When the 2024 NASCAR racing series begins in February, they will be in the final year of their current broadcasting agreement.

Beginning with the 2025 season, NASCAR fans will have to do some channel and streaming surfing in order to find all of the races.  Joining FOX and NBC, Amazon Prime and TNT will also be broadcasting races.

Both FOX and NBC will lose five races in the deal with Amazon and TNT splitting the races.

FOX will continue to open the season broadcasting a total of 14 races with only five of the races being broadcast on the FOX channel with the remainder of the races being aired on the FOX cable channels.

The final 14 races will be broadcast on NBC with four of the races airing on the network channel and the remaining races on an NBC cable channel.

The 10 midseason races will be split between Amazon and TNT. 

Practice and qualifying will be regulated to Amazon’s Prive Video, the B/R Sports Add-On on Max, Max, and truTV; with the exception of the Busch Light Clash, the Daytona 500, and the All Star Race.

NASCAR President Steve Phelps spoke on the new agreement saying, “our goal was to secure long-term stability with an optimized mix of distribution platforms and innovative partners that would allow us to grow the sport while delivering our product to fans wherever they are — and we’ve achieved that today.  NASCAR has been a cornerstone property for both new and established platforms for several decades. These agreements demonstrate the staying power of our sport and the consistent, large-scale audience it delivers. This landmark deal underscores our collective growth opportunity to drive engagement across this diverse collection of platforms — whether on broadcast, cable or direct-to-consumer. With the talented young drivers, exciting new teams and record-breaking racing we’ve seen since the Next Gen car was introduced in 2022, we’re looking forward to working with each of these partners to bring some of the best racing in the world to fans everywhere.”

NASCAR’s senior vice president, media and productions Brian Herbst added, “these agreements not only show NASCAR’s importance to the sports and entertainment ecosystem, but also the willingness of some of the world’s largest and most respected media companies to make significant investments in America’s leading motorsport.  The media landscape is rapidly evolving, with new distribution platforms providing more options to the consumer than ever before. This is the right mix of media partners to promote and deliver content around our sport — positioning NASCAR for growth across different mediums and giving our fans uninterrupted access on the established platforms that they are already using. We are excited to work with this best-in-class group of media companies to deliver the best of NASCAR racing and the excitement of live sports to our fans.”

The deal runs through 2031.

Earlier this year, NASCAR announced that beginning in 2025 the Xfinity Series would be carried on the CW Network for the entire season.  The deal includes all practice, qualifying, and racing events.  It marks the first time that every Xfinity Series race will appear on a single network.

The Craftsman Truck Series will continue to be aired on FS1.