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H1 Unlimited Unveils Calendar & New Race Format for 2026 Season

H1 Unlimited has confirmed a four-race 2026 season schedule and announced a new competition format that will debut at the APBA Gold Cup in Madison, Indiana, in July.

The new system replaces draw-based positioning with a cumulative scoring structure called Total Weekend Points, which connects Time Trials, preliminary heats, and the Final into a single continuous competition. Under the previous format, lane selection in heats was determined partly by draw. Under the new one, every session contributes points that shape the rest of the weekend.

2026 Season Schedule

Dates Event Location
30 May Preseason Testing Tri-Cities, WA
3–5 July APBA Gold Cup Madison, IN
24–26 July Columbia Cup Tri-Cities, WA
31 July–2 August Apollo Mechanical Cup Seattle, WA
18–20 September Bill Muncey Cup San Diego, CA

Madison is the only venue east of the Mississippi. The remaining three race events are on the West Coast, with Tri-Cities hosting both the preseason test and the Columbia Cup. The season closes in San Diego on September 18–20.

With four scoring rounds, reliability will be at a premium. A single retirement or disqualification could have an outsized effect on the championship outcome.

How the New Format Works

Points accumulation begins in Time Trials. The fastest boat earns 200 points, with a sliding scale down to 85 points for ninth place. From tenth onwards, each position is worth five points fewer than the one above it.

Time Trial Points

Place Points
1st 200
2nd 180
3rd 160
4th 140
5th 120
6th 100
7th 95
8th 90
9th 85
10th onwards –5 from position above

Those Time Trial points then determine heat placement and lane selection. The preliminary heats use an inverted odd/even grouping: for an eight-boat field, Heat 1A draws boats finishing 7th, 5th, 3rd, and 1st in Time Trials, while Heat 1B takes 8th, 6th, 4th, and 2nd. Lane choice order within each heat runs from the lower-ranked qualifier first, so the slowest qualifier in each group picks their lane before the fastest. The intent is to prevent the quickest boats from being stacked into the same early heat.

From Round 2 onwards, heat groupings and lane selection are determined by Total Weekend Points rather than Time Trial order alone. A boat that performs well in Time Trials but struggles in Heat 1 will see its position in the draw reflect that.

The Final

Qualification for the Final is decided by Total Weekend Points accumulated across Time Trials and all preliminary heats. Lane choice in the Final follows the same principle: the boat with the highest points total picks first, the second-highest picks second, and so on.

There is one additional incentive built in for the championship leader. The boat carrying the most Total Weekend Points is entitled to select Lane 1 once and Lane 2 once across all Finals during the season, providing a tactical advantage at the point in the weekend when it matters most.

H1 Unlimited announced the new format on March 3rd, describing it as reflecting the league’s commitment to competitive integrity. The format applies across all four race events in 2026, with Madison providing the first test of how the new structure plays out on the water.