Feld Motor Sports, Inc., and MX Sports Pro Racing, Inc. announced today the 2025 schedules for the Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship and Pro Motocross Championship, sanctioned by AMA Pro Racing. The indoor and outdoor seasons of the SuperMotocross World Championship Series consists of 17 Supercross races and 11 Pro Motocross races, providing 28 rounds of regular season competition building towards the postseason and the 2025 SuperMotocross World Championship Finals, fueled by Monster Energy.
Words and Images by Feld Motor Sports, Inc & MX Sports Pro Racing,
Supercross and Pro Motocross pre-sale begins Tuesday, October 1 at 10 a.m. ET for preferred customers and will run through the following Monday, October 7. Tickets for all Supercross and Pro Motocross races will then become available to the public starting on Tuesday, October 8, at 10 a.m. ET and then at 10 a.m. local time in each subsequent time zone. Fans can sign up for preferred access or make ticket purchases online at SupercrossLIVE.com and promotocross.com.
The 17-round Supercross schedule is poised to visit 16 different cities spread across 13 states, from California and Arizona to Alabama and Pennsylvania, which includes four rounds in the Northeast as the SMX League continues to drive growth of the sport within the region.
As is tradition, the Monster Energy Supercross season will begin in Southern California at Angel Stadium of Anaheim on Saturday, January 11. Angel Stadium and the city of Anaheim have become synonymous with the start of the Supercross season as the venue has hosted 33 season openers, the most of any venue in the sport. A second visit to Angel Stadium will come on Saturday, January 25, with a stop to Snapdragon Stadium in San Diego in between on Saturday, January 18. Glendale, Arizona will round out the initial West Coast run on Saturday, February 1 at State Farm Stadium.
Returning to the schedule in 2025 will be stops to Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida on Saturday, February 8, Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan on Saturday, February 15, AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas on Saturday, February 22 while the historic 55th running of the Daytona Supercross will take place in Daytona Beach, Florida on Saturday, March 1 at Daytona International Speedway.
Round 9 will see Supercross back in Indianapolis, Indiana at Lucas Oil Stadium on Saturday, March 8, followed by a return to Protective Stadium in Birmingham, Alabama on Saturday, March 22 and a cross-country trek west to Lumen Field in Seattle, Washington on Saturday, March 29.
The month of April will play host to a Northeast swing that begins with a stop to Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts on Saturday, April 5, followed by visits to Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on Saturday, April 12, MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey on Saturday, April 19, and what will more than likely be the most anticipated market return in some time with a visit to Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on Saturday, April 26.
With the amount of fandom the sport has in the region, Supercross has only been staged in Pittsburgh twice throughout its fifty plus year history, first in 1978, followed by a second visit five years later in 1983. Both events took place at the now defunct Three Rivers Stadium, which makes Acrisure Stadium, home to the 6-time Superbowl winning Pittsburgh Steelers, a first-time venue for the sport.
The Supercross season will conclude on Saturday, May 10, at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City to once again crown a Supercross Champion. Utah – The State of Sport, has developed into a fitting destination for the final round of the Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship as it has become home to many world-class sporting events.
Following a one-week break in action, the focus will shift to the summer outdoors, where the Pro Motocross Championship will host its 54th season of competition for the second half of the SMX regular season. The 11-round campaign will once again consist of the sport’s most iconic venues, which span across 10 different states and well-known regions, from Southern California and the Pacific Northwest, to New England and the Appalachians, as well as the Rocky Mountains and Great Lakes. With 22 grueling motos set to challenge the fastest and most talented racers on the planet, the Pro Motocross Championship remains arguably the most difficult test in all motorsports.
The season will begin, as it always does, over Memorial Day weekend, where Southern California’s Fox Raceway at Pala will kick off the summer on Saturday, May 24, with the Fox Raceway National. From there, the championship journey will travel to Northern California’s Prairie City SVRA for the storied Hangtown Motocross Classic on May 31, followed by the mile-high altitude of Colorado’s Thunder Valley Motocross Park for the Thunder Valley National on June 7, before heading east for the famed Father’s Day tradition of the High Point National on June 14 from Pennsylvania’s High Point Raceway.
After the first off-weekend of the summer the action will resume on June 28 from Massachusetts’ moto sand box at The Wick 338 for the Southwick National. The championship will then reach its halfway point over Independence Day weekend, on July 5, with the legendary holiday celebration that is the RedBud National from Michigan’s RedBud MX. The Land of 10,000 Lakes awaits on July 12 as Minnesota’s Spring Creek MX Park hosts the Spring Creek National, before the final stop in the Pacific Time Zone on July 19, where the Pacific Northwest and Washington’s scenic Washougal MX Park provide the setting for the Washougal National.
The in-season “summer break” will bring quiet for two weekends before kicking off the three-race stretch run to crown champions. The closing trio of races will provide a minor shift in traditional event dates, as the Ironman National will move from its usual placement as the season finale and will instead open the stretch run on August 9 from Indiana’s Ironman Raceway. Central New York’s iconic Unadilla MX will host the penultimate round on August 16 with the Unadilla National, before heading to the greater Washington D.C. area for the Pro Motocross Championship Final on August 23, where Southern Maryland’s Budds Creek Motocross Park will host the Budds Creek National.
Once the Edison Dye Cup (450 Class) and Gary Jones Cup (250 Class) have been awarded to bring the regular season to a close, the field of postseason racers will also be set for the impending SuperMotocross World Championship Finals, where three postseason races will once again determine the season’s ultimate champions.
All 17 rounds of the Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship and 11 rounds of the Pro Motocross Championship will be streamed live domestically on Peacock, while broadcast coverage will be shared between NBC, USA Network, and CNBC. The complete television schedule and broadcast talent line up will be released closer to the start of the season.
Internationally, all 17 rounds of the Monster Energy AMA Supercross Championship and 11 rounds of the Pro Motocross Championship will be available to stream live and on-demand via the SuperMotocross Video Pass, available to fans everywhere outside the U.S. in both English and Spanish. Visit Peacock (Domestic) and SuperMotocross.tv (International) for additional details.
2024 has proven to be a historic year for Supercross and Motocross racing as the SuperMotocross World Championship Finals have added a new layer of intrigue and excitement to the sport. In just its second year, both Jett Lawrence and Haiden Deegan have both won back-to-back SMX World Championships and will continue to carry that momentum into the 2025 season.
Dates and venues for the 2025 SuperMotocross World Championship Finals, fueled by Monster Energy and subsequent ticketing information will be released in the coming months.