If you have been waiting for the moment when Corvette season stops feeling theoretical and starts feeling real, this is it. The 2026 Michelin National Corvette Museum Bash runs April 23–25 in Bowling Green, Kentucky, and the Museum is positioning it exactly where it belongs: as the official kickoff to its on-site event season. More importantly, the schedule shows why Bash still matters. This is not just a parking-lot gathering with a few vendor tables and some polite applause. It is three full days of performance cars, factory insight, road tours, preservation programming, racing history, owner education, and the kind of access that keeps the National Corvette Museum at the center of the hobby.
What makes the 2026 edition especially interesting is the breadth of the program. Bash is hitting every major Corvette nerve at once. Modern performance? Covered. Museum stewardship and long-term preservation? Covered. Corvette Racing history? Covered. Assembly plant leadership, engineering seminars, infotainment support, track activity, guided road tours, a Museum-judged car show, raffles, donor events, and enthusiast fellowship? All there. That wide reach is what sets the 2026 NCM Bash apart from many other calendar apps. It is not trying to be one thing. It is trying to be the place where the full Corvette world comes together under one roof, and this year’s official schedule makes that plain.
The 2026 NCM Bash is where the present and future of Corvette show up together

If you want one headline item that tells you this year’s Bash is serious, start with the performance-car display Chevrolet is bringing to the Museum. All 2026 NCM Bash attendees will be able to see the Corvette ZR1X Nürburgring fast lap car, Corvette ZR1 Nürburgring fast lap car, Corvette Z06 Nürburgring fast lap car, and the Corvette ZR1X dragstrip quarter-mile and 0–60 record car. That is not filler. That is a concentrated display of the current high-water mark for Corvette performance, bringing together some of the most advanced and most publicly significant modern Corvettes in one place. For enthusiasts who follow the car not just as a badge but as a global performance benchmark, that alone makes Bash worth a hard look.
And the Museum is doing the right thing by not treating those cars like silent props. The broader seminar lineup is built to give context to what modern Corvette has become. On Thursday alone, attendees can sit in on a Museum update with President and CEO Bryce Burklow and Board Chairman Michael LaRocca, a Michelin tire-technology session, Corvette infotainment with Paul Koerner, and a Bowling Green Assembly Plant leadership presentation. Friday adds another deep bench of technical and insider programming, including the Corvette Team update with Chief Engineer Josh Holder and Product Marketing Manager Austin Fisher, an LS6 design overview with Mike Kociba, and a session titled “How to Run a Lap Time” featuring engineers connected to active chassis calibration, vehicle dynamics, propulsion development, and GM Motorsports. That is exactly the kind of lineup Corvette owners want from Bash. Not fluff. Not vague marketing. Substance.
There is also a practical side to this that should not be overlooked. Corvette ownership in the modern era is not just about horsepower and paint codes. It is about software, connected systems, infotainment, calibration logic, and understanding how to get the most out of increasingly sophisticated cars. The infotainment seminar covering model years 2005 to present, along with the limited-registration C8 classroom sessions, gives owners a chance to engage with real expertise instead of relying on rumors, message boards, and half-correct social media clips. That kind of owner-facing education has become one of Bash’s most useful roles, and it is a big reason this event carries real value beyond the social side of the weekend.
The 2026 NCM Bash also leans hard into preservation—and that matters

One of the smartest parts of the 2026 NCM Bash schedule is how deliberately it connects Corvette’s future to the work of protecting its past. The Museum’s mission is rooted in the collection, preservation, and celebration of Corvette history, and this Bash puts that mission front and center. Attendees will have access to a preview tour of the future 66,000-square-foot National Corvette Museum Collections facility, including a guided trolley visit to the site and an overview of how the Museum is preparing for the next era of long-term storage, conservation, and preservation. That is a major development for the institution, and it gives Bash something deeper than an event-weekend spectacle. It gives it institutional weight.
That preservation thread continues inside the building as well. Bash includes an exhibit walkthrough of Driven to Preserve, the Museum’s new exhibition focused on how the collections team cares for Corvette artifacts and historically significant vehicles. The exhibit, launched in March as the Museum continues work toward the new collections facility, was created specifically to show visitors what preservation actually looks like behind the curtain. That matters because too many enthusiasts think preservation begins and ends with polished paint. In reality, it is climate control, stewardship, artifact handling, storage logic, conservation planning, archival care, and making hard decisions about restoration versus retention. Bash 2026 puts that work in plain view.

The artifact programming itself is strong. Thursday brings a spotlight on the one-and-only 1983 Corvette, with Curator Bryan Gable discussing how the survivor of a lost model year endured. Friday follows with a spotlight on Neil Armstrong’s recently donated 1967 Corvette, plus a broader “73 Years of Corvette” moment in the Gateway exhibit. Saturday adds an artifact-handling session with the collections team and a Cutaway Corvette Showcase featuring three functional cutaway cars representing the first three generations. That is a smart mix. It serves the fan who wants headline artifacts, the historian who wants interpretation, and the museum-minded enthusiast who understands that the cars alone are only part of the story.
The road tours and track activity give the NCM Bash its movement

Corvette events should not feel static, and the 2026 NCM Bash clearly does not. The schedule is loaded with guided road tours on all three days. Thursday offers caravans to Bardstown, Sumner Crest Winery, and the HotRod MotorTel. Friday repeats the Bardstown and Sumner Crest options. Saturday heads to Heaven Hill and also offers a General Jackson Showboat cruise in Nashville. These are not random add-ons. They are part of the larger Bash formula: get the cars out on the road, put owners in motion, and create shared experiences beyond the Museum grounds. Corvette has always been at its best when driven, and Bash continues to understand that.
That same spirit carries over to the NCM Motorsports Park. Bash attendees are being offered discounted touring laps, with the option of bringing their own car or choosing from a fleet that includes a C8 Stingray, C8 E-Ray, C8 Z06, Camaro SS 1LE, and C7 Stingray on the Park’s 3.2-mile, 23-turn road course in a lead/follow format. There is also High Performance Driving Education on the schedule for Wednesday and Thursday. In other words, this is not just a weekend for looking at Corvettes. It is a weekend for using them. For a Museum event built around America’s sports car, that is exactly the right note to hit.
Corvette Racing still has a proper place here

Bash also does a good job of honoring the competition side of the Corvette story. Thursday evening’s Corvette Racing banquet with Pratt Miller Motorsports brings Brandon Widmer, Ben Bode, and Doug Fehan into the conversation for a look back at last season’s IMSA championship and what comes next. Then on Friday, Hall of Famers Ron Fellows and Johnny O’Connell take the stage for a seminar marking 25 years since Corvette Racing’s historic 2001 season. That is a serious one-two punch for anyone who understands that the Corvette legend was not built on styling and showroom performance alone. It was also built on endurance racing, credibility under pressure, and decades of proving the car where it mattered most.
There is still plenty here for the broader enthusiast crowd
Not every Bash attendee wants to spend the whole weekend in seminars, and the schedule reflects that. There are professional Corvette photo opportunities outside the Skydome on both Friday and Saturday. There is a Museum-judged Corvette car show on Saturday. There are happy hours at the Stingray Grill. There are raffles for a 2026 Black Corvette Z06 Coupe and a 2026 Torch Red Corvette. There is a Ladies Garage session, a Corvette Today live appearance with Steve Garrett, Elfi’s Sisterhood programming, a Sip n’ Paint session, and the usual event merchandise, including the official 2026 Bash T-shirt. In other words, Bash knows how to balance depth with atmosphere. It gives hardcore enthusiasts real content, but it also remembers that part of Corvette culture is simply enjoying the community around the car.
One Friday stop worth making: the Scott Kolecki book signing

For UltimateCorvette.com readers, there is one additional reason to carve out a few minutes on Friday. UltimateCorvette.com creator and founder Scott Kolecki is scheduled to sign copies of his book, Corvette Concept Cars: Developing America’s Favorite Sports Car, on Friday, April 24 from 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., with the exact location still listed as to be determined on the official Bash schedule. Scott’s published author bio describes him as an automotive historian, journalist, and entrepreneur focused on preserving, documenting, and celebrating the complete history of America’s sports car through primary research, period documentation, and original storytelling. That is exactly the kind of perspective that fits Bash.
Just as important, this is a chance to support the Museum while you are there. If you stop by the signing, say hello, and pick up a copy of the book from the NCM gift shop, you are doing more than adding a strong Corvette title to your shelf. You are also supporting the institution that continues to preserve the hardware, history, and stories that make weekends like Bash possible. And that is a pretty good fit for the spirit of the event overall. The signing should not be the centerpiece of anyone’s Bash itinerary, but it absolutely belongs on the list.
Why this Bash feels bigger than a weekend event

The best Corvette events remind you that the car’s story is not linear. It is engineering. It is racing. It is ownership. It is design. It is preservation. It is community. It is the assembly plant. It is the Museum. It is the track. It is the archive. What makes the 2026 NCM Bash look so strong is that it does not reduce Corvette culture to one of those things. It puts all of them on stage at once. The result is a three-day event that feels less like a spring gathering and more like a concentrated snapshot of where Corvette stands right now—and why people still care so deeply about where it goes next.
For UltimateCorvette.com, that is the real takeaway. Bash 2026 is not important just because it is busy. It is important because it is layered. You can go for the record-setting ZR1X and Z06 hardware. You can go for the racing names. You can go for the road tours and laps. You can go for the artifact talks, the 1983 Corvette, Neil Armstrong’s 1967, the cutaways, or the Museum’s new preservation push. However you come at it, the event offers a credible argument for why Bowling Green still sits at the center of the Corvette world. And if you were looking for the point in the calendar when Corvette season truly starts to feel alive, this year’s Bash looks like it may be the answer.

