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The 2026 Long Beach Grand Prix will feature 27 Indy cars racing on a 1.968-mile street course, consuming approximately 4,860 gallons of fuel if all cars finish. The event takes place amidst rising gasoline prices due to ongoing conflict in the Middle East.
Drivers make their way toward the famous hairpin corner at the end of the lap during the 2024 Long Beach Grand Prix. (Steve Galluzzo / For The Times)
The high-powered Indy cars that will be racing in Sunday’s Grand Prix of Long Beach will burn about two gallons of fuel on each of their 90 trips around the tight 1.968-mile street course.
So if all 27 cars that start the race also finish it, the field will use 4,860 gallons of fuel. And that doesn’t include the fuel used in qualifying or in the other five classifications of cars that will be participating in the three days of racing in Long Beach.
That’s a lot of fuel for drivers who will end up in the same place they started, especially when seven weeks of war in the Middle East has driven the price of gasoline to record highs. However, the fuel the IndyCar series uses differs significantly from what that comes out of the pump at the gas station.
“This year marks the fourth season that IndyCar has used 100% renewable race fuel for the NTT IndyCar Series — the first motorsport series in North America to utilize this type of fuel,” an IndyCar spokesperson wrote in a statement. “Developed through a collaboration with Shell, this innovative fuel consists of a blend of second-generation ethanol derived from sugarcane waste and other biofuels mainly derived from animal waste. The use of this renewable race fuel enables a 60% reduction in life cycle greenhouse gas emissions.”
Read more: Why Kyle Kirkwood is primed for another Grand Prix of Long Beach win
So while driving Indy cars 177 miles in a circle may seem wasteful during a gas crunch, Sunday’s race will have a negligible affect on the price and availability of fuel at service stations. The greater impact will be made by fans driving to Long Beach; last year’s three-day race weekend drew more than 200,000 people.
Indy cars will burn about two gallons of fuel for each of their 90 laps, totaling approximately 4,860 gallons if all 27 cars finish the race.
The Long Beach Grand Prix course is 1.968 miles long.
A total of 27 cars are expected to participate in the 2026 Long Beach Grand Prix.
Gasoline prices are reaching record highs due to seven weeks of war in the Middle East.

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Although drivers insist qualifying well is important on the narrow 11-turn Long Beach course, winning the pole has rarely guaranteed success on race day: Last spring Kyle Kirkwood became just the sixth driver to win after starting No. 1; Alexander Rossi also did that in 2018-19.
Those six drivers — Kirkwood, Rossi, Mario Andretti, Al Unser Jr., Helio Castroneves and Sebastien Bourdais — combined for 12 victories after qualifying fastest.
Kirkwood comes into the race with a two-point lead over defending champion Alex Palou in the season standings and is the only driver to finish in the top five in all four IndyCar events this season. No active driver has won at Long Beach more often Rossi or Kirkwood, who also took the checkered flag in 2023.
Here’s a guide to the weekend:
General admission, Friday, $58; Saturday, $107; Sunday, $113. General admission tickets come with unreserved seating on Friday and Saturday but not on Sunday. Three-day package, $151.
Reserved seating, Saturday $116; Sunday prices range from $127 to $144 for adults and $96 to $111 for juniors. Three-day packages, $165-$228 for adults and $131-$180 for juniors, depending on seating.
Tickets are available at gplb.com/tickets
**Long Beach Motorsports Walk of Fame Induction Ceremony,**11 a.m.-noon in front of the Long Beach Convention and Entertainment Center on South Pine Avenue. Driver Alexander Rossi, a two-time Grand Prix winner, and former Long Beach Mayor Bob Foster will be honored, free to attend.
**Thunder Thursday at the Pike Outlets,**Pike Outlets, 95 S. Pine Ave., Long Beach. 6-10 p.m. — Freestyle motocross demonstrations and pit-stop competition with cars representing fouur IndyCar teams, along with a beer garden, live music, race car displays and a classic car show.
**7:30 a.m.,**gates open; 7:45-8:15 a.m., Porsche Carrera Cup practice #1; 8:25-8:45 a.m., Historic Sports Car practice #1, 9-10 a.m., IMSA practice #1; **10:15-10:45 a.m.,**Stadium Super Trucks practice; 11:45 a.m.-12:15 p.m., Porsche Carrera Cup practice #2; **12:30-12:50 p.m.,**Historic Sports Cars practice #2; 1:10-2:40 p.m.., IMSA practice #2; 3-4:30 p.m., IndyCar practice #1; 4:40-5:10 p.m., Porsche Carrera Cup qualifying; 5:15-6:15 p.m., IndyCar Series all-driver autograph session, Grand Ballroom, Long Beach Convention Center; 5:25-6 p.m., IMSA qualifying; **6:30-8:30 p.m.,**Super Drift Challenge #1; **6:30-8:30 p.m.,**concert starting Lupe Fiasco at Terrace Theater plaza, 300 E. Ocean Blvd., Long Beach.
**7:30 a.m.,**gates open; **8:30-8:50 a.m.,**Historic Sports Car Challenge #1; **9:05-9:45 a.m.,**Porsche Carrera Cup Race #1; **10:30-noon,**IndyCar practice #2; **10:30-11 a.m.,**IMSA autographer session (IMSA paddockl); 11:45 a.m.-12:15 p.m., Porsche Carrera Cup autograph session, Porsche Carrera Cup paddock, main expo hall; **12:05-1 p.m.,**IMSA pre-race; 1-3 p.m., IMSA Sports Car Grand Prix (100 min.); 3:30-5 p.m., IndyCar qualifying; **5:15-5:45 p.m.,**Stadium Super Trucks race #1; 6:30-8:30 p.m., Super Drift Challenge #2; 6:30-8 p.m., Concert featring Kings of Chaos, Terrace Theater plaza, 300 E. Ocean Blvd., Long Beach.
7:30 a.m., gates open; **9:20-9:40 a.m.,**Historic Sports Car Challenge #2; 10-10:30 a.m., IndyCar warm-up; 11:20 a.m.-noon, Porsche Carrera Cup race #2; **12:15-12:45 p.m.,**Stadium Super Tracks race #2; 12:55-1:10 p.m., Mornings CARnival car parade; **1:30-2:30 p.m.,**IndyCar pre-race; **2:45 p.m.-5 p.m.,**Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.