Mille Miglia 2026: How to Watch Italy's Greatest Vintage Car Event and Where to Stand When the Ferraris Go By
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: April 2026.
The Mille Miglia (the Thousand Miles — the distance from Brescia to Rome and back via the specific route that defined the original race from 1927 to 1957) is the most beautiful motorsport event in the world and the only one whose course runs through the everyday streets of Italian cities and villages without road closure — the vintage cars (pre-1957, the year the original race was permanently cancelled after a fatal accident killed 9 spectators and driver Alfonso de Portago) drive on the public road, surrounded by people watching from the pavement, in a procession of approximately 400 vehicles that takes 4-5 days to complete the circuit and passes through every town on the route at a specific scheduled time.
The Mille Miglia is not a race in the modern motorsport sense — it is a regularity rally, where competitors are scored on how precisely they match target times at each checkpoint rather than on outright speed. The practical consequence for the spectator: the cars pass at speeds of 60-100 km/h in the open countryside and 30-50 km/h in the town centers, making it the safest motorsport viewing available and the most photographically accessible (the cars pass at a pace that allows a 1/250 second shutter speed to capture them sharply without a tracking sequence).
Mille Miglia 2026: Key Information
Dates and Route
The Mille Miglia 2026 typically takes place in mid-May (exact dates announced at millemiglia.it approximately 8-12 months in advance; the 2025 edition was May 13-17). The route: Brescia (start, Thursday evening) → Ferrara → Ravenna → Pesaro → Ancona → Pescara → Rome (Friday evening arrival) → Siena → Florence → Bologna → Modena → Parma → Brescia (Sunday arrival). The exact route varies slightly each year; the millemiglia.it website publishes the complete stage-by-stage route with precise timing for each town approximately 4-6 weeks before the event.
Best Spectator Locations
The specific best viewing locations on the Mille Miglia route: Brescia start (Thursday evening): the cars depart from Viale Venezia and the central Brescia circuit in a ceremonial start — the crowd, the noise, the smell of vintage cars warming up for the first stage; attendance free, extremely crowded by 6pm. Ravenna overnight: the cars stop in Ravenna on Thursday night for the first stage check — a relaxed opportunity to examine the vehicles up close in the Piazza del Popolo without the start-line crowds. Tuscany open roads (Friday/Saturday): the specific Mille Miglia experience of standing on a Tuscan hilltop road as a line of pre-1957 Ferraris, Alfa Romeos, Maseratis, and Mercedes-Benz 300SLs passes through the cypress-lined lanes — this combination exists nowhere else in the world. Position at any point on the SR2 south of Siena or the roads through the Chianti on Friday/Saturday afternoon.
Q&A: Mille Miglia
Do I need tickets to watch the Mille Miglia?
Watching from the roadside on the public road is completely free — the Mille Miglia is a public road event and the road remains open to traffic throughout (the cars have priority but do not close the road to other vehicles). Some specific areas — the start and finish ceremonies in Brescia, the checkpoints in certain piazzas — have ticketed VIP enclosures within larger free public areas. The experience for the free spectator: the cars pass through your position on the route at the scheduled time; position yourself 2-3 hours before the expected passage time for a good roadside position.
Internal Links
- Motor Sport Italy: The Other Speed Tradition
- May Italy: Mille Miglia in Shoulder Season
- Ferrari Museum Maranello: Motor Heritage
- Photographing the Mille Miglia: Camera Settings
- Mille Miglia Route Food: Emilia-Romagna and Tuscany
- May Northern Italy: The Event Calendar
- Brescia: Start City Medieval Heritage