
If you have a rookie license, you need a 3.0 Safety Rating or higher and drive four races or four time trials to be promoted to D class.

Every class has multiple series’ where you can earn both iRating and Safety Rating – the higher up the spectrum you get the more series’ you will unlock. In all the disciplines, there are classes from Rookie to A license. From here, you can hone in on the different types of series, but first, you might realise you can’t race in all of them… How classes affect the series’ you race in All the available series have a schedule, where you’ll be able to find what time the series races at, and at what tracks. The thirteenth week is a special one, in this week there comes an update for the next season, and in this week you cannot gain or lose safety rating or iRating. There are thirteen weeks in a season, twelve weeks of racing for championship points. IRacing works with a weekly calendar, where each week there is a different track in every racing series there is. As you know though, they all have their own variety of series’ where you can take to the track and experience iRacing at its best, so let’s delve into their different types. Each discipline brings its own unique set of challenges and requires a wide range of skills to compete at the highest level. There are four different disciplines in iRacing Road Racing, Oval Racing, Dirt Road Racing and Dirt Oval Racing.

Today, we are going to look into the different iRacing Series, how they work and what you need to enter them.
