Best Sim Racing Cockpit for 2025

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Best Sim Racing Cockpit for 2025

There’s nothing quite like the speed and adrenaline of being in a race car. But racing games can help you experience that excitement in a far less dangerous and more accessible manner. If you want to experience what it’s like to tear down the track in your favorite car, why not get a sim racing cockpit? While you can get by on a basic wheel and pedal setup, it fails to provide the atmosphere and sensation of an actual racing cockpit. A sim racing cockpit is a serious improvement over a basic wheel and pedal setup, making you feel like you’re tearing down the track.

A sim racing cockpit isn’t just a way to make you look cool and authentic; it also helps provide a stable environment for you to experience what it feels like to race. It provides a stable platform while giving you the experience of constant steering and pedal pressing to maintain control of your vehicle. A well-designed sim racing seat setup enhances ergonomics and control placement, ensuring the wheel and pedals are positioned naturally for improved power. If you like the way that sounds, maybe you’d like gift a cockpit to one of the sim racers in your life for Valentine’s Day or an upcoming birthday.

We’ve compiled a list of the best sim racing seats and home racing cockpits for various budgets and spaces. We’ve also included motion control rigs, which enhance force feedback by allowing drivers to feel cornering, acceleration and braking through the seat.

Next Level Racing

For close to $1,000, GTTrack isn’t cheap, but it’s a solid and upgradable platform for sim racing. The sim racer rig starts with a beefy frame that can support the most powerful direct-drive force feedback racing wheels while standing up to strong pedal pressure. The seat is supportive and comfortable which is good for extended lapping sessions. Roadshow’s Editor-in-Chief, Tim Stevens, has recommended this sim racing setup before and uses one in his iRacing setup.

The GTtrack racing simulator cockpit is adjustable for a wide range of body types, compact enough for most homes and is compatible with Next Level’s ecosystem of motion control electronics.

Playseat

Besides being significantly less expensive than a full racing rig like the GTtrack, the Playseat Challenge’s best feature is how it quickly folds into an extremely compact package for storage in a closet, corner or under a bed. The foldable racing simulator cockpit design comes with a few compromises but ultimately makes the Challenge one of the most ideal simulator cockpits for casual and serious racers in small apartments, bedroom setups and shared spaces.

There are adjustments for the wheel, pedal and seat placement, but no gear shifter mount. (If you must have a shifter box, consider the Next Level Racing GT Lite.) Getting in and out of the racing simulator seat can be a touch awkward, especially for kids. The racing simulator frame is strong enough for most console racing wheels and the fold-out pedal mount keeps the foot controls surprisingly planted during use. I personally use the Playseat Challenge sim rig in my small San Francisco Bay Area apartment.

Next Level Racing

The Next Level Racing Wheel Stand provides a firm platform for mounting a racing wheel, pedal box and even a shift lever. The Wheel Stand is meant to be a starting point around which you can upgrade, adding a seat and more as you go. Unfortunately, that means that it doesn’t come with a real racing seat in the box, and the racing simulator ergonomics of a couch or rolling office chair aren’t the best.

The low entry point price makes this a good option for casual racers who want to get away from just clamping onto a coffee table or desk.

OpenWheeler

If you don’t have the space (or the bucks) for a full GTrack cockpit, but don’t need the foldability of the Playseat Challenge, the OpenWheeler GEN3 sim racing rig sits nicely in the Goldilocks zone between the two. This sturdy racing seat and frame combo accommodates mounting a wheel, pedal set and shifter and is very adjustable for a wide range of body types. The racing seat is also quite comfortable.

When not in racing simulation use, the OpenWheeler can collapse a bit. Fans of flight sims can also purchase optional mounts to quickly convert the rig to a HOTAS setup, complete with a perfectly centered flight stick.