NASCAR championship weekend goes to
Homestead in 2026, starting a rotating formula
[May 07, 2025]
By TIM REYNOLDS
MIAMI (AP) — NASCAR asked its fans where they would prefer seeing
championship weekend held, and the majority of those who responded
picked Homestead-Miami Speedway.
And NASCAR listened.
The 2026 NASCAR season will end in South Florida, with stock car
racing's championship weekend returning to Homestead-Miami next
year. It'll be the first time since 2019 that the title-winners will
be crowned there and will start a rotation where NASCAR will move
its final weekend around various tracks.
How that'll work in 2027 and beyond remains unclear. But in 2026,
Homestead is the spot.
“I like that we move it around," said reigning NASCAR champion Joey
Logano, who won the crown last fall at Phoenix — this year's
title-deciding spot as well — and the first of his three titles at
Homestead-Miami in 2018. "That was one of the things that I always
thought would be a great idea if we were able to pull it off, right?
The Super Bowl doesn’t stay in the same place every year. Why should
our Super Bowl, our championship race, stay in same place every
year?”

NASCAR made the announcement Tuesday, and it was not exactly a
stunner. ("I'm sure everyone was surprised to see this coming,"
Logano said, smiling.) Its three series — the truck series, the
Xfinity Series and the Cup Series — will see their seasons come to a
close at Homestead from Nov. 6-8, 2026.
It isn't a permanent return, though: NASCAR said that championship
weekends are going to be on a rotation “to ensure that the season’s
exciting conclusion is shared amongst NASCAR’s marquee venues and
key markets.” Phoenix will be part of that rotation, somehow, but
NASCAR isn't ready to say which other tracks may be involved and
when all that will be announced.
“We have a lot of confidence, when we go to Homestead-Miami
Speedway, it’s going to deliver from a racing product perspective,”
NASCAR executive vice president Ben Kennedy said. “It’s also going
to create a good amount of unpredictability for many of our fans
that come to that race or tune in on TV just going to a different
championship venue and having it on the line. We’re excited to see
all that.”
Part of NASCAR's commitment to Homestead-Miami, Kennedy said,
includes a capital investment to “make sure it is a
championship-caliber facility when we show up next year.”
NASCAR routinely makes tweaks to schedules and now will tinker again
with where seasons end, but one non-negotiable appears to be the
start of the season: Daytona will remain the first points race for
the foreseeable future, Kennedy said.
[to top of second column] |

Joey Logano crosses the finish line to win a NASCAR Cup Series auto
race at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, Sunday, May 4,
2025. (AP Photo/Larry Papke)

“We ran a survey a couple years ago, and it was
over 95% of our fan base wants to see their first points race be the
Daytona 500,” Kennedy said. “That was a statistic that was strong
enough for us to say we’re not even going to explore that for now.”
Homestead-Miami was the championship weekend site from 2002 through
2019. There are three active drivers who were crowned NASCAR
champions at Homestead — Kyle Busch in 2015 and 2019, Brad
Keselowski in 2012 and Logano in 2018. Logano has also won the title
at Phoenix in two of the last three seasons, including last year.
And all seven of Jimmie Johnson's NASCAR titles came at Homestead,
which has renamed a tunnel in his honor to commemorate those
championships.
“If you’re asking drivers, it’s about the track, right? The
environment obviously is really cool. It’s different being in Miami.
That’s a neat thing,” Logano said. “But the drivers, what we care
about is the racing, right? Can we move around the racetrack, can we
do different things, are the tires falling off, is that fun. To us,
yeah, that’s fun.”
NASCAR decided after the 2001 season to move its truck and Cup
series races to one track, in order to create a season-ending
championship celebration. Homestead-Miami was the original site
after that decision, and then things moved to Phoenix starting in
2020.
Kennedy said racing in early November isn't exactly possible at all
of the tracks on the NASCAR schedule, meaning that the series would
prefer a warm-weather climate for its finish — something that
Phoenix and Homestead-Miami provide. And Homestead-Miami's history
isn't lost on NASCAR, either.

“Homestead has put on some of the most phenomenal finishes,
especially when we had the championship there,” Kennedy said. “But
even since then, and we’ve crowned so many legends and Hall of
Famers over the past 15 years when we did have the championship at
Homestead-Miami Speedway. So, competition is a part of it,
variability, and I think diversity in where you’re crowning the
champion was another consideration.”
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |