German Flag

24H Series | 12 Hours Nürburgring 2026

07/04, 2026

Where to watch 24H Series – 12 Hours Nürburgring 2026?

Learn how to watch the 24H Series – 12 Hours Nürburgring 2026.  Below, we have listed everything you need to watch. We make it easy to find the live streams, schedules and replays without having to dig through the race series sites and other places. We find the races, so you don’t have to.

Is this a free live stream?
YES!

Status: Waiting For Start Times
Live Stream event start times will be posted as we get them. We work directly with the 24H Series management so we post start times and direct live streams below, as soon as they’re active.

Best way to watch:

  • Use the free YouTube App on a smart TV for qualifying and the full race to have on a big screen with great sound.
  • Live timing screens on a laptop or tablet to follow each driver and location on the track due to multi-class racing.
  • Print out the Spotter’s Guide (in color) for car numbers, driver names and car identification.

Live Stream Schedule

24H Series Qualifying
Fri, July 3, 2026
120 min
12 Hours Nürburgring Pt1
Sat, July 4, 2026
First 6 Hours
12 Hours Nürburgring Pt2
Sun, July 5, 2026
Last 6 Hours
Avaliable on these services:
Avaliable on these services:
Avaliable on these services:
Avaliable on these services:

Webcams, Radio, Live Timing

Onboard Live Streams (Coming soon)
Event Poster (coming soon)

Replays

YouTube Replays - Once Complete

Social Media

Event Information

Event Description

24H Series – 12 Hours Nürburgring 2026

The Michelin 12H Nürburgring: Twelve Hours Carved into the Green Hell

The Michelin 12H Nürburgring 2026 descends upon the Nordschleife like a ritual of fire and shadow, claiming its place as the most feared and revered fixture in the 24H Series calendar. For twelve unbroken hours, the 20.8-kilometre beast that winds through the Eifel forests unleashes its full medieval fury: Flugplatz crests that launch cars skyward, the plunging descent of Fuchsröhre, the relentless Pflanzgarten compressions, and the endless, unforgiving carousel where only the brave keep their foot planted. Mist clings to the trees at dawn, rain lashes the asphalt without warning, and by night the Green Hell glows with brake discs and distant headlights threading the darkness like comets.

Creventic’s grid swells toward seventy machines, from howling GT3 thoroughbreds to snarling Porsche Cup warriors and the wild GTX hybrids, all bound by Michelin rubber engineered to survive the Nordschleife’s legendary abrasion. Classes ensure that factory-supported giants duel alongside privateer legends, every lap a gamble against mechanical failure, driver fatigue, and the track’s merciless memory. German squads such as Manthey and Phoenix arrive with home-soil hunger, while international travellers treat the event as pilgrimage and penance in equal measure.

The Eifel air carries the scent of damp earth and hot brakes. Spectators camp along the fences at Brünnchen and Pflanzgarten, their fires flickering against the forest as engines scream past mere metres away. When the sun finally rises over the final hour, painting the Nürburg castle ruins gold, the survivors emerge not merely as winners but as those who have stared into the abyss and returned. The 12H Nürburgring is less a race than a covenant: twelve hours that separate the merely fast from those forever marked by the greatest circuit on earth.