Alright so last weekend I planned a trip to Spa Francorchamps, super excited to drive that iconic track. Figured I’d need a good map, right? Seemed simple enough at first.

Started by typing “Spa Francorchamps map” into my phone. Bad idea. Got swamped with super blurry fan drawings, weird racing line diagrams that made zero sense, and ads for GPS apps I didn’t trust. Seriously, why is finding a basic map online such a mission?
Gave up on random web searches fast. My next move hit the official Spa Francorchamps track website. Scrolled past all the ticket sales and event listings – had to dig deep. Finally found a tiny “Visitor Info” link way down the page. Bingo! Hidden in there was a proper, downloadable PDF map of the whole circuit area. Actually usable one.
Downloaded it right away to my phone. Opened it… and wow, it was actually detailed. Showed everything:
- The actual asphalt snake of the track layout
- All the parking zones labeled A through L
- Main entrances marked clearly
- Even the stupid tiny gravel access roads around the forest
Took it for a test run the next day driving there. Okay, tip one: ZOOM IN before you lose signal in the Ardennes hills. My phone almost died showing the whole area when I needed Gate 3. Fixed that by saving the map offline.
Finding my parking? Used the zone colors on the map. Paddock parking was marked yellow – followed the signs matching the map colors perfectly. Lifesaver when things got chaotic.

Wanted to walk parts of the track? Map showed elevation lines! Knew exactly where Eau Rouge’s crazy steep climb started. My big realization? You gotta pair this map with just looking around. Signage is good but knowing the overall layout prevents you ending up in some random campsite when you want the pit lane.
So yeah, skip the Google rabbit hole. Official site. PDF map. Save offline. Read the color codes. Maybe learn what “Raidillon” means first. Definitely saved my trip from being a lost cause.