Rubik's WCA North American Championship 2026


Information

We are pleased to announce that the 2026 North American Championship will take place in Raleigh, North Carolina! This competition will serve as both the US National Championship and the North American Championship.

Please note that all spectators must have a spectator ticket. Competitors will receive one free spectator ticket as part of their registration. Additional tickets can be purchased on Ticketor; limited quantities are available so make sure to purchase your spectator tickets early!

All events have qualifying times; please refer to the CubingUSA site for full details.

Events
Main event
Competitors
892
Registration period

Online registration opened and closed .

Registration requirements
This competition is over, click here to display the registration requirements it used.
Create a WCA account here if you don't have one.
If this is not your first competition, associate your WCA ID to your WCA account here.
Register for this competition here.
There is a competitor limit of 1200 competitors.
The base registration fee for this competition is $150 (United States Dollar).
The registration fee has to be paid through Stripe here once registered.
If your registration is cancelled before you will be refunded 50% of your registration fee.
Registrants on the waiting list may be accepted onto the competitor list until .
If you are a registered competitor you may change your registered events until on the Register tab.
No on the spot registrations will be accepted.
Spectators can attend paying an entry fee of $25 (United States Dollar).
Competitors may only register for events that they are already qualified for.

All competitors automatically receive one spectator ticket. Additional tickets can be purchased on Ticketor; limited quantities are available so make sure to purchase your spectator tickets early!

Highlights
Click here to display the highlights of the competition.

Kyle Santucci won with an average of 5.63 seconds in the 3x3x3 Cube event. Matty Hiroto Inaba finished second (5.70) and Max Park finished third (5.93).

World records: Max Park‎ 7x7x7 Cube 1:30.59 (single).

North American records: Max Park‎ 5x5x5 Cube 34.65 (average).

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