Supercars Christchurch Super 440 2026 | Schedule & Sessions | MotorSportRadar

Supercars - Christchurch Super 440

Dunlaing Watches
Event Start

Christchurch Super 440

Dunlaing Watches
0 D
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17 - 19 Apr

Completed
Ruapuna Raceway

Ruapuna Raceway

Practice
09:35 - Fri, 17 Apr
Qualifying (Race 10)
14:15 - Fri, 17 Apr
Race 10
16:35 - Fri, 17 Apr
Qualifying (Race 11)
10:05 - Sat, 18 Apr
Qualifying (Race 12)
11:00 - Sat, 18 Apr
Race 11
12:45 - Sat, 18 Apr
Race 12
16:10 - Sat, 18 Apr
Qualifying (Race 13)
11:50 - Sun, 19 Apr
Top Ten Shootout
12:45 - Sun, 19 Apr
Race 13
15:05 - Sun, 19 Apr

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Upcoming in Supercars
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Track Info

Ruapuna Raceway - Christchurch, New Zealand

South Island club-racing stronghold with a fast anti-clockwise Grand Prix loop, a big final sweeper and serious local-history weight - 3.330 km / 2.069 mi with 11 turns - flat, technical and deceptively tough, with passing chances, punishing kerbs and a close-up old-school atmosphere

First Race
24 Nov 1963
Ruapuna opened with its first race meeting on the original one-mile course, giving Canterbury permanent circuit racing after years of using temporary venues.
Circuit Length
3.330 km / 2.069 mi
The main Grand Prix circuit runs anti-clockwise on hot mix bitumen. It was extended to this full length in 1993 and sits on a flat river-stone base that still makes the lap feel technical rather than simple.
Turns
11
A fast opening section, slower infield changes of direction and the long sweeper back onto the straight shape the lap. Alternative layouts also exist, including a longer 3.44 km configuration used by some categories.
Lap Records
1:15.810 - Scott Dixon - 1998 (Formula Holden single-seater overall)
The main official benchmark on the 3.33 km circuit. Other major marks include 1:18.742 by Jonny Reid in 2023 for South Island Endurance GT3-based saloons, 1:17.493 by Michael Shin in 2024 for Castrol Toyota Formula Regional Oceania, and 1:17.062 by Lando Norris in 2016 for Toyota Racing Series.
Opened
1963
Built by Canterbury Car Club volunteers. The original one-mile layout was widened in 1976 for drag racing, then dramatically expanded in 1993 into today's full circuit. Ruapuna remains one of New Zealand's great club-owned motorsport venues.

When was the track built?

Ruapuna was built in 1963 after the Canterbury Car Club decided Christchurch needed a permanent home for circuit racing. Volunteers turned open land at Templeton into a sealed one-mile course, and that mattered hugely for South Island motorsport. This was not a corporate vanity project or a modern destination complex - it was a racers' track, created because local competition needed somewhere permanent to grow. The circuit evolved steadily, with the main straight widened in 1976 so it could also serve drag racing, clubrooms added in the 1980s and major spectator facilities developed over time. The biggest transformation came in 1993, when the track was extended to 3.33 km and turned into the modern Grand Prix layout still used today.

When was its first race?

The first race meeting at Ruapuna was held on November 24, 1963, on the original one-mile layout. From that moment the circuit became a cornerstone of New Zealand racing, first as a local and national hub and later as a venue with genuine international pedigree. The circuit hosted the New Zealand Grand Prix in 1998 and 1999, both won by Simon Wills, and later became the Christchurch home of the Lady Wigram Trophy tradition after racing left Wigram airfield. That link gives Ruapuna a direct connection to names that shaped New Zealand motorsport history, even as the circuit built its own identity.

What's the circuit like?

  • Flat, but not easy: Ruapuna does not rely on dramatic elevation to create drama. The challenge comes from rhythm, patience and how the car sits on a flat river-stone base that can punish impatience and reward clean, repeatable lines.
  • Turn 1 matters: The run down the main straight into the first braking zone is one of the clearest overtaking chances on the lap. It is also where starts and restarts can get lively, especially when touring cars or GT machinery arrive side-by-side.
  • The big sweeper is the signature: The long, loaded final corner back onto the start-finish straight is vital. Carry too little speed and you are vulnerable all the way down the straight. Attack it too hard and the front tyres complain immediately.
  • Technical infield, not just straight-line stuff: Ruapuna has plenty of passing opportunities, but it is not a stop-start layout. The middle of the lap asks for balance, tidy placement and a willingness to live with compromise between traction, kerb use and minimum speed.
  • Kerbs and ripple strips bite: The track has a reputation for punishing lazy use of kerbs. Drivers who are too greedy can unsettle the car quickly, which is why the quick laps always look neat rather than theatrical.
  • Set-up is a trade-off: There is always a tension between getting the car free enough for the faster sections and stable enough for the slower corners and the long sweeper. That is why Ruapuna often produces interesting differences between single-seaters, GT cars, touring cars and bikes.
  • Weather can still move the goalposts: Christchurch can deliver cool air, bright sun, showers and the famous Canterbury wind across the same weekend. At a circuit where flow matters, that can change braking confidence and corner balance more than you might expect.

Lap records and benchmarks

  • Overall official single-seater race lap - 3.330 km: 1:15.810 - Scott Dixon - Reynard 92D - 1998 - Formula Holden.
  • Overall official saloon race lap - 3.330 km: 1:18.742 - Jonny Reid - Audi R8 LMS GT3 - 2023 - South Island Endurance Series.
  • Castrol Toyota Formula Regional Oceania benchmark: 1:17.493 - Michael Shin - Toyota FT60 - 2024.
  • Toyota Racing Series benchmark: 1:17.062 - Lando Norris - Toyota FT50 - 2016.
  • V8 Supertourers benchmark: 1:24.478 - Scott McLaughlin - Holden Commodore - 2012.
  • Unofficial outright context: Liam Lawson lapped in 1:11.265 in a Rodin FZED during a non-race demonstration in 2022, which shows just how quick a modern high-downforce machine can be around Ruapuna - but it is not an official race record.

Ruapuna's alternative layouts have separate records, including the 3.44 km long configuration used by some categories, so comparing times only makes sense when the exact layout is clear.

Why go?

Because Ruapuna still feels like racing is supposed to feel. You can get close to the paddock, watch cars work hard rather than just pose for television, and enjoy a venue that grew out of local motorsport culture instead of corporate hospitality first. It is close to Christchurch airport, easy to reach from the city, and the atmosphere is usually more relaxed and more intimate than at larger international venues. That matters for fans planning a trip. You can spend the morning at the circuit, get properly close to the action, and still turn the weekend into a bigger South Island escape. When the big events land - especially the SKOPE Classic or the new Supercars weekend - Ruapuna combines genuine history with the feeling that you are right on top of the racing.

Where's the best place to watch?

  • Bruce McLaren Grandstand: The classic first choice. You get the main straight, pit lane atmosphere and the action into Turn 1, which is one of the lap's clearest passing zones.
  • Denny Hulme Grandstand: Ideal if you want to see the back section and follow more of the rhythm of the lap rather than just the headline braking zone.
  • The final sweeper onto the straight: One of the best places to appreciate driver quality. You can see who is brave, who is smooth and who has given away the run all the way to Turn 1.
  • Grass banks and terraces: Ruapuna is a very good spectator circuit because the views are naturally open. On many race weekends the grassy viewing areas let you follow multiple corners and move around without feeling locked into one seat all day.
  • Pit lane side during major events: This is a smart pick if you enjoy the event itself as much as the lap time - starts, strategy, driver changes in endurance racing and the close-up club-racing vibe all come through here.

Not just one series - headline events at Ruapuna Raceway

Supercars: Ruapuna enters a new chapter with the Christchurch Super 440 from 2026, bringing Australia's top touring car championship to Christchurch and giving the South Island one of its biggest modern motorsport events.

Historic and heritage racing: The SKOPE Classic is one of New Zealand's best-loved historic meetings, regularly featuring Formula 5000, historic touring cars, muscle cars and classic sports machinery that suit Ruapuna's old-school feel perfectly.

Endurance and GT: The South Island Endurance Series has become one of the circuit's modern calling cards, mixing GT cars, production-based machinery and strategy-heavy long-distance racing on a layout that always punishes mistakes.

Single-seaters and trophy history: Ruapuna has hosted Toyota Racing Series and Castrol Toyota Formula Regional Oceania rounds, plus the Lady Wigram Trophy in its modern Ruapuna era. That means drivers such as Scott Dixon, Lando Norris and Lance Stroll all have a place in the circuit's story.

More than four wheels: Motorcycle meetings, drifting and drag racing all matter here too. The main straight's drag-strip history and the circuit's multiple configurations mean Ruapuna stays busy in a way many bigger-name tracks can only envy.

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