Why IndyCar Is Growing Again: Mike Shank, Honda, and the Series' Quiet Momentum
Viewership is climbing, teams are optimistic, and IndyCar finally has something to build upon.

It’s no revelation that motorsports as a collective entertainment entity has been experiencing a bit of a boon during the past several years. The easy answer is that Netflix’s Drive to Survive Formula 1 “reality” show was the most obvious catalyst for this, quickly pouring gallons of fuel on what began as more of a curious spark that subsequently propelled F1’s breakthrough in the U.S. market. But as someone who’s followed various racing series for more than 30 years now, with a decade spent as a full-time motorsports editor and journalist, I’ve repeatedly experienced things I not long ago never would have imagined when it comes to F1.
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It’s mostly arrived in the form of I don’t know how many people on the street striking up a conversation with me about the sport simply because I happened to be wearing a random F1-related hat or T-shirt. Even immediate family members who never took any interest or cared about it despite seeing me watch it and hearing me talk about it and even making it a big part of my job are suddenly texting me ahead of every race asking for thoughts and predictions. I’m not sure if this will ever stop feeling at least a little bizarre. But since it’s happening, I’ve also taken the opportunity to tell these people, “If you like F1, it’s time for you to start watching IndyCar.”
Quiet but Real Momentum
The maybe even more bizarre thing is that a fair number of folks are already doing so; you just don’t realize it. Perhaps it’s because IndyCar fans have traditionally been concentrated in the Midwest, whereas F1’s surge has more of a foothold in major East and West Coast regions. But for all of F1’s hype in America—three races on U.S. soil, its drivers and cars appearing regularly in national advertising and social media campaigns, and the 2025 F1 movie—the races reportedly averaged something like 1.3 million viewers last year during ESPN’s final season as the series’ broadcast partner. Apple TV, which took over the rights beginning this year, hasn’t released specific figures but says it has seen another viewership surge. That bodes well for F1’s American future, but the NTT IndyCar Series’ overall numbers stack up strongly in comparison. (For context, the NASCAR Cup Series averages approximately 2.8 million per race.)
Likely unbeknownst and unnoticed outside of diehard IndyCar fans and series stakeholders—and mostly ignored by mainstream media outlets that have gravitated to F1’s American invasion—IndyCar last week reported that its first 10 races of 2026 on Fox have averaged 2,033,000 watchers, a 14 percent jump over 2025. The most recent race, a classic “Who’s gonna win this?” lottery of a contest at the spectacular Road America natural-terrain road course in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin, averaged 1,803,000 viewers. That’s a beyond-staggering 131 percent increase versus the same race last season, with this year’s audience peaking at 2,943,000. They weren’t disappointed by any lack of drama, either, with Arrow McLaren’s Christian Lundgaard driving all the way through the field from last place to claim victory.

Christian Lundgaard at the XPEL Grand Prix at Road America. Credit: Joe Skibinski




