Index  ›  tech  ›  Forbes
tech · Forbes ↗

10 Things You Must See At Goodwood Festival Of Speed 2026

Forbes Published Jul 9, 2026 Reviewed Jul 9, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
The FOS Future Lab at the 2026 Goodwood Festival of Speed is presented by Randox and highlights four themes: New Frontiers, Unseen Worlds, Intelligent Systems and Extending Reality.
4 themes · FOS Future Lab 2026 themes
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The 2026 Goodwood Festival of Speed theme is 'The Rivals, Epic Racing Duels', marking 60 years since Ford's 1-2-3 victory over Ferrari at Le Mans in 1966.
60 years · Ford's 1-2-3 Le Mans victory anniversary50 years · James Hunt vs. Niki Lauda 1976 F1 championship rivalry anniversary
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The FOS Future Lab 2026 includes NASA’s return to the Moon exhibit focused on the Artemis II mission.
1 mission · NASA Artemis II mission
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The 2026 Goodwood Festival of Speed features a 1.16-mile Hillclimb course where vehicles from historic racers to electric prototypes compete.
1.16 mile · Goodwood Hillclimb course
View source ↗

The 2026 Goodwood Festival of Speed has evolved beyond racing heritage, now showcasing the past, present, and future of mobility, innovation, and technology. While the iconic Hillclimb remains central, featuring diverse vehicles from historic racers to electric prototypes, the event's scope has broadened significantly. This year's theme, "The Rivals," celebrates legendary motorsport duels like Ford vs. Ferrari and Hunt vs. Lauda. The FOS Future Lab highlights cutting-edge technologies, from space exploration and AI to robotics and quantum computing, offering a glimpse into future enterprise. Formula 1 has a major presence, alongside a new Fan Zone for intimate interactions. The First Glance Paddock reveals new car trends, including electrification and luxury, while the Supercar Paddock and Cartier Style et Luxe celebrate design and performance. Goodwood is now a powerful lens on innovation, blending motorsport, technology, and design.

Goodwood Festival of Speed has always been one of the best places in the world to see the past, present and future of mobility in one extraordinary setting. Today is my first day at the 2026 event, and what struck me most was how much the Festival has evolved beyond a celebration of cars and racing heritage into a showcase for innovation, design, technology and human ambition.

Yes, the Hill is still the beating heart of Goodwood. The sound, speed and spectacle of legendary machines launching past Goodwood House remains the experience everyone comes for. But this year, the wider story is even bigger. From epic racing rivalries and Formula 1 stars to electric racing, future mobility, supercars, luxury design and frontier technologies, the 2026 Festival of Speed feels like a living museum of speed and a glimpse of what comes next.

Here are the highlights I think visitors should make time for.

You can plan your day around paddocks, interviews, launches and exhibitions, but nothing quite compares with standing beside the famous Goodwood Hill as cars and bikes from different eras come past at speed.

Goodwood describes the Hill as the centrepiece of the Festival, bringing together vehicles from the past, present and future of motorsport, as well as the latest road cars. That is exactly why it works so well. In the space of a few minutes, you might see a historic racer, a modern Formula 1 car, an electric prototype, a supercar and a priceless motorsport icon all tackling the same 1.16-mile course.

For me, this is where Goodwood’s magic really lives. It is not just a static display of famous machines. It is the sight, sound and sometimes smell of engineering history being used properly. My advice is simple: do not just walk past the Hill on your way somewhere else. Stop, watch a full batch and let the variety sink in.

The 2026 Festival theme is “The Rivals, Epic Racing Duels,” and it gives this year’s event a powerful emotional hook. Motorsport is never only about machines. It is about personalities, pressure, risk, brilliance and rivalry.

Goodwood is using this year’s theme to celebrate some of racing’s most intense contests, with cars and bikes from Formula 1, MotoGP, World Superbikes, IndyCar, the World Endurance Championship, the Isle of Man TT, the World Rally Championship and touring cars all forming part of the story.

Two anniversaries give the theme extra weight. This year marks 60 years since Ford’s famous 1-2-3 victory over Ferrari at Le Mans in 1966, and 50 years since James Hunt won the 1976 Formula 1 World Championship after his extraordinary rivalry with Niki Lauda. Goodwood says the three Ford GT MkIIs from the 1966 Le Mans finish will reunite on the Hill for a rare demonstration, while Hunt and Lauda’s 1976 battle will also be remembered.

This is exactly the kind of storytelling that makes Goodwood so special. You do not need to be a motorsport historian to feel the drama. The cars, the setting and the context do the work.

One of my must-see areas this year is FOS Future Lab presented by Randox. I have worked with Goodwood Future Lab before, and I think it has become one of the most important parts of the Festival because it connects the thrill of motorsport with the wider technologies shaping our future.

For 2026, Future Lab has moved to a new home near the cricket pitch and is built around four themes: New Frontiers, Unseen Worlds, Intelligent Systems and Extending Reality. The exhibition includes NASA’s return to the Moon, underwater human habitats, quantum computing, robotics, electronic skin, brainwave-generated art and spatial content creation.

What makes Future Lab so effective is that it makes complex technologies feel tangible. Visitors can meet robots, explore quantum computing, see how machines are learning to feel and experience technologies that might change healthcare, space exploration, ocean research, creative production and education. This is also where Goodwood becomes a window into the future of enterprise technology. The same advances on display here, from AI and robotics to quantum computing, spatial experiences, sensors and health data, are already starting to reshape how organizations operate, innovate and compete.

Some of the standout exhibits include Randox’s RanChip Insight 360 preventative health platform, the Return to the Moon exhibit focused on NASA’s Artemis II mission, Deep’s open-ocean underwater habitat, the National Quantum Computing Centre, Enchanted Tools’ fox-eared Mirokaï robots, OLO Robotics’ plain-English robot programming, TouchLab’s electronic skin and Emotiv’s Brain Art experience, which turns live brain activity into generative artwork.

It is easy to come to Goodwood for the cars and then find yourself talking about space, AI, robotics, health data and quantum computing. That is why Future Lab is worth making time for, especially if you are visiting with young people or anyone curious about science and technology. And if you are there on Saturday, do not miss my talk with astronaut Tim Peake at 3pm in the Future Lab, titled From ISS to Artemis: Tim Peake on the Next Chapter in Human Spaceflight.

Formula 1 has a huge presence again at Goodwood in 2026, and the line-up gives fans plenty to look out for. Alpine, Aston Martin, Ferrari, McLaren and Mercedes are among the teams confirmed, with current and historic cars, team appearances and driver activations forming part of the weekend.

For many fans, the McLaren presence will be a major draw. Lando Norris is due to appear on the Balcony of Goodwood House on Saturday, while McLaren will also celebrate the 50th anniversary of James Hunt’s 1976 World Championship by bringing the M23 to the Hill.

Mercedes is also bringing its biggest ever presence to the Festival, including a new fan hub where visitors can experience the challenge of an F1 pit stop using the 2018 W09 as the test bed.

This is another reason Goodwood feels different from almost any other motorsport event. It gives fans access to the people, teams and machines they usually only see on screens, but in a much more relaxed and intimate setting.

New for 2026 is the FOS Fan Zone presented by Pirelli, which is designed to bring visitors closer to the personalities and culture of motorsport. The Fan Zone stage will host Q&As, podcasts and panels with names including Damon Hill, Tom Kristensen, Emanuele Pirro, Gerhard Berger and Williams Racing Team Principal James Vowles, alongside sim rigs, merchandise and photo opportunities.

This feels like a smart addition because it recognizes how much motorsport fandom has changed. Fans no longer just want to watch the action. They want behind-the-scenes stories, access to drivers and engineers, interactive experiences and content they can share.

If you are going to Goodwood for one day only, I would check the Fan Zone schedule early and build at least one session into your plan.

The First Glance Paddock is always one of the best places to see where the car industry is heading. Goodwood describes it as the place where leading manufacturers show their latest products, often using the Festival as a global launch platform.

This year’s new car line-up reflects the huge transformation happening across the industry, from electrification and hybrid powertrains to luxury performance and new entrants from China.

Goodwood highlights include the UK launch of BYD’s premium Denza brand, with models including the Denza B5, Denza D9 and the all-new Denza Z9GT, which is expected to be a major talking point thanks to a claimed 0-62mph time of 2.7 seconds. Renault is also showcasing its newest electric models, including the Renault 5 Turbo 3E, a modern reinterpretation of the classic Renault 5 Turbo and Turbo 2.

Honda is another brand worth watching, with the world dynamic debut of the Prelude HRC Concept, a performance-focused version of the Prelude developed with parts from Honda’s racing division.

For anyone interested in the future of mobility, this paddock is essential. It shows how performance, electrification, design and brand reinvention are colliding.

Goodwood’s Supercar Paddock remains one of the great crowd-pleasers. It is the place to see many of the world’s most desirable high-performance cars in one place, not just sitting still, but also running on the Hill.

What makes this area so appealing is the sheer concentration of dream machines. It is a reminder that even as the car industry shifts toward electrification, autonomy and software-defined vehicles, emotional design and performance still matter.

For business leaders, there is a lesson here too. The most successful products often combine technology with desire. Supercars may be extreme examples, but they show how engineering, brand, storytelling and experience come together to create something people care about.

Every year, the Central Feature in front of Goodwood House becomes one of the Festival’s defining images. In 2026, the installation celebrates Singer, the company known for its reimagining of the classic Porsche 911 through a blend of engineering, material science and craftsmanship.

This is a fitting choice because Singer represents a fascinating part of modern car culture. It is not about nostalgia for its own sake. It is about taking an iconic design and rethinking it through modern technology, precision and obsessive attention to detail.

In a world obsessed with disruption, Singer is a reminder that innovation can also mean refinement. Sometimes the future is not about replacing the past, but re-engineering it beautifully.

If the Hill is Goodwood’s headline act, the Forest Rally Stage is one of its best hidden pleasures. Set in woodland at the top of the Hill, it gives visitors a completely different kind of motorsport experience, with rally cars tackling a chalk-surface stage in a more natural environment.

It is worth the walk because rallying feels different up close. It is rawer, looser and more physical. You get a stronger sense of the driver’s skill as cars slide, bounce and correct through the trees.

For anyone visiting with children or anyone who wants a break from the busiest areas around Goodwood House, the Forest Rally Stage is a brilliant change of pace.

Goodwood is loud, fast and busy, which makes Cartier Style et Luxe feel like a wonderfully elegant counterpoint. Set on the private lawns of Goodwood House, it is one of the world’s leading concours d’elegance events and celebrates imagination and innovation in automotive design.

This is the place to slow down and appreciate cars as design objects. After the intensity of the Hill, it offers a quieter reminder that the automobile has always been as much about beauty, culture and craftsmanship as performance.

What makes Goodwood Festival of Speed so compelling is the way it compresses so many stories into one place. It is motorsport history, live performance, luxury design, future mobility, science, technology and family-friendly entertainment all happening at once.

The bigger story is not just that Goodwood is a fantastic day out. It is that the Festival has become a powerful lens on the future. The same event can celebrate Ford versus Ferrari, James Hunt versus Niki Lauda, the latest Formula 1 technology, electric racing, quantum computing, robotics, space exploration and preventative health.

Goodwood feels especially relevant because the future of mobility will not be shaped by cars alone. It will be shaped by AI, data, materials science, energy systems, sensors, immersive technology, automation and new expectations from consumers.

Goodwood brings those worlds together in a way that is accessible, exciting and deeply human. You can come for the noise and spectacle, but you leave with a much broader sense of where technology, performance and innovation are heading.

If you are visiting this year, my advice is to explore beyond the obvious. Watch the Hill, of course. Spend time with the F1 cars and supercars. But also visit Future Lab, walk up to the rally stage, explore the First Glance Paddock, listen to a Fan Zone session and take a moment to appreciate the Central Feature and Style et Luxe.

The best way to experience Goodwood is not to treat it as one event, but as many different futures happening side by side.

This article was originally published by Forbes ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error