Daytona 500 schedule and how to watch 2024 NASCAR Cup opener
It is soon time for the Daytona 500, so here is everything to know including the on-track schedule, weather forecast and TV broadcast times for the 2024 NASCAR Cup curtain-raiser.
The world-famous Daytona 500 will kickstart the 76th season of NASCAR racing where Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney will commence his championship defense.
Delayed until Monday, due to heavy rain across the weekend in Daytona, the race is scheduled to start on Presidents' Day at 4:00pm ET. The rain-delayed Xfinity Series race will then take place after it, at approximately 9pm ET.
Drivers will tackle 500 miles around the illustrious Daytona International Speedway which, just less than one month ago, hosted the enthralling Daytona 24 Hours where Porsche Penske Motorsport won by 2.1 seconds ahead of Cadillac in a grandstand finish on its 3.56-mile road course.
But from the week commencing 12 February it will be time for America's stock cars to face the historic Florida venue’s 2.5-mile, high-banked oval with Ricky Stenhouse Jr as the defending Daytona 500 winner.
Stenhouse Jr is one of seven Daytona 500 winners on this year’s grid, yet Blaney is not one of them – having come extremely close and even been put in the wall by his Penske team-mate Austin Cindric on the dash to the finish line in 2022 – so will the newly-crowned Cup champion finally clinch victory at the famous speedway?
Ryan Blaney, Team Penske, Menards/Blue DEF/PEAK Ford Mustang
Photo by: Nigel Kinrade / NKP / Motorsport Images
When is the Daytona 500?
- Date: Monday 19 February
- Time: 4:00pm ET
Before the Daytona 500 was qualifying on Wednesday, and the Duel races that set the grid behind the front row on Thursday, leading up to Sunday’s main event.
Date |
Session |
Session start time |
Wednesday 14 February |
Daytona 500 qualifying |
8:15pm ET |
Thursday 15 February |
Duel Race 1 |
7pm ET |
Thursday 15 February |
Duel Race 2 |
8:45pm ET |
Friday 16 February |
Daytona 500 Practice 1 |
5:35pm ET |
Saturday 17 February |
Daytona 500 Practice 2 |
10:30am ET (rained out) |
Sunday 18 February |
Daytona 500 |
2:30pm ET (postponed) |
Monday 19 February |
Daytona 500 |
4:00pm ET |
How does qualifying work for the Daytona 500?
Qualifying for the Daytona 500 is unlike anything in motorsport, particularly Formula 1 where everything happens on the same weekend.
On the Tuesday before, a random draw takes place and this decides the order cars will take to the track for Wednesday’s qualifying. The final 20 spots though are given to the 20 highest scoring drivers from the previous year, because there is an advantage to setting a hot lap later due to track evolution.
Qualifying for the Daytona 500 is a single-car, one-lap format. So, each driver gets one flying lap around the tri-oval and the two fastest cars will be locked into the front-row for Sunday’s Daytona 500. The other qualifying times determine the starting grid for both Duel races, which decide the line-up from third to 40th for the Daytona 500.
2023 Daytona 500 front row: Kyle Larson, & Alex Bowman, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet Camaros
Photo by: Gavin Baker / NKP / Motorsport Images
The Duels are of 60 laps, covering 150 miles, and the results of the first race determine the inside row for the 500, while the second one decides Sunday’s outside row.
But 36 spots for the ‘Great American Race’ are guaranteed for chartered teams, who compete in every round during a NASCAR Cup season. This means the other four spots are given to so-called ‘open teams’ who compete part-time, so there will be drivers who fail to qualify for the Daytona 500 if there are over 40 entrants [at the time of writing there are 41 cars entered].
The two fastest open teams in one-lap qualifying will automatically qualify for the 500 without needing to compete in the Duels. The other two spots are then determined by both Duels and the final four grid positions for the Daytona 500 are assigned to the open teams.
Alex Bowman, Hendrick Motorsports, Ally Chevrolet Camaro and Kyle Larson, Hendrick Motorsports, HendrickCars.com Chevrolet Camaro
Photo by: Nigel Kinrade / NKP / Motorsport Images
How can I watch the Daytona 500?
In America, FOX will broadcast the delayed Daytona 500 live. FOX Sports 1 will broadcast every session live for the Daytona 500, beginning with qualifying on Wednesday at 8pm ET, and it is also available via the FOX Sports app.
FOX Sports 1 will also live broadcast the NASCAR Xfinity Series and NASCAR Truck Series, which are both support events for the Cup Series at Daytona International Speedway. The Daytona 500 is also available via FuboTV, YouTube TV, Sling TV and Hulu+, meaning the action can be live streamed on a mobile or tablet device, as well as a console.
Date |
Session |
Network |
Program start time |
Wednesday 14 February |
Daytona 500 qualifying |
FOX Sports 1 |
8pm ET |
Thursday 15 February |
Duel Races 1 and 2 |
FOX Sports 1 |
6pm ET |
Friday 16 February |
Daytona 500 Practice 1 |
FOX Sports 1 |
5:30pm ET |
Monday 19 February |
Daytona 500 race |
FOX |
4:00pm ET |
Non-American viewers can watch the Daytona 500 via Viaplay Sports 1, who will broadcast certain sessions during the week.
Viaplay Sports 1 will first live broadcast both Duels on Thursday 15 February with coverage starting at 11:30pm GMT. The network will next broadcast the Daytona 500, with its pre-race coverage beginning one hour before the green flag.
Viaplay Total Monthly costs £14.99 per month for new customers.
Date |
Session |
Network |
Program start time |
Thursday 15 February |
Duel Races 1 and 2 |
Viaplay Sports 1 |
11:30pm GMT |
Monday 19 February |
Daytona 500 |
Viaplay Sports 1 |
9:00pm GMT |
Where can I watch highlights of the Daytona 500?
Last year the NASCAR on FOX YouTube channel uploaded highlights soon after the Daytona 500 had finished, while doing the same for the sessions which preceded it that week.
The official NASCAR YouTube channel currently has a full replay of the 2023 Daytona 500, so follow the various NASCAR platforms to watch a highlights package – or the full race again – as soon as it drops.
Watch: Stenhouse wins longest Daytona 500 in NASCAR history
What type of track is Daytona International Speedway?
Daytona’s tri-oval course is a 2.5-mile layout with four designated corners that have a 31-degree banking, while it is an 18-degree banking along the start-finish area, which is sited in the grandstand-lined tri-oval section.
The Daytona 500 features 200 laps of the oval which takes close to four hours to complete. It is one of three Cup circuits considered to be “drafting tracks” – when cars line up one behind each other to get a speed boost like the slipstream – alongside Talladega Superspeedway and Atlanta Motor Speedway.
This is different to the sports car course used for the Daytona 24 Hours, which is a 3.56-mile layout with 12 corners including all four banked turns but some of the infield section as well.
Rain clouds at the Daytona 500
Photo by: Lesley Ann Miller / Motorsport Images
Daytona 500 weather forecast
Considering Daytona’s location along the Florida coastline, rain is not too common at the 500 due to its February date. And long-range forecasts are often unreliable due to its tropical climate, however...
Following heavy rain on Saturday that postponed the Xfinity race until Monday, Sunday's Daytona 500 was also postponed due to a 100% chance of rain during the day and showers in the evening, when the race could have run under floodlights into the small hours.
As with most of the American oval racing, the cars will not run if it does rain as they only use slick tires.
Monday's forecast is better, with a 38% chance of rain showers during the morning and clearing up in the afternoon.
When it last rained for the 500, in 2021, the race was delayed by almost six hours – so when showers do fall at the speedway, they hit hard!
NASCAR at Daytona Speedweeks schedule
Date and time |
Event |
Wednesday 14 February |
|
8:15pm ET |
NASCAR Cup Daytona 500 Qualifying |
Thursday 15 February |
|
5:05pm ET |
NASCAR Truck Series Practice |
7pm ET |
NASCAR Cup Duel Race 1 |
8:45pm ET |
NASCAR Cup Duel Race 2 |
Friday 16 February |
|
3pm ET |
NASCAR Truck Series Qualifying |
4:35pm ET |
NASCAR Xfinity Series Practice |
5:35pm ET |
NASCAR Cup Daytona 500 Practice 1 |
7:30pm ET |
NASCAR Truck Series Daytona 250 |
Saturday 17 February |
|
10:30am ET |
Daytona 500 Practice 2 (rained out) |
11:30am ET |
NASCAR Xfinity Series Qualifying |
5pm ET |
NASCAR Xfinity Series Daytona 300 (postponed) |
Sunday 18 February |
|
2:30pm ET |
Daytona 500 (postponed) |
NASCAR at Daytona Speedweeks rescheduled races
Monday 19 February |
|
4:00pm ET |
Daytona 500 |
9:00pm ET |
Xfinity Series Race |
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