
Saturday, March 7 | Phoenix Raceway |
Saturday, March 14 | Las Vegas Motor Speedway |
Saturday, March 21 | Darlington Raceway |
Saturday, March 28 | Martinsville Speedway |
Saturday, April 4 | Rockingham Speedway |
Saturday, April 11 | Bristol Motor Speedway |
Saturday, April 18 | Kansas Speedway |
Saturday, April 25 | Talladega Superspeedway |
Saturday, May 2 | Texas Motor Speedway |
Saturday, May 9 | Watkins Glen International |
Saturday, May 16 | Dover Motor Speedway |
Saturday, May 23 | Charlotte Motor Speedway |
Saturday, May 30 | Nashville Superspeedway |
Saturday, June 13 | Pocono Raceway |
Saturday, June 20 | San Diego (Naval Base Coronado) |
Saturday, June 27 | Sonoma Raceway |
Saturday, July 4 | Chicagoland Speedway |
Saturday, July 11 | EchoPark Speedway (Atlanta) |
Saturday, July 25 | Indianapolis Motor Speedway |
Saturday, August 8 | Iowa Speedway |
Friday, August 28 | Daytona International Speedway |
Saturday, September 5 | Darlington Raceway |
Saturday, September 12 | World Wide Technology Raceway (St. Louis) |
Friday, September 18 | Bristol Motor Speedway |
Saturday, October 3 | Las Vegas Motor Speedway |
Saturday, October 10 | Charlotte ROVAL |
Saturday, October 17 | Phoenix Raceway |
Saturday, October 24 | Talladega Superspeedway |
Saturday, October 31 | Martinsville Speedway |
Saturday, November 7 | (NASCAR Championship) Homestead-Miami Speedway |
2026 NASCAR CRAFTSMAN TRUCK SERIES SCHEDULE
Date | Event / Racetrack |
Friday, February 13 | Daytona International Speedway |
Saturday, February 21 | EchoPark Speedway (Atlanta) |
Saturday, February 28 | Grand Prix of St. Petersburg |
Friday, March 20 | Darlington Raceway |
Friday, April 3 | Rockingham Speedway |
Friday, April 10 | Bristol Motor Speedway |
Friday, May 1 | Texas Motor Speedway |
Friday, May 8 | Watkins Glen International |
Friday, May 15 | Dover Motor Speedway |
Friday, May 22 | Charlotte Motor Speedway |
Friday, May 29 | Nashville Superspeedway |
Saturday, June 6 | Michigan International Speedway |
Friday, June 19 | San Diego (Naval Base Coronado) |
Saturday, July 11 | Lime Rock Park |
Saturday, July 18 | North Wilkesboro Speedway |
Friday, July 24 | Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park |
Friday, August 14 | Richmond Raceway |
Saturday, August 22 | New Hampshire Motor Speedway |
Thursday, September 17 | Bristol Motor Speedway |
Saturday, September 26 | Kansas Speedway |
Friday, October 9 | Charlotte ROVAL |
Friday, October 16 | Phoenix Raceway |
Friday, October 23 | Talladega Superspeedway |
Friday, October 30 | Martinsville Speedway |
Friday, November 6 | (NASCAR Championship) Homestead-Miami Speedway |
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