Nascar San Diego 2026 | Schedule & Sessions | MotorSportRadar

Nascar Cup - San Diego

Dunlaing Watches
Event Start

San Diego

Dunlaing Watches
0 D
0 H
0 M
0 S

20 - 21 Jun

Coronado Street Course

Coronado Street Course

Some session times for Nascar San Diego 2026 have not yet been finalised, they represent possible times in which each race session could occur. Please check back later for more accurate times.

Practice*
10:00 - Sat, 20 Jun
Qualifying*
12:30 - Sat, 20 Jun
Race
14:00 - Sun, 21 Jun

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Upcoming in Nascar

Upcoming in Nascar
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Track Info

Coronado Street Course - San Diego, California, USA

Military-base street circuit with bay views, aircraft carriers, runway-side blasts and a wall-lined technical core - counter-clockwise - 5.472 km / 3.400 mi with 16 turns - NASCAR's longest 2026 road course should be fast, heavy on braking and unlike anything else on the calendar

First Race
19 Jun 2026 (scheduled)
The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race is the first scheduled competitive event on the new Coronado layout, with the support bill opening a landmark weekend on Naval Base Coronado.
Circuit Length
5.472 km / 3.400 mi
A purpose-designed temporary street circuit at Naval Air Station North Island, and the longest course on NASCAR's 2026 schedule.
Turns
16
The lap mixes tight 90-degree corners, a named chicane, long acceleration zones and a fast run near Halsey Field's runway and San Diego Bay.
Lap Records
No official race lap records yet
Coronado debuts in 2026, so the first Truck, O'Reilly Auto Parts Series and Cup races will establish every real benchmark from scratch.
Opened
2026
Notable facts include its location on an active military base, the Ellyson Start/Finish Line, Turn 5's Carrier Corner between carrier berths, Turn 8's Coronado Chicane and Turn 14's Runway Road beside the airfield.

When was the track built?

Coronado is a modern event circuit built specifically for its 2026 debut rather than a revived old track. The project came together in 2025 as NASCAR and local organisers shaped a temporary course inside Naval Base Coronado at NAS North Island, turning operational roads and base infrastructure into a one-off national-series venue. That alone makes it unusual, but the bigger point is how deliberately the place has been designed. This is not a random loop around a city grid. It is a purpose-built street course threaded through one of the most visually distinctive sites in American motorsport, with aircraft carriers, bayfront views and an active runway all worked into the lap. In construction terms it is temporary. In identity terms it already feels like one of the boldest new motorsport stages in the country.

When was its first race?

As of the 2026 season, Coronado has not yet hosted a race. Its first scheduled race is the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series event on Friday, June 19, 2026. The NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series follows on Saturday, June 20, with the NASCAR Cup Series headlining on Sunday, June 21. That means the circuit's first weekend is not just a debut, but a full three-day launch where every pole, podium and fastest lap becomes part of the venue's founding story.

What's the circuit like?

  • Street course, not a simple parade loop: Coronado is long by NASCAR standards and full of proper braking events. The lap begins with a quick right after the start line, then immediately asks for rhythm through a pair of lefts before the first real acceleration zones build.
  • Carrier Corner is the showpiece braking zone: Turn 5 is a sharp left placed between the docking locations of two aircraft carriers. It already looks like one of the signature visuals of the whole season, and it should be one of the clearest passing spots too.
  • The chicane changes the flow: Turn 8, the Coronado Chicane, breaks up the lap and should punish anyone who attacks too greedily. It is the kind of section where curb use, car placement and exit discipline matter more than headline bravery.
  • Runway Road should be properly quick: Turn 14 runs near the north end of Halsey Field's runway, and the straighter sections around there look built for slipstreaming, brake temperature management and late-move setup rather than pure single-corner lunges.
  • Walls, surface changes and no margin: Even though it sits on a naval base rather than downtown city streets, this is still a temporary barrier-lined course. That means changing grip, concrete close at hand and the usual street-track penalty for getting too optimistic on entry.
  • Stock-car rhythm will matter: With long straights, repeated slow-speed exits and several hard stops, the lap should reward drivers who can rotate the car without abusing the rear tyres. On a big heavy NASCAR machine, that is never a small detail.
  • Wind and weather could be a factor: The bayfront setting should make crosswinds part of the challenge, especially in braking zones and direction changes where the car is already moving around underneath the driver.

Lap records and benchmarks

  • NASCAR Cup Series - official race lap: No official record yet. The inaugural Cup race is scheduled for 21 Jun 2026.
  • NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series - official race lap: No official record yet. The series is scheduled to race on 20 Jun 2026.
  • NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series - official race lap: No official record yet. The Truck race on 19 Jun 2026 is set to create the first real benchmark at Coronado.
  • Context: Because this is a brand-new street course, opening-weekend pace should shift quickly as rubber goes down, braking points become clearer and drivers learn which curbs can be attacked and which ones bite back.
  • Why that matters: At new temporary circuits, the first practice chart often tells only half the story. The real benchmark usually arrives later once teams trust the surface and the walls stop feeling theoretical.

Coronado is the kind of venue where the first real race laps will matter more than any simulation talk beforehand. Until cars run in anger, every prediction about pace, tyre wear and overtaking quality stays provisional.

Why go?

Because there is simply nothing else like it on the schedule. You are getting top-level NASCAR racing inside an active military installation, with the bay on one side, aviation history all around you and a course built to look spectacular in person as well as on television. That alone is enough to make it a bucket-list first edition. Then there is San Diego itself - beaches, food, perfect race-trip weather, easy airport access and the chance to turn a motorsport weekend into a proper Southern California break. Add the curiosity of a brand-new layout and the novelty of seeing stock cars thread through Carrier Corner and Runway Road for the first time, and Coronado becomes much more than a one-off gimmick. It feels like an event.

Where's the best place to watch?

  • Ellyson Start/Finish Line and Turn 1: The best all-round choice if you want the start, restarts and the first braking phase of the lap. On a debut street race, that opening sequence should be busy all weekend.
  • Turn 5 - Carrier Corner: Probably the headline spectator pick. It is the iconic visual of the circuit and should also be one of the strongest overtaking zones thanks to the sharp left-hand entry.
  • Turn 8 - Coronado Chicane: A smart place to watch drivers wrestle with precision rather than just top speed. This is where the lap gets technical and small mistakes should be obvious.
  • Turn 14 - Runway Road: One of the best spots for seeing the track's unique setting and the way speed builds before another key braking and positioning phase.
  • Final sector into Turn 16: A good choice if you like watching drivers piece together the run back toward the line. Exits matter here, especially in NASCAR machinery where momentum out of the last corner can set up the next attack.

Not just one series - headline events at Coronado Street Course

NASCAR Cup Series: The Anduril 250 Race the Base is the main event and the race that puts Coronado straight into the national spotlight.

NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series: Saturday's race gives the circuit a second major stock-car benchmark and adds a category that often produces some of NASCAR's most aggressive road- and street-course racing.

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series: The Truck race opens the competitive history of the venue on Friday and should be a fascinating first read on how heavy stock vehicles cope with the walls, braking zones and long lap.

The bigger picture: Coronado is not being launched as a one-race novelty. From the start it arrives with all three national NASCAR series, a huge event setting and a place in the wider celebration of the U.S. Navy's 250th anniversary. That gives the weekend scale before a wheel has even turned.

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