2026 Porsche Supercup

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The 2026 Porsche Mobil 1 Supercup will be the 34th Porsche Supercup season, a GT3 production one-make stock car racing series sanctioned by Porsche Motorsports GmbH in the world. It will begin on 4 June at Circuit de Monaco, Monaco and will end on 6 September at the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza, Italy, after eight races, all of which are support events for the 2026 Formula One World Championship.[1]

The 2026 season will be the first with the new Porsche 911 Cup (992.2), which is based on the 992.2 generation of the 911 and also the 25th consecutive season of Michelin tyre supply partnership since 2002 season.[2][3]

Team No. Drivers Class Rounds
Austria BWT Lechner Racing[4] 1 Netherlands Robert de Haan TBC
2 Finland Marcus Amand R TBC
3 Australia Caleb Sumich R TBC
Germany Proton Competition 4 South Africa Keagan Masters TBC
5 Germany Kai Pfister PA TBC
6 TBA TBC
Italy Dinamic Motorsport 7 Italy Andrea Bristot R TBC
8 Italy William Mezzetti R TBC
9 TBA TBC
France Schumacher CLRT 11 Luxembourg Chester Kieffer R TBC
12 Netherlands Flynt Schuring TBC
Spain RGB Racing 13 Spain Jorge Ramírez PA TBC
14 Colombia Juan Pablo Vega Dieppa R TBC
France Martinet by Alméras 15 Germany Theo Oeverhaus TBC
16 France Paul Cauhaupé R TBC
17 Netherlands Jaap van Lagen TBC
Italy Ombra Racing 18 United Kingdom Liam McNeilly R TBC
19 Argentina Luciano Facundo Martinez TBC
20 Romania Filip Ugran R TBC
Germany Looping by CarTech 22 Netherlands Dirk Schouten TBC
TBA TBA TBC
Netherlands Team GP Elite 23 Australia Samer Shahin PA TBC
24 Germany Jonas Grief R TBC
25 Netherlands Wouter Boerekamps TBC
26 United Kingdom Gustav Burton TBC
27 Brazil Matheus Ferreira R TBC
Italy Target Competition 28 Italy Aldo Festante TBC
29 United Kingdom Jack Young R TBC
Sources:
Icon Class
PA Pro-Am Cup
R Rookie
G Guest

Race calendar and results

Round Circuit Date Pole position Fastest lap Winning driver Winning team
1 Monaco Circuit de Monaco, Monte Carlo 4–6 June
2 Spain Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, Montmeló 12–14 June
3 Austria Red Bull Ring, Spielberg 26–28 June
4 Belgium Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Stavelot 17–19 July
5 Hungary Hungaroring, Budapest 24–26 July
6 Netherlands Circuit Zandvoort, Zandvoort 21–23 August
7
8 Italy Autodromo Nazionale di Monza, Monza 4–6 September
Source:[5]

Championship standings

Scoring system

Points were awarded to the top fifteen classified drivers in every race, using the following system:

Position 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th 15th
Points 25 20 17 14 12 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

In order for full points to be awarded, the race winner must complete at least 50% of the scheduled race distance. Half points are awarded if the race winner completes less than 50% of the race distance. In the event of a tie at the conclusion of the championship, a count-back system is used as a tie-breaker, with a driver's/constructor's best result used to decide the standings.[6]

Rookie drivers must be 25 years of age or younger to compete in the Rookies' Championship.[6]

Guest drivers are ineligible to score points. If a guest driver finishes in first position, the second-placed finisher will receive 25 points. The same goes for every other points scoring position. So if three guest drivers end up placed fourth, fifth and sixth, the seventh-placed finisher will receive fourteen points and so forth - until the eighteenth-placed finisher receives the final point.[7]

Notes

References

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