Munich
If you're living in Munich and want to do track days, you'll need to accept that Bavaria doesn't have its own nearby race circuit—both Hockenheimring and Nürburgring sit well outside Bavaria. Your closest realistic options are Austrian tracks across the border: Salzburgring (roughly 150 km east, 1.5-2 hours driving) offers 4.24 km permanent race track located about 10 km east of Salzburg in a valley surrounded by mountains. Austria's second permanent racetrack after the Red Bull Ring, Salzburgring sits well-connected to major cities via motorways including the A1/A8 between Munich and Vienna—just 15-20 minute drive from Salzburg center via highway 158. Red Bull Ring in Spielberg, Styria (roughly 350 km, 3.5-4 hours southeast) represents Austria's Formula 1 venue—4.318 km, 10 turns with dramatic elevation changes and home to Austrian Grand Prix since 2014. The distance makes Red Bull Ring a weekend trip rather than regular track day destination, but F1/MotoGP prestige and Alan Wilson design justify the pilgrimage. Both tracks coordinate track days through various organizations, though Austrian providers dominate rather than German DMSB organizations.
Within Germany, track days from Munich mean long drives: Hockenheimring (roughly 400 km northwest in Baden-Württemberg, 4+ hours) remains Germany's most accessible major circuit with 4.574 km Grand Prix track (after 2002 redesign from original 6.8 km forest layout). Tourist Rides cost €69 for two 20-minute time slots, Drive in Motion Track Days from €1,900 (exclusive event with 25 vehicles, 5x40 min free driving), Porsche Experience Center €450-790 gross. Organizations like Pistenclub e.V. (51 track days in 2025 at 12 racetracks, €120 membership/year), GEDLICH Racing (May 5-6, 2025 Hockenheim track day, two starting groups alternating every 45 minutes), and Event Fahrtrainings coordinate regular events. DEKRA Lausitzring (roughly 450 km northeast in Saxony, 4.5+ hours) provides 3.478 km Grand Prix track with 10 left and 4 right turns, hosting DTM and various track day providers. Nürburgring Nordschleife (roughly 550 km northwest, 5.5+ hours) represents Germany's most legendary track—20.832 km, 73 turns, "The Green Hell"—but distance from Munich makes it special trip rather than regular visit.
Munich's track day situation reveals Bavaria's geographic isolation from Germany's racing circuit infrastructure—the south lacks local options while Nordrhein-Westfalen (Nürburgring), Baden-Württemberg (Hockenheim), Sachsen (Lausitzring) all host tracks. BMW's headquarters in Munich and strong Bavarian automotive culture (BMW, Audi from nearby Ingolstadt) create massive enthusiast community without local race track to play on. The solution becomes weekend road trips—Salzburgring for closest realistic option (1.5-2 hours), Hockenheim for German track day experience (4 hours), Red Bull Ring for F1 bucket-list (3.5-4 hours). DMSB (German Motor Sport Federation) licensing courses run at Hockenheim, Nürburgring, Bilster Berg and Spa-Francorchamps, with all license fees independent of courses and paid directly to DMSB. Pistenclub e.V., Gedlich Racing, Drive in Motion, and BMW M Driving Experience (Hockenheim/Nürburgring half-day to multi-day experiences) offer structured track days. For Munich residents, track days mean either accepting Austria compromise (closer but non-German tracks) or making German track pilgrimages (authentic experience but massive distances). Bavaria's wealth and automotive passion support community regardless—Munich's affluent population (tech, automotive industry, finance) makes expensive weekend track trips feasible, and Alps proximity means fantastic mountain roads partially compensate for missing race track access. The situation's not ideal, but Munich's position as Germany's wealthiest major city means enthusiasts have means to overcome the distances.