THURSDAY
FEB 13
2025
TBA
|
NASCAR Duel at Daytona
Daytona International Speedway
Daytona Beach,
FL
|
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THURSDAY
FEB 13
2025
TBA
|
NASCAR Cup Series: Daytona 500 - 4 Day Pass
Daytona International Speedway
Daytona Beach,
FL
|
|
FRIDAY
FEB 14
2025
TBA
|
NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series: Fresh From Florida 250
Daytona International Speedway
Daytona Beach,
FL
|
|
SATURDAY
FEB 15
2025
TBA
|
NASCAR Xfinity Series: United Rentals 300 & ARCA Menards Series - Doubleheader
Daytona International Speedway
Daytona Beach,
FL
|
|
SUNDAY
FEB 16
2025
TBA
|
NASCAR Cup Series: Daytona 500
Daytona International Speedway
Daytona Beach,
FL
|
|
For fans of racing, there are few things more exciting than nabbing a ticket to see drivers like Kevin Harvick, Clint Bowyer, Danica Patrick, and Joey Logano fly around the track at nearly 200 miles per hour (322 km/h). As the world’s premier stock-car racing organization, NASCAR sanctions more than 1,500 adrenaline-pumping races at more than 100 tracks across the United States and Canada, as well as bringing circuits to countries like Mexico, Japan, and Australia. Whether you want to grab tickets for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, the Camping World Truck Series, or the NASCAR Xfinity Series, there are countless ways to fulfill your need for speed.
The history of stock-car racing dates back to Prohibition, when bootleggers would modify their vehicles for speed and handling to better outrun the police. Though the repeal of Prohibition dried up some of their business, by 1933, Americans—particularly in the South—had certainly developed a taste for moonshine. Many of the bootleggers continued to run liquor in an attempt to avoid taxes, and they continued to improve on their cars in the process.
By the mid-1930s, races featuring these cars began running for both pride and profit, and soon stock cars specifically designed for racing were being built. But the racing industry itself was fraught with disarray as drivers would be cheated out of money by deceitful promoters who would leave events without paying them their winnings. In 1947, a mechanic and driver named Bill France Sr. decided the sport needed formal organization, standardized rules, and a championship—and by the next year, NASCAR was born. Since then, the franchise has become one of the top professional sports organizations in the country, second only to the NFL in number of viewers. Grab NASCAR tickets today and experience this heart-racing American tradition alongside tens of thousands of screaming fans.