Le Mans Then vs Now — And How to Do It Right in 2026
If you’ve been before, you’ll already feel it.
If you haven’t… you’ll notice it anyway.
Le Mans has changed. Not overnight—but not slowly either. The shift since COVID has been real, and it’s not going back.
This isn’t a bad thing, but some might say it is!.
But it does mean you need to approach the week a bit differently.
🕰️ Then vs Now — What’s Actually Changed?
Then (The Old Days)
Camp where you liked (more or less)
Buy tickets at the gate
Huge open viewing areas
Minimal facilities
Cheap food (mostly terrible)
Organised chaos everywhere
Now (Modern Le Mans)
Allocated pitches — stay inside your box
More restricted viewing areas
Proper fan zones with big screens
Clean, organised, well-run campsites
Better food… but you’ll pay for it
And yes—it feels more “corporate”.
But here’s the trade-off:
Showers that actually work
Toilets you don’t fear
Transport that functions
A circuit that can handle massive crowds
It’s different—but in many ways, better.
⚠️ The Big Shift: You Can’t Just Wing It Anymore
This is the key takeaway.
Old Le Mans rewarded turning up and figuring it out.
Modern Le Mans rewards having a plan.
If you don’t adapt, you’ll spend half the week:
Stuck in queues
Missing good stuff
Wondering why it feels hard work
✅ How to Do Le Mans Right in 2026
(also see other posts about this)
1. Use the Early Week Properly
Don’t save everything for the weekend.
Explore the circuit
Visit the village
Do exhibitions and displays
Get your bearings
By Saturday, it’s busy. By Sunday, it’s chaos.
2. Treat Friday Like a Main Event
Friday isn’t a filler day anymore—it’s one of the best days of the week.
Do it properly:
Pit lane walk
Track walk / cycle
Drivers parade in town
Displays and events around the circuit
Skip Friday, and you’ve missed a huge part of Le Mans.
3. Use the Fan Zones
You might not want to—but you should.
They’re:
Well placed
Easy to follow the race from
Good for food and drink
Perfect for:
Night stints
Meeting points
Taking a break without missing the race
4. Get Off-Site At Least Once
Le Mans isn’t just the circuit.
Use the tram and go into town:
Old town (Cité Plantagenêt), SEE MORE HERE
Bars and restaurants
Drivers parade atmosphere
It’s part of the experience—not an optional extra.
5. Socialise at the Campsite
The circuit is for the race.
The campsite is for everything else.
Chat to neighbours
Share a beer
Wander a bit
That’s where Le Mans still feels like Le Mans.
🚧 Arrival Day — What Actually Happens
No matter how well you plan… expect a bit of chaos.
Typical experience:
Traffic building near Arnage and Beauséjour
Confusing routing near campsites
Slow-moving entry queues
Ticket checks that vary wildly
Early in the week:
You may end up explaining your own ticket to the steward.
Later in the week:
They’ve seen it all before and wave you through.
Just go with it.
🎟️ The Steward / Security Rule (Important)
There is one universal truth at Le Mans:
No two stewards (Security at gates) will react the same way.
The rules about bringing alcohol and bottles in are complex and not consistant !
You might find:
One lets you through without looking
Another checks everything twice
Another invents a rule on the spot
Don’t argue.
Smile, nod, adjust, move on.
⛺ Campsite Reality
Modern camping is more structured than it used to be.
Key rules:
Stay inside your marked pitch
Keep your car and gear within your space
Talk to neighbours before spreading out
Encroaching = arguments
Talking = usually fine
Private sites are more relaxed—but still organised.
🍺 Campsite Etiquette (Unwritten Rules)
Say hello to your neighbours
Bring beer (this helps… a lot)
Don’t take over shared space without asking
Respect that some people really care about their setup
Do this right, and you’ll make friends quickly.
🛒 The Supermarket Run (Do This Right)
Almost everyone makes the same mistake:
👉 Trying to shop before setting up camp
Don’t.
Instead:
Get into your pitch
Set up your base
Then go shopping
Also worth knowing:
Parts of the circuit close during race week
Some supermarkets become awkward to reach
Beer deals are often handed out at the entrance—take the vouchers
🚗 The Drive Down — Where It Really Starts
Le Mans doesn’t start at the circuit.
It starts somewhere between the ferry and the first green sign.
You’ll notice:
Cars that look “like yours”
Subtle nods between drivers
Convoys forming naturally
By the time you’re close:
Everyone’s smiling
Everyone’s ready
It’s part of the ritual.
Don't forget your Stickers! CLICK HERE
🚫 Leaving Early? Plan It Now
This catches people out every year.
Recent changes mean:
Movement from campsites may be restricted before the end
Traffic builds heavily just after the finish
If you need a quick exit:
Park smart (edge of circuit if possible)
Plan your route in advance
Don’t assume you can just leave when you want
Get it right and you’re gone in 15 minutes
Get it wrong and you’re stuck for hours
❤️ Le Mans Is Still About People
For all the changes, this hasn’t shifted.
Le Mans is still:
Groups of friends returning every year
New people joining in
Campsite conversations that last hours
You can turn up knowing no one…
…and leave with plans for next year.
🔁 The Cycle Never Really Ends
You leave on Sunday.
By Monday:
You’re replaying moments
Talking about what you’d do differently
Half-planning next year
That’s just how it works.
🧭 Final Thought
Yes, it’s more organised.
Yes, it’s more expensive.
Yes, it’s less chaotic than it used to be.
But if you approach it the right way…
It’s still one of the best events you’ll ever experience.
See you there.



