NASA HPDE Guide

NASA (National Auto Sport Association) runs one of the largest HPDE programs in the country. HPDE stands for High Performance Driver Education — it's structured driver instruction on real race circuits, organized into four run groups based on experience level. NASA HPDE is the most common entry point for drivers who want to go fast on a track legally and safely.

The Four Run Groups

GroupExperience LevelInstructorPassing
HPDE 1No track experience requiredRequired (in-car)No passing
HPDE 2HPDE 1 completedRequired (in-car)Passing zones only, with signal
HPDE 3HPDE 2 signed offOptional (out of car)Designated zones, by signal
HPDE 4HPDE 3 signed offNot requiredOpen passing (region dependent)

You cannot self-promote between groups — advancement requires sign-off from your instructor and approval from the event organizer. This is intentional. The structured progression is what makes HPDE safe. Don't try to skip groups.

Gear Requirements by Group

ItemHPDE 1–2HPDE 3HPDE 4
HelmetSA2015+ requiredSA2015+ requiredSA2020 required (most regions)
Driving SuitNot requiredRecommendedRequired (most regions)
HANSNot requiredNot requiredRequired with harness; recommended otherwise
GlovesNot requiredNot requiredRequired (most regions)
Fire ExtinguisherNot requiredRecommendedRequired, in car

Requirements vary significantly by NASA region. The table above reflects common standards — your specific region may require suits at HPDE 3 or have different helmet certification requirements. Always read your event's supplemental regulations.

Helmet for NASA HPDE

An SA2020 or SA2015 helmet is required at all NASA HPDE events. At HPDE 4, most regions require SA2020 specifically. Buy SA2020 if you're starting now — you'll be covered for all groups. A Snell M-rated helmet is not accepted.

Best HPDE Helmet Editor's Pick
Zamp RZ-42Y (SA2020)
SA2020, excellent entry price, available in multiple shell sizes for proper fit. The most common helmet you'll see at HPDE events at every experience level.
~$200–$260Zamp / Summit
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Car Requirements

NASA HPDE has formal tech inspection. Common requirements across all groups:

Brake fluid is the most common tech failure

NASA regions frequently require fresh brake fluid — some specify within 12 months, others require you to flush and bleed at the track. Use a high-temp fluid like Motul RBF600 or Castrol SRF. DOT 3 fluid from a stock car will boil at HPDE 3+.

Your First NASA HPDE Event

  1. Register online: NASA events fill up. Register weeks in advance, not the night before.
  2. Register as HPDE 1: even if you have track experience elsewhere, check with the event organizer before jumping groups
  3. Arrive early: HPDE days start early. Plan to be in the paddock 45–60 minutes before tech opens
  4. Tech first: car and helmet must pass tech before you can grid
  5. Instructor orientation: meet your assigned instructor before the first session
  6. Classroom: most events have a mandatory classroom/briefing session for HPDE 1-2
  7. Enjoy: you'll typically get 4–6 track sessions of 20–25 minutes each