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February 5, 2026

In-Season Challenge returns to Cup Series schedule in 2026


NASCAR will bring back its five-race In-Season Challenge in 2026, returning a midyear jolt of stakes and story lines to the regular-season schedule.

All five rounds of the bracket-style, head-to-head competition will again air during TNT Sports’ portion of the broadcast schedule. Only the top 32 drivers in the point standings will qualify for the In-Season Challenge. Instead of using three races to determine seeding on performance, drivers will be seeded based on their points position entering the mid-season tournament.

RELATED: NASCAR releases 2026 schedule | Full schedule

Another difference in 2026 will be the venue lineup. Sonoma Raceway will move from Round 3 in 2025 to the challenge opener in 2026, setting the tone with a road-course test right out of the gate. In Round 2, the Cup Series will remain in Illinois but transition from the downtown street course to the Chicagoland Speedway oval. It will mark the series’ long-awaited return to Joliet, Illinois, for the first time since 2019.

EchoPark Speedway near Atlanta, which opened the 2025 In-Season Challenge and busted plenty of brackets, will remain on the schedule as the third-round bout. As such, the stakes will be even higher as the event will determine which four drivers advance to the semifinal.

The historic North Wilkesboro Speedway will receive its first Cup Series points race since 1996, adding a layer of nostalgia to the penultimate bracket-style round. The North Carolina short track has already become a fan favorite again by hosting the All-Star Race the past three seasons, but with Dover Motor Speedway stepping into the All-Star role, North Wilkesboro returns to host a pivotal contest during the challenge stretch.

Finally, the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway will once again serve as the finale, deciding the 2026 In-Season Challenge champion. With the history and crown-jewel prestige, Indy makes the perfect backdrop to deliver a winner who can handle the spotlight on one of racing’s biggest stages.

RELATED: Dover to host 2026 All-Star Race

“It’s the first time that we did it this year, and obviously we learned a lot of things, gathered a lot of feedback, some positives and some areas that we may want to make some changes in the future, but I think the great part about it is it creates more story lines, especially in that portion of the season,” said Ben Kennedy, NASCAR executive vice president and chief venue & racing innovation officer. “You have a ton of energy and momentum, certainly during the Daytona 500 and as you go through the spring and then the Amazon Prime portion of the season, a strong slate from the Coke 600 to San Diego, and we have a really strong slate of races for TNT’s portion of the season, and I think returning back again with the In-Season Challenge with a wide variety of tracks, whether it’s a road course, a mile-and-a-half in Atlanta, which races a little bit like a superspeedway now, North Wilkesboro being a short track, and then ending up with another very unique race track in Indianapolis Motor Speedway on the oval again, I think it creates a lot of variety and a lot of excitement for our fans as they get to follow the In-Season Challenge.”

During its inaugural season, the In-Season Challenge produced unforgettable racing moments and story lines that carried throughout the summer stretch, culminating with Ty Gibbs banking a $1 million payday while ending Ty Dillon’s Cinderella run.

Combining road courses, short tracks, intermediate ovals and one of the most iconic venues in all of motorsports, the 2026 In-Season Challenge will again offer variety, unpredictability and the possibility for plenty of drama in Year 2.

See the full 2026 Cup Series schedule below:

DateRace / TrackBroadcast partner
Sunday, Feb. 1Cook Out Clash (Bowman Gray Stadium)FOX Sports
Sunday, Feb. 15Daytona 500FOX Sports
Sunday, Feb. 22EchoPark Speedway (Atlanta)FOX Sports
Sunday, March 1Circuit of The Americas (Austin)FOX Sports
Sunday, March 8Phoenix RacewayFOX Sports
Sunday, March 15Las Vegas Motor SpeedwayFOX Sports
Sunday, March 22Darlington RacewayFOX Sports
Sunday, March 29Martinsville SpeedwayFOX Sports
Sunday, April 12Bristol Motor SpeedwayFOX Sports
Sunday, April 19Kansas SpeedwayFOX Sports
Sunday, April 26Talladega SuperspeedwayFOX Sports
Sunday, May 3Texas Motor SpeedwayFOX Sports
Sunday, May 10Watkins Glen InternationalFOX Sports
Sunday, May 17All-Star Race (Dover Motor Speedway)FOX Sports
Sunday, May 24Charlotte Motor SpeedwayPrime Video
Sunday, May 31Nashville SuperspeedwayPrime Video
Sunday, June 7Michigan International SpeedwayPrime Video
Sunday, June 14Pocono RacewayPrime Video
Sunday, June 21San Diego (Naval Base Coronado)Prime Video
Sunday, June 28Sonoma RacewayTNT Sports
Sunday, July 5Chicagoland SpeedwayTNT Sports
Sunday, July 12EchoPark Speedway (Atlanta)TNT Sports
Sunday, July 19North Wilkesboro SpeedwayTNT Sports
Sunday, July 26Indianapolis Motor SpeedwayTNT Sports
Sunday, Aug. 9Iowa SpeedwayUSA Network/NBC
Saturday, Aug. 15Richmond RacewayUSA Network/NBC
Sunday, Aug. 23New Hampshire Motor SpeedwayUSA Network/NBC
Saturday, Aug. 29Daytona International SpeedwayUSA Network/NBC
Sunday, Sept. 6Darlington Raceway*USA Network/NBC
Sunday, Sept. 13World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway* (St. Louis)USA Network/NBC
Saturday, Sept. 19Bristol Motor Speedway*USA Network/NBC
Sunday, Sept. 27Kansas Speedway*USA Network/NBC
Sunday, Oct. 4Las Vegas Motor Speedway*USA Network/NBC
Sunday, Oct. 11Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval*USA Network/NBC
Sunday, Oct. 18Phoenix Raceway*USA Network/NBC
Sunday, Oct. 25Talladega Superspeedway*USA Network/NBC
Sunday, Nov. 1Martinsville Speedway*USA Network/NBC
Sunday, Nov. 8NASCAR Championship* (Homestead-Miami Speedway)USA Network/NBC

*Denotes playoff race

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