The 2026 Charlotte Auto Fair

Long before the Internet was a thing, I recall reading about the Charlotte Auto Fair in Hemmings Motor News. It sounded like the South’s version of Hershey, with a flea market, car corral, and car show all rolled into one. I’ve often thought about attending, so earlier this year, when my AACA magazine advertised that a National Judged Show would be part of this year’s Auto Fair, I decided to make the drive. I headed out on Wednesday morning, April 8, and overnighted in Roanoke, VA, to break up the trip. Early Thursday morning, I was back on the road, and arrived at Charlotte Motor Speedway at 10 a.m. Finding the place was easy, there was no wait to get in, and once I forked over my $10 for parking, I was inside the Speedway.

Although I’ve never been a racing fan, I’ve always understood that NASCAR is a really big deal in the south, and stepping onto the actual track at the Speedway was awe-inspiring. The place is huge. When infield seating and standing room accommodations are included, total audience capacity is 95,000. That’s big. The map I was handed as I walked in showed me that the track’s entire infield oval, plus several fields beyond the oval, were taken up by the show.

While the flea market fields were filled to capacity with vendors on Thursday, the same could not be said for the area set aside for car clubs. There were very few cars on Thursday, and just a few more on Friday. The car club area did not completely fill up until Saturday. I wandered through the car corral both Thursday and Friday, but it was less than half full both days, and many of the cars there were late model, heavily modified, or both. (The “Hershey rule” that only AACA-eligible cars are allowed in the car corral was not in force in Charlotte.) Many asking prices were astronomically beyond reasonableness.

The infield “grass” is artificial turf

My map showed one building marked “Auto Fair Auction,” but when I wandered over to it, there was nothing to see: no auction cars on preview, no signage, nada. I stopped at two different information booths run by AACA’s Hornet’s Nest Region, the club responsible for the entire show, and no one knew anything about an auction. Saturday morning, I gave it one more shot, and was extremely disappointed by my findings: two old project cars, plus a small smattering of garage “junk,” and that was the totality of the items for the auction. It was not advertised, it was not promoted, and it held zero interest for me, and probably for the majority of show-goers.

Saturday’s AACA judged National Show was worth it, as there were many fine cars on display. (The write-up and photos for that show will be covered in a separate blog post.) In retrospect, attending the Charlotte Auto Fair all three days was excessive. I could have seen everything I wanted to see on Saturday. But not all was lost. I got to spend time with two long-term friends, both of whom retired to North Carolina, and that made the extra days I spent there worthwhile. Would I attend the Auto Fair again? Probably not. We will file this in the “one and done” category.

FLEA MARKET
Old car parts the way we used to search for them
I don’t think I’ve ever seen a Volvo Penta sign at the flea market before

 

CAR CORRAL

 

1967 Volvo 122 wagon, asking $18,000. Weber carburetor, claimed original interior.
Volvo interior was hard to fault

 

 

1963 Studebaker Avanti, asking $32,500. 289 V8, auto.
Avanti interior was very rough

 

 

 

1963 Citroen Camionnette, two-cylinder air-cooled engine, four-speed, FWD, many new parts, needs brake work. Sign says MAKE ME AN OFFER!

 

 

 

1965 Buick Riviera, rebuilt nailhead engine, $9,500 OBO

 

 

1963 Pontiac Bonneville Safari, 389 tri-power, buckets/console. No asking price shown.

 

Sign: “1958 Studebaker Silver Hawk. All new Chevy crate engine. Mint condition. Rare. $63,000.”

 

 

CAR CLUBS

 

CORVAIR
The Corvair Club made a strong showing all three days
Corvair pickup
1962 station wagon
First-gen convertible

 

MOPAR
DeSotos were aplenty

Road Runner
Plymouth Belvedere
First-gen Charger
AMC Gremlin GT
Renault Alliance convertible
Dodge Dart
AMC Ambassador

 

 

 

FORD
First-gen Mustang
One-owner early Fox-body Mustang

 

Plenty of full-size Ford pickups

Falcon
Falcon Ranchero (wood was added by owner, not available from the factory that year
Another Falcon Ranchero

 

1961 Starliner
Fairlane
1966 Thunderbird

 

OLDSMOBILE
442
Cutlass
Toronado
442
442
Cutlass S
442

 

HOLDEN

Impressively, the Holden Club brought many cars. I didn’t know there were this many Holdens in North Carolina, much less America! There were Chevy SSs, Pontiac GTOs and G8s, and actual Holdens (or at least converted to Holdens).

 

 

AUDI
One of the few import brands in the Car Club area, all the Audis were late-model

 

 

 

 

AUCTION
These were the only two cars in the auction
Aside from the cars, these were the only other items in the auction. I’m not sure why they bothered.

 

 

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