EchoPark Speedway's summer NASCAR event renamed Dollar Tree 400 for 2027
Yahoo Sports • 1 min read • Latest: Jul 13, 2026, 6:11 AM
Last updated Jul 13, 2026
EchoPark Speedway will introduce the Dollar Tree 400 as the new name for its summer NASCAR Cup Series event starting in 2027. This change follows 16 years under the Quaker State banner, which began in 2011. Despite the name change, the event format will remain similar, maintaining its 400-mile distance and competitive racing conditions at EchoPark Speedway. The race will continue to take place at night, featuring the track's notable 28-degree banking.
- •Dollar Tree 400 replaces Quaker State 400 starting in 2027
- •Quaker State branding lasted for 16 years, debuting in 2011
- •Race will remain a 400-mile NASCAR Cup Series event
- •Night race continues at EchoPark Speedway with 28-degree banking
- 6:11 AMYahoo Sports — EchoPark Speedway’s Summer NASCAR Classic to Become the Dollar Tree 400 Beginning in 2027
"A new era is coming to EchoPark Speedway as the track’s signature summer NASCAR Cup Series event will carry a new name beginning in 2027. After several seasons under the Quaker State banner, the race will become the Dollar Tree 400, signaling the start of a new title sponsorship for one of NASCAR’s premier summer…
Sources
External linksOriginal reporting and copyright belong to the linked sources. SportsNewsReport.com aggregates and links — it does not republish full articles.
Related Stories
Last 14 days
NASCAR•Jul 13, 2026, 7:02 AMWallace argues he 'did not advance' his position with penalized yellow line move- NASCAR•Jul 13, 2026, 6:30 AMOfficial race results: 2026 NASCAR Cup at Atlanta II
- NASCAR•Jul 13, 2026, 6:21 AMRyan Blaney Dominates at EchoPark Speedway for Second Win of the Season
- Motorsports•Jul 13, 2026, 5:01 AMColumn: NASCAR Deserves Tons of Credit for Going Full Distance at Quaker State 400
- NASCAR•Jul 13, 2026, 3:01 AMWhy NASCAR Fans Love Having Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the Broadcast Booth
- NASCAR•Jul 13, 2026, 2:44 AMHow Does NASCAR Dry a Wet Track? Inside the Air Titan System
