
NASCAR and Speedway Motorsports announced the format for the 2026 NASCAR All-Star Race, set for Sunday, May 17 at Dover Motor Speedway.

The main event will be 350 laps, split up into three segments – 75 laps, 75 laps and 200 laps. A competition break will take place at or around 75 laps into the final segment, which would be at or around lap 225 of 350 in the overall race.
Drivers eligible for the final segment include:
The remaining positions will be filled based on the combined results from the first two segments until the field reaches 25 drivers. The 26th spot will go to the NASCAR All-Star Race Fan Vote winner.
With the format the way it is, there will be no Open race – a first for the event since its inaugural edition in 1985. However, the Mechanix Wear Pit Crew Challenge will return and take place during qualifying Saturday.
During qualifying, drivers take the green flag, run one full lap at speed and, on the second lap, do a four-tire stop with no fuel. Once the stop is done, the cars will exit pit road and race back to the checkered flag.
Qualifying time will be the total elapsed time from green flag to checkered flag. The fastest team will earn the pole for Segment 1 of Sunday's All-Star Race. It'll also set the lineup for that segment.
Segment 2 will feature the top 26 finishers of Segment 1 inverted at the start. Then, the rest of the field will line up based on their Segment 1 finishing positions.
The pit crew with the fastest stop – and no penalties – will win the Pit Crew Challenge. Pit Crew Challenge results will determine pit selection order.
The NASCAR All-Star Race will air live on FS1, MRN Radio and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, with coverage beginning at 1 p.m. ET on Sunday, May 17.
Dover will also host a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race that Friday, May 15, and a NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series that Saturday, May 16.
Dover is the sixth track to host the NASCAR All-Star Race since the race's inception in 1985: