Pau Arnos

Here’s a detailed motorcycle track-day overview of the Circuit Pau-Arnos (Arnos, France) — what to expect, how to prepare, and whether it might suit your riding goals.


✅ Basic Info & Layout

  • The full “speed” configuration is 3.030 km (≈1.88 mi) long.
  • Track width varies between 9–12 m.
  • Located in a green valley near Pau, in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department.1
  • The circuit is described as “technique” with elevation changes, blind crests and a mix of fast & slow corners.
  • For motorcycles, the site lists “Roulage Moto” (open trackday) sessions with graded level groups (Initiation / Intermédiaire / Confirmé) and 6×20-minute sessions common.

🏍️ Rider Experience & Strengths

What works well:

  • Because of the valley setting and technical layout, it’s excellent for braking, corner transitions, elevation changes, and bike control rather than purely top-speed.
  • Good for riders who want to improve their technique: late braking, blind turn-in points, flowing exits.
  • The track offers value: day sessions for bikes list around €85 (½ day) / €130 (day) as per the 2025 tariff.
  • Open to multiple skill levels, which means a trackday where you can ride at your own pace in a graded environment.

Points to keep in mind:

  • It’s not one of the huge “long flow / mega-straight” circuits. If you’re chasing high top speeds or long full-throttle runs, you might find it shorter/less “open” than some big GP tracks.
  • Because of the technical nature and shorter lap, traffic (slower riders, mixed pace) can become a factor — good group management is important.
  • Noise / equipment compliance must be checked: the track’s “Roulage Moto” page lists the requirement of a bike “en bon état, pas de fuite, carénages fixés, rétro-scotchés, sonomètre 102 dB”.

🔑 Key Sections & Rider Focus

  • Consider the start/straight into Turn 1: the straight gives decent build-up, then a drop or undulating section into a fast chicane – good for working on tuck, gearing and brake markers.
  • The mid-sector with blind crests & flowing corners: since elevation changes are referenced, this is where precision and commitment pay off.
  • The final complex and exit back to main straight: clean exit here matters because it’ll set you up for your next lap (short lap means exit speed vs outright top speed).
  • Because laps are shorter and technical, rewards go to consistency, smooth input, and corner-exit speed rather than sheer “max lean” or “top straight speed”.

🛠️ Setup & Rider Tips

  • Tyres & Warmers: Use warmers or ensure your tyres are warmed properly. Because of technical sections, grip is important early.
  • Brakes & Suspension: Fresh brake fluid, good front-end feel, responsive suspension tuning (not too soft that you lose support in banked/undulating sections).
  • Bodywork & Vision: Ensure clear vision ahead of blind crests and transitions; smooth throttle roll-on, late apex where required.
  • Noise / Exhaust Checked: Since “sonomètre 102 dB” is mentioned for motorcycles. Confirm your exhaust meets the local requirement.
  • Group selection: Choose a group matching your pace; being in a group too fast ahead of you — or too slow — will spoil the ride.

🧭 Trackday Format & Practical Info

  • Day sessions: 6×20 minutes are common for bike days.
  • Pricing (2025 quoted): ~€85 for half-day, ~€130 for full day for motorcycles.
  • Facilities: Box/garage rental is available (32 m² box for ~€40/day) per site’s list.
  • Schedule: Morning & afternoon sessions (e.g., 8:30-12:30 / 14:00-18:00) typical in season.
  • Location: Near Pau Airport, motorway access, good for a weekend track trip in southwest France.

✅ Best For:

  • Riders with some track experience looking to improve technique rather than only chasing outright lap times.
  • Intermediate riders on 600-1000cc sport bikes who want a well-rounded track session in a technical environment.
  • Road-legal bikes going on trackdays (rather than full race/prepped machines), as the pace and layout reward input over pure machine.
  • Riders combining a scenic track day (near the Pyrenees) with travel — good for a weekend away.

💡 Pro Tips

  1. Use the first session to learn: track, elevation changes, brake markers — don’t push hard on lap one.
  2. Focus on exit speed especially in the final complex: on a shorter technical circuit, exits matter more than huge straights.
  3. Check your bike prep (mirrors removed or taped, tyres in shape, no leaks) to avoid being held up at tech check.
  4. Choose correct group — being with riders of similar pace means smoother sessions.
  5. Use video or onboard footage of Pau-Arnos to pre-familiarise yourself with blind crests or tricky corners.
  6. Book early — especially if you want a garage/box, and confirm noise/exhaust compliance.
Venue Details
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