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24H Series | 12 Hours Paul Ricard 2026

06/06, 2026

Where to watch 24H Series – 12 Hours Paul Ricard 2026?

Learn how to watch the 24H Series – 12 Hours Paul Ricard 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, June 5, 2026
120 min
12 Hours of Paul Ricard pt1
Sat, June 6, 2026
First 6 Hours
12 Hours of Paul Ricard pt2
Sun, June 7, 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 Paul Ricard 2026

The Michelin 12H Paul Ricard: Midnight Blue Inferno in the South of France

The Michelin 12H Paul Ricard 2026 closes the 24H Series European campaign with a sun-scorched, star-drenched duel along the Mediterranean coast, where the Circuit Paul Ricard’s endless run-off stripes glow like molten lava under Provençal skies. Split into two six-hour parts bridged by a brief nocturnal respite, this twelve-hour saga unfolds on the 5.842-kilometre Grand Prix layout, a track reborn in 1970 and relentlessly modernised ever since. Its deceptive smoothness masks brutal demands: the sweeping Signes curve taken flat in GT3 machinery, the abrasive Mistral straight that devours rubber, and the tight chicane carving the back straight into a chessboard of overtaking gambles.

Creventic’s signature inclusivity shines as over sixty cars (from thunderous Mercedes-AMG and Porsche 911 GT3 Rs to nimble TCR hatchbacks and radical GTX silhouettes) chase victory across classes designed for both gentlemen and gladiators. Michelin’s latest endurance compounds wrestle with temperatures that swing from blistering afternoon heat to cool coastal nights, turning tire management into high art. French squads like Saintéloc and AGS Events defend local honour against the travelling circus that has followed the series from Dubai’s dunes to Spa’s forests, each team chasing vital championship points in the season’s decisive act.

Beyond the barriers, the Var countryside perfumes the air with pine and rosemary while grandstands and rooftop terraces offer panoramic views of glowing brake discs dancing under floodlights. The paddock hums with Riviera glamour: chilled rosé, late-night driver briefings, and the distant throb of yacht parties echoing across the bay. When dawn finally paints the horizon pink above Le Castellet’s plateau, the 12H Paul Ricard stands revealed not merely as a race, but as the series’ Mediterranean crescendo (an exquisite blend of velocity, strategy, and southern French theatre that sends crews home carrying both exhaustion and the unmistakable scent of victory by the sea).