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2026 NASCAR Cup Series
Tyler Reddick, the current points leader, became the first driver in NASCAR Cup Series history to win the first three races of a season.
The 2026 NASCAR Cup Series is the 78th season for NASCAR professional stock car racing in the United States and the 55th season for the modern-era Cup Series. The preseason featured the Cook Out Clash exhibition race on February 4 at Bowman Gray Stadium, followed by the season-opening 68th running of the Daytona 500 on February 15 at Daytona International Speedway. The season will end at Homestead–Miami Speedway on November 8.
Kyle Larson of Hendrick Motorsports returns as the reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion.
This was the final season featuring two-time champion Kyle Busch, after his sudden passing from an undisclosed illness on May 21, days before the Coca-Cola 600.
| Manufacturer | Team | .mw-parser-output .tooltip-dotted{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}No. | Driver | Crew chief | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Haas Factory Team | 41 | Cole Custer | Aaron Kramer | ||
| Hendrick Motorsports | 5 | Kyle Larson | Cliff Daniels | ||
| 9 | Chase Elliott | Alan Gustafson | |||
| 24 | William Byron | Rudy Fugle | |||
| 48 | Alex Bowman 32 | Blake Harris | |||
| Anthony Alfredo 1 | |||||
| Justin Allgaier 3 | |||||
| Hyak Motorsports | 47 | Ricky Stenhouse Jr. | Mike Kelley | ||
| Kaulig Racing | 10 | Ty Dillon | Andrew Dickeson | ||
| 16 | A. J. Allmendinger | Trent Owens | |||
| Richard Childress Racing | 3 | Austin Dillon | Richard Boswell | ||
| 8 | Kyle Busch 12 | Jim Pohlman 10 Andy Street 26 | |||
| Austin Hill 1 | |||||
| TBA 23 | |||||
| Rick Ware Racing | 51 | Cody Ware | Billy Plourde | ||
| Spire Motorsports | 7 | Daniel Suárez | Ryan Sparks | ||
| 71 | Michael McDowell | Travis Peterson | |||
| 77 | Carson Hocevar | Luke Lambert | |||
| Trackhouse Racing | 1 | Ross Chastain | Brandon McSwain | ||
| 88 | Connor Zilisch (R) | Randall Burnett | |||
| 97 | Shane van Gisbergen | Stephen Doran | |||
| Front Row Motorsports | 4 | Noah Gragson | Grant Hutchens | ||
| 34 | Todd Gilliland | Chris Lawson | |||
| 38 | Zane Smith | Ryan Bergenty | |||
| RFK Racing | 6 | Brad Keselowski | Jeremy Bullins | ||
| 17 | Chris Buescher | Scott Graves | |||
| 60 | Ryan Preece | Derrick Finley | |||
| Team Penske | 2 | Austin Cindric | Brian Wilson | ||
| 12 | Ryan Blaney | Jonathan Hassler 35 Matt Swiderski 1 | |||
| 22 | Joey Logano | Paul Wolfe | |||
| Wood Brothers Racing | 21 | Josh Berry | Miles Stanley 35 Matt Swiderski 1 | ||
| 23XI Racing | 23 | Bubba Wallace | Charles Denike | ||
| 35 | Riley Herbst | Davin Restivo | |||
| 45 | Tyler Reddick | Billy Scott | |||
| Joe Gibbs Racing | 11 | Denny Hamlin | Chris Gayle | ||
| 19 | Chase Briscoe | James Small | |||
| 20 | Christopher Bell | Adam Stevens | |||
| 54 | Ty Gibbs | Tyler Allen | |||
| Legacy Motor Club | 42 | John Hunter Nemechek | Travis Mack | ||
| 43 | Erik Jones | Justin Alexander |
| Manufacturer | Team | No. | Driver | Crew chief | Races | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beard Motorsports | 62 | Anthony Alfredo | Darren Shaw | 1 | ||
| Casey Mears | 5 | |||||
| JR Motorsports | 40 | Justin Allgaier | Greg Ives | 1 | ||
| Live Fast Motorsports | 78 | B. J. McLeod | David Ingram | 2 | ||
| Daniel Dye | 4 | |||||
| Katherine Legge | 2 | |||||
| NY Racing Team | 44 | J. J. Yeley | Jay Guy | 2 | ||
| Joey Gase | 1 | |||||
| Richard Childress Racing | 33 | Jesse Love | Andy Street | 2 | ||
| Austin Hill | 5 | |||||
| Front Row Motorsports | 36 | Chandler Smith | Seth Barbour | 1 | ||
| Garage 66 | 66 | Casey Mears | Jason Miller 4 Carl Long 3 | 1 | ||
| Timmy Hill | 2 | |||||
| Chad Finchum | 3 | |||||
| Josh Bilicki | 1 | |||||
| TBA | 6 | |||||
| RFK Racing | 99 | Corey LaJoie | Mike Skarbowski | 1 | ||
| 23XI Racing | 67 | Corey Heim | Bootie Barker | 12 | ||
| Legacy Motor Club | 84 | Jimmie Johnson | Chad Johnston | 2 |
Chevrolet unveiled a new body style for the ZL1 in November 2025 for the 2026 season to replace the model that had been used since 2022. The redesign is based on the Camaro ZL1 Carbon Performance Package accessories kit. Haas Factory Team and Rick Ware Racing switched from Ford to Chevrolet in 2026. HFT has a technical alliance with Hendrick Motorsports, while RWR formed a technical partnership with Richard Childress Racing.
Justin Haley did not return to Spire Motorsports. Haley returned to Kaulig Racing, driving in the Craftsman Truck Series. Daniel Suárez, who was released from Trackhouse Racing, moved to Spire Motorports in Haley's place.
Connor Zilisch signed a multi-year contract with Trackhouse Racing to replace Suárez in 2026.
Horsepower increased from 670 to 750 at tracks under 1.5 miles and road courses.
Bristol, Darlington, Dover, Nashville, New Hampshire, and St. Louis would run the short track package rather than the intermediate package from previous years. NASCAR also mandated a permanent A-post flap for all races to prevent flips. The A-post flap debuted last year at Daytona II.
The amount of races full-time Cup drivers can run in the O'Reilly Auto Parts Series and Craftsman Truck Series was increased to ten and eight, respectively, up from the 2025 restriction of five in each series. Cup drivers remain ineligible for points, as well as unable to compete in the regular season finale and postseason events.
The minimum age requirement to race in the O'Reilly Auto Parts series was lowered to 17 for road courses and oval tracks less than 1.25 miles in length. This change creates a staggered minimum age: 16 in Trucks, 17 in O'Reilly, and 18 in Cup series events.
The restriction of hands out the window during qualifying at drafting tracks such as Daytona, Talladega, and Atlanta (EchoPark) was added, and drivers who touch the window net or the hole in between to redirect air will have their qualifying time disallowed. Noah Gragson was the first to break this rule, having his Daytona 500 qualifying time erased.
Following the outcome of the 23XI Racing lawsuit, all teams were offered "evergreen" charters. In contrast to previous agreements, which expired at a set date, the new agreement would include charters that would not expire.
NASCAR revealed a new postseason format in January 2026. Used in the top three series, it is a return of the Chase format previously used from 2004 to 2013. The top 16 drivers on points after 26 races will qualify for the Chase, with the 'win-and-you're-in' rule being scrapped, and starting points in the Chase will be staggered based on the regular season standings. This format replaced a derided playoff system, which included four "rounds" with points resets. With the change, playoff points are no longer awarded.
The points awarded for finishing first in a race was increased from 40 to 55.
Drivers who enter the garage during a race will no longer be eligible for the fastest lap bonus point. If the driver's fastest lap was achieved before they entered the garage, it will still stand.
The 2026 schedule consists of 32 oval races, 3 road course races, 1 street track race, and 3 non-championship races to be held on ovals.
Notes: Race names and title sponsors are subject to change. Not all title sponsors/names of races have been announced for 2026. For the races where a 2026 name and title sponsor has yet to be announced, the title sponsors/names of those races in 2025 are listed.
Bolded races indicate an event generally known as a Crown Jewel race.
R Road course
S Street course
| No | Race name | Track | Location | Date | Time (ET) | TV | Radio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cook Out Clash | O Bowman Gray Stadium | Winston-Salem, North Carolina | February 4 | 6 pm | FOX | MRN | |
| America 250 Florida Duel at Daytona | O Daytona International Speedway | Daytona Beach, Florida | February 12 | 7 pm | FS1 | ||
| Daytona 500 | February 15 | 1:30 pm | FOX | ||||
| Autotrader 400 | O EchoPark Speedway | Hampton, Georgia | February 22 | 3 pm | PRN | ||
| DuraMAX Texas Grand Prix | R Circuit of the Americas | Austin, Texas | March 1 | 3:30 pm | |||
| Straight Talk Wireless 500 | O Phoenix Raceway | Avondale, Arizona | March 8 | FS1 | MRN | ||
| Pennzoil 400 | O Las Vegas Motor Speedway | Las Vegas, Nevada | March 15 | 4 pm | PRN | ||
| Goodyear 400 | O Darlington Raceway | Darlington, South Carolina | March 22 | 3 pm | MRN | ||
| Cook Out 400 | O Martinsville Speedway | Ridgeway, Virginia | March 29 | 3:30 pm | |||
| Food City 500 | O Bristol Motor Speedway | Bristol, Tennessee | April 12 | 3 pm | PRN | ||
| AdventHealth 400 | O Kansas Speedway | Kansas City, Kansas | April 19 | 2 pm | FOX | MRN | |
| Jack Link's 500 | O Talladega Superspeedway | Lincoln, Alabama | April 26 | 3 pm | |||
| Würth 400 | O Texas Motor Speedway | Fort Worth, Texas | May 3 | 3:30 pm | FS1 | PRN | |
| Go Bowling at The Glen | R Watkins Glen International | Watkins Glen, New York | May 10 | 3 pm | MRN | ||
| NASCAR All-Star Race | O Dover Motor Speedway | Dover, Delaware | May 17 | 1 pm | PRN | ||
| Coca-Cola 600 | O Charlotte Motor Speedway | Concord, North Carolina | May 24 | 6 pm | Prime | ||
| Cracker Barrel 400 | O Nashville Superspeedway | Lebanon, Tennessee | May 31 | 7 pm | |||
| FireKeepers Casino 400 | O Michigan International Speedway | Brooklyn, Michigan | June 7 | 3 pm | MRN | ||
| The Great American Getaway 400 | O Pocono Raceway | Long Pond, Pennsylvania | June 14 | ||||
| Anduril 250 | S Qualcomm Circuit | San Diego, California | June 21 | 4 pm | |||
| Toyota/Save Mart 350 | R Sonoma Raceway | Sonoma, California | June 28 | 3:30 pm | TNT | MRN | |
| eero 400 | O Chicagoland Speedway | Joliet, Illinois | July 5 | 6 pm | |||
| Quaker State 400 | O EchoPark Speedway | Hampton, Georgia | July 12 | 7 pm | PRN | ||
| Window World 450 | O North Wilkesboro Speedway | North Wilkesboro, North Carolina | July 19 | ||||
| Brickyard 400 | O Indianapolis Motor Speedway | Speedway, Indiana | July 26 | 2 pm | IMS | ||
| Iowa Corn 350 | O Iowa Speedway | Newton, Iowa | August 9 | 3:30 pm | USA | MRN | |
| Cook Out 400 | O Richmond Raceway | Richmond, Virginia | August 15 | 7 pm | |||
| Dollar Tree 301 | O New Hampshire Motor Speedway | Loudon, New Hampshire | August 23 | 3 pm | PRN | ||
| Coke Zero Sugar 400 | O Daytona International Speedway | Daytona Beach, Florida | August 29 | 7:30 pm | NBC | MRN | |
| Cook Out Southern 500 | O Darlington Raceway | Darlington, South Carolina | September 6 | 5 pm | USA | MRN | |
| Enjoy Illinois 300 | O World Wide Technology Raceway | Madison, Illinois | September 13 | 3 pm | |||
| Bass Pro Shops Night Race | O Bristol Motor Speedway | Bristol, Tennessee | September 19 | 7:30 pm | PRN | ||
| Hollywood Casino 400 | O Kansas Speedway | Kansas City, Kansas | September 27 | 3 pm | MRN | ||
| South Point 400 | O Las Vegas Motor Speedway | Las Vegas, Nevada | October 4 | 5:30 pm | PRN | ||
| Bank of America 400 | O Charlotte Motor Speedway | Concord, North Carolina | October 11 | 3 pm | |||
| Freeway Insurance 500 | O Phoenix Raceway | Avondale, Arizona | October 18 | MRN | |||
| YellaWood 500 | O Talladega Superspeedway | Lincoln, Alabama | October 25 | 2 pm | NBC | ||
| Xfinity 500 | O Martinsville Speedway | Ridgeway, Virginia | November 1 | ||||
| Straight Talk Wireless 400 | O Homestead–Miami Speedway | Homestead, Florida | November 8 | 3 pm |
Homestead–Miami Speedway returned to its traditional date as the season finale for all three major series. To accommodate this change, New Hampshire Motor Speedway was removed from The Chase. Chicago Street Course officials announced that the Grant Park 165 will not return in 2026, with hopes to revive the event in future seasons. The Cup Series returned to Southern California with a street race at Naval Base Coronado near San Diego. To accommodate this change, Mexico City was dropped from the schedule due to a conflict with the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The NASCAR All-Star Race moved from North Wilkesboro Speedway to Dover Motor Speedway, giving the former a points race, the first regular-season race held since 1996. Chicagoland Speedway returned to the schedule for the first time since 2019. The Charlotte Motor Speedway fall race moved away from the roval layout to the oval, after seven years as a road course race.
Due to a historic snowstorm over the United States, the Cook Out Clash was postponed three times from its original Saturday and Sunday dates, before ultimately being condensed to a one-day event on Wednesday, February 4. Reigning champion Kyle Larson won pole position. Weather plagued the event, causing NASCAR to mandate use of wet weather tires after a scheduled half-race break. After an event record 17 cautions, Ryan Preece won the Clash, joining Jeff Gordon and Denny Hamlin as drivers who won the Clash before winning their first race.
The Duel at Daytona races set the starting order for the Daytona 500, with the exception of the front row, which is set by the fastest two times in qualifying. Kyle Busch and Chase Briscoe won the pole and second place respectively, and therefore started first in each duel race. During the first Duel, RFK Racing dominated the majority of the race, seeking to help Corey LaJoie clinch among the "Open" cars, as he had not qualified for the race. Unfortunately for LaJoie, a last lap wreck ended his chances of making the 500. Casey Mears, despite a spin earlier in the race, dodged LaJoie during the wreck, clinching his spot into the race, as well as making his first Daytona 500 start since 2019's race.
During the second Duel, which ran caution-free, Chase Elliott finished 0.065 seconds ahead of Carson Hocevar. Anthony Alfredo finished in position to make the Daytona 500 as the last open car, but was disqualified after a post-race technical inspection found that his car's cooling hoses were not secured. Due to the disqualification, the next-best finishing open car, driven by B. J. McLeod, qualified for the race.
NASCAR moved the Daytona 500 start time forward an hour to 1:30 p.m. eastern time due to the threat of rain in the evening. Zane Smith won stage one after staying out in the middle of pit cycles, as well as getting his first career stage win. Stage two featured a battle between Kyle Busch and Kyle Larson for a battle for the lead for the majority of the stage, Bubba Wallace however won the second stage, after narrowly avoiding "The Big One", caused by Denny Hamlin tapping Justin Allgaier's rear bumper, triggering a 20-car pileup on the tri-oval. After a restart with five laps remaining, Tyler Reddick escaped two wrecks and passed Chase Elliott for the win exiting turn four.
Tyler Reddick won the pole at Atlanta, after qualifying was canceled due to rain. The race had set a new track record for 17 lead changes in stage one, with Austin Cindric winning the stage. William Byron appeared to have won stage two, however Bubba Wallace was later ruled as the stage winner due to a spin by Kyle Larson just feet behind him. During overtime, Reddick, who was involved in a crash on 160, won the race. Reddick became the sixth driver ever, and the first since Matt Kenseth in 2009 to win the first two races of the season.
Tyler Reddick won his second pole of the season at Austin, his third pole win at the track, with the other pole wins being 2021 and 2025. Pit strategies shook up the stage standings, with Ross Chastain winning stage one, and Ty Gibbs winning stage two. On lap 76, Myatt Snider replaced Alex Bowman, as Bowman experienced vertigo symptoms during the race. Reddick dominated the later half of the race, becoming the first driver in series history to win the first three races to begin a season.
Joey Logano won the pole at Phoenix. Similar to the last season's fall race at the track, tires had increased tire wear, playing a key role in the race. Ryan Blaney won stage one, and Christopher Bell won stage two. A late race caution on lap 295 reset the field, as Bell had led 176 laps to that point. Blaney passed the leader, Ty Gibbs, on lap 303, holding off a hard charging Bell and ultimately winning the race, getting his second consecutive win at the track.
Christopher Bell won the pole at Las Vegas. Bell won stage one, and William Byron won stage two. Denny Hamlin, who finished second to Bell in qualifying, dominated the race. Hamlin would overcome a pit road speeding penalty earlier in the race, and leading a race high 134 laps en route to his 61st Cup Series win, putting him 10th all time on NASCAR's all-time winners, as well as claiming his second consecutive win at the track.
Tyler Reddick won the pole at Darlington. Brad Keselowski swept the stages, seeking to get his first win since 2024's running of the race. Reddick was battling for the lead with Keselowski, eventually overtaking him on lap 265, winning the race and continuing his early season success. Reddick became the third driver ever; along with Dale Earnhardt and Bill Elliott, to win 4 of the first 6 races of a season.
Denny Hamlin won the pole at Martinsville. A caution came out on lap 77, ending stage one early with Hamlin winning. Hamlin would eventually sweep the stages. Chase Elliott would take advantage of a late race caution, and would hold off Hamlin for his 22nd career win, and first win at Martinsville since 2020.
Ryan Blaney won the pole at Bristol. Kyle Larson swept the stages for the second straight day, as he also swept Saturday's O'Reilly race stages. A late race caution on lap 498 would shake up overtime, with Ty Gibbs holding off a hard charging Blaney and Larson to get his first career Cup Series win, becoming the first Cup driver to get their first win at Bristol Motor Speedway since Kurt Busch in 2002.
Tyler Reddick won the pole at Kansas. Denny Hamlin won stage one, and Kyle Larson won stage two. Reddick originally ran out of fuel on lap 266 before a spin by Cody Ware triggered a caution, forcing overtime. Reddick, following pit stops, was able to pass three cars in the final two laps of overtime for his fifth win of the season, becoming the first driver since Dale Earnhardt in 1987 to win five of the first nine races in a season.
Rain at Talladega canceled qualifying, with Tyler Reddick winning the pole. The stages were changed to prevent fuel saving. Ryan Preece won stage one. On lap 115, "The Big One" struck, taking out 26 drivers, such as Kyle Larson, Bubba Wallace, Joey Logano, Daniel Suárez, Ty Gibbs, Ryan Blaney, and others. Ross Chastain won stage two. The race ended with Carson Hocevar scoring his first career win by 0.114 seconds over Chris Buescher and Alex Bowman.
Carson Hocevar won the pole at Texas. Erik Jones won stage one, his first career stage win. Chase Elliott won stage two. Elliott would dominate the later half of the race, and ultimately would hold off runner-up Denny Hamlin after a late race caution for his second career win at Texas Motor Speedway.
Shane van Gisbergen won the pole at Watkins Glen. Ross Chastain won stage one, and van Gisbergen won stage two. Following pit cycles, stage three featured a battle between Ty Gibbs and Connor Zilisch, however, van Gisbergen, after ending up 24th after pit cycles on lap 76, was able to overtake Gibbs with 8 to go, and would win the race, as well as claiming his second consecutive win at Watkins Glen International.
Denny Hamlin won the pole for the exhibition race at Dover. On lap two, a wreck occurred with Ryan Preece's car catching on fire, bringing out the red flag early. Another caution on lap 63 ended segment one early, with Bubba Wallace winning, and Tyler Reddick won segment two. The field was shrunk to 26 cars for the final segment. Hamlin eventually dominated the final segment, holding off Chase Briscoe for his second NASCAR All-Star Race win after 2015.
| No. | Race | Pole position | Most laps led | Fastest race lap | Winning driver | Manufacturer | Report |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cook Out Clash | Kyle Larson | Kyle Larson | —.mw-parser-output .sr-only{border:0;clip:rect(0,0,0,0);clip-path:polygon(0px 0px,0px 0px,0px 0px);height:1px;margin:-1px;overflow:hidden;padding:0;position:absolute;width:1px;white-space:nowrap}N/a | Ryan Preece | Ford | Report | |
| America 250 Florida Duels | Kyle Busch | Ryan Preece | Joey Logano | Ford | Report | ||
| Chase Briscoe | Chase Briscoe | Chase Elliott | Chevrolet | ||||
| Daytona 500 | Kyle Busch | Bubba Wallace | Carson Hocevar | Tyler Reddick | Toyota | Report | |
| Autotrader 400 | Tyler Reddick | Tyler Reddick | Cole Custer | Tyler Reddick | Toyota | Report | |
| DuraMAX Texas Grand Prix | Tyler Reddick | Tyler Reddick | Ross Chastain | Tyler Reddick | Toyota | Report | |
| Straight Talk Wireless 500 | Joey Logano | Christopher Bell | Joey Logano | Ryan Blaney | Ford | Report | |
| Pennzoil 400 | Christopher Bell | Denny Hamlin | Denny Hamlin | Denny Hamlin | Toyota | Report | |
| Goodyear 400 | Tyler Reddick | Brad Keselowski | Bubba Wallace | Tyler Reddick | Toyota | Report | |
| Cook Out 400 | Denny Hamlin | Denny Hamlin | Denny Hamlin | Chase Elliott | Chevrolet | Report | |
| Food City 500 | Ryan Blaney | Kyle Larson | Ryan Blaney | Ty Gibbs | Toyota | Report | |
| AdventHealth 400 | Tyler Reddick | Denny Hamlin | Christopher Bell | Tyler Reddick | Toyota | Report | |
| Jack Link's 500 | Tyler Reddick | Christopher Bell | Zane Smith | Carson Hocevar | Chevrolet | Report | |
| Würth 400 | Carson Hocevar | Chase Elliott | Chase Elliott | Chase Elliott | Chevrolet | Report | |
| Go Bowling at The Glen | Shane van Gisbergen | Shane van Gisbergen | Connor Zilisch | Shane van Gisbergen | Chevrolet | Report | |
| NASCAR All-Star Race | Denny Hamlin | Denny Hamlin | —N/a | Denny Hamlin | Toyota | Report |
(Key) Bold – Pole position awarded by time. Italics – Pole position set by competition-based formula. * – Most laps led. F – Fastest lap. 1 – Stage 1 winner. 2 – Stage 2 winner. 3 – Stage 3 winner.
Notes
After 12 of 36 races
| Pos | Manufacturer | Wins | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| Toyota | 7 | ||
| Chevrolet | 4 | ||
| Ford | 1 |
- 2026 NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series
- 2026 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
- 2026 ARCA Menards Series
- 2026 ARCA Menards Series East
- 2026 ARCA Menards Series West
- 2026 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour
- 2026 NASCAR Canada Series
- 2026 NASCAR Brasil Series
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