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Winter Series | Aragon 2026

02/14, 2026

Where to watch GT Winter Series – Aragon 2026

This event includes these in one stream:

  • GT Winter Series
  • GT4 Winter Series
  • Prototype Winter Series
  • Formula Winter Series

Learn how to watch the GT Winter Series –  Aragon 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 and replays, so you don’t have to.

Is this a free live stream?
Yes!

Status: Waiting For Start Times
We are working directly with GEDLICH Racing management to get all the event times, live stream links and other items listed. We will post everything once they get it over to us.

Best way to watch:

  • Use the free YouTube App on a smart TV for qualifying, Race 1 and Race 2 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.
  • Stream on-board driver’s view cams on a laptop or tablet with main race on big screen.

Live Stream Schedule

Winter Series Day 1
Sat, February 14, 2026
4 Hours
Winter Series Day 2
Sun, February 15, 2026
4 Hours
Avaliable on these services:
Avaliable on these services:
Avaliable on these services:
Avaliable on these services:

Webcams, Radio, Live Timing

On-board Streams
Live Timing Screens

Replays

Social Media

Event Information

Event Description

Winter Series – Aragon 2026

Aragón Apex: Saturday and Sunday of the Winter Series 2026

Saturday detonates at MotorLand Aragón with the four-class grid—GT3, GT4, Prototypes, and Formula Winter Series—fully primed after Thursday’s qualifying skirmishes. The morning opens with a brief warm-up, engines snarling across the 5.1-kilometer layout as crews fine-tune brake balance and tire pressures on the still-cool asphalt. The first sprint race erupts mid-morning: a 25-minute dash where prototypes rocket from pole, slicing through GT packs with hybrid bursts down the back straight. Formula Winter Series cars weave inside lines at the hairpin, while GT3 and GT4 trains stretch eight-wide into the esses. Mandatory pit windows force lightning driver changes—prototypes swapping in under 40 seconds, GT crews blitzing tire swaps. A late safety car bunches the field, igniting a three-lap shootout. Checkered flags fly with a prototype claiming overall honors, Formula rookies nabbing class glory, and GT4 underdogs stealing the show with a last-corner lunge.

Sunday escalates into endurance theater. A longer warm-up sharpens reflexes before the main event: a three-hour multi-class marathon. Fifty-plus machines surge from the rolling start, prototypes leaping ahead while Formula cars dive for gaps and GT4 packs fan across the track. Early laps bristle with ambition—GT3 Porsches trading paint at Turn 7’s blind crest, prototypes threading traffic like silver needles. Pit strategy becomes chess: staggered stops, double-stints on mediums, and fuel-save modes. A mid-race safety car compresses the order, sparking ferocious restarts where blue flags dance and mirrors fill with carbon wings. As the final hour looms, fatigue gnaws—blistered hands on Formula wheels, GT strategists crunching deltas. The checkered flag drops at dusk, crowning an overall prototype victor alongside Formula Winter Series, GT3, and GT4 champions. The tiered podium erupts in champagne under floodlights, Aragón’s winter wind carrying echoes of four classes forged into one unforgettable crescendo.