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Winter Series | Valencia 2026

02/14, 2026

Where to watch GT Winter Series – Valencia 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 –  Valencia 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 – Valencia 2026

Valencia Vortex: The Winter Series 2026 Races

The Circuit Ricardo Tormo erupts in Valencia’s winter warmth, hosting the GEDLICH Racing Winter Series climax. GT3, GT4, and Cup X endurance warriors share the 4-kilometer stage with Formula Winter Series single-seaters and prototype racers, turning the compact bullring into a multi-class cauldron where 900-hp GT monsters dice with featherweight open-wheelers and sleek LMP-style machines.

Day one is a symphony of preparation across disciplines. Scrutineering lines stretch long: carbon-tubbed prototypes on scales, Formula Winter Series cars with wings adjusted to the gram, and GT squads torque-checking every bolt on Porsche 911 GT3 Rs and Ferrari 296 GT3s. Afternoon free practice layers chaos—prototypes howling through the final sector at 250 km/h, formula cars threading hairpins with surgical precision, GT4 packs hunting tow in the slipstream. Tire blankets glow red, data streams flood pit walls, and the paddock thrums with crossover banter: a prototype engineer eyeing GT fuel maps, a formula rookie studying GT braking zones.

Day two ignites with qualifying fireworks. A split warm-up segregates classes before the grid battles: prototypes lock brakes into Turn 1 for pole, Formula Winter Series drivers ballet-dance the chicane for FWS honors, GT3 titans carve sub-1:25s while GT4 warriors scrap kerb-to-kerb. Grandstands roar as classes interleave on hot laps, carbon shards glittering under floodlights. Post-session, crews swarm—diff preload for GT, wing angles for formula, ride height for prototypes. A joint drivers’ parade unites the grid: helmeted prototype aces alongside wide-eyed formula talents and grizzled GT veterans.

Race day unleashes the full spectacle. Forty-plus cars surge—prototypes leaping from the line, formula cars diving inside, GT packs fanning wide. Early laps are ballet and brutality: a prototype slicing past a GT4 train, a formula car out-braking a Cup X Porsche. Pit stops cascade—prototype driver swaps in 40 seconds, formula tire changes under blankets, GT crews blitzing 7-second stops. Safety cars compress the madness, sparking three-abreast restarts. Prototype leaders hunt overall glory, Formula Winter Series stars chase checkered flags in class, GT3 duels rage door-to-door. As dusk falls, the circuit is a blur of spray and sparks. The checkered flag crowns an overall prototype victor, formula champions, and GT class kings in a multi-tier podium soaked in Valencian sun and shared triumph.