Rebel 400


The Rebel 400 was a NASCAR Cup Series race held at Darlington Raceway in Darlington, South Carolina, USA. A race was held in May at the track in 1952, however the event did not become a regular one on the NASCAR schedule until 1957, as a race in the Convertible Division, known as the Rebel 300. In 1966, the race was expanded to, and in 1973 to. For a time, the race was held on or around Confederate Memorial Day, which is observed on May 10 in the state of South Carolina.
In 1994, the race was returned to 400 miles. In 2005, as part of the settlement of the Ferko lawsuit and as part of a schedule realignment, Darlington was forced to give up one of it's two races; the Rebel 400 was dropped and the Southern 500 moved to the spring until 2015.
In 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, NASCAR announced it would be running two Darlington races in May, replacing the Chicagoland Speedway event and the Richmond Raceway spring race and also marking the return of spring Darlington racing. The track hosted a 400-mile race called The Real Heroes 400 on Sunday, May 17 followed by a 500-kilometer race called the Toyota 500 on Wednesday, May 20.

Notable races

Track length notes

Multiple winners (teams)

Manufacturer wins