Sebring International Raceway
Sebring, Florida
- Location
- Sebring, Florida
- Length
- 3.74 mi
- Turns
- 17
- Opened
- 1950
Sebring International Raceway is one of the circuits FastLane can run a private program at on request. It is not a FastLane base of operation. Our home track is Buttonwillow Raceway Park , where most days run.
Sebring International Raceway is a historic road course in Sebring, Florida, set in rural Highlands County in the central part of the state. Built partly on the runways and taxiways of a former World War II airfield, it is one of the oldest continuously operating race tracks in the United States, with its first event run in 1950. The current Grand Prix road course measures 3.74 miles and links 17 turns into a flowing yet demanding lap.
Sebring is famous for its rough, bumpy surface, a mix of aged concrete runway slabs and asphalt that punishes cars and drivers alike and rewards precise car control. The track's character, fast sweepers, heavy braking zones, and the tricky transitions between pavement types, has made a strong Sebring lap a benchmark of driver skill for generations of sports car and open-wheel racers.
The circuit is best known as the home of the 12 Hours of Sebring, a cornerstone of the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship and one of the most prestigious endurance races in the world. Over the decades it has also hosted the FIA World Endurance Championship's 1000 Miles of Sebring, Trans-Am, and GT World Challenge America. For drivers, mastering Sebring's bumps and rhythm is a rite of passage, which makes it an exceptional proving ground for building precision, consistency, and confidence at speed.
Notable events
- 12 Hours of Sebring (IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship)
- FIA World Endurance Championship - 1000 Miles of Sebring (former)
- Trans-Am Series
- GT World Challenge America
Book a call and pick your circuit
Want to drive Sebring International Raceway? Tell us your goals and we will build a private, one-on-one day around you, here or at our home track.