LEC Spring Split 2026 Guide: Roadtrips to Madrid and Paris, Best-of-Three Format and MSI Qualification Explained

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News/LEC Spring Split 2026 Guide: Roadtrips to Madrid and Paris, Best-of-Three Format and MSI Qualification Explained







LEC Spring Split 2026 Guide: Roadtrips to Madrid and Paris, Best-of-Three Format and MSI Qualification Explained

More

09 March 2026 09:19

TL;DR

  • The LEC Spring Primer 2026 kicks off March 28th with a best-of-three regular season running over seven weeks, culminating in a six-team playoff bracket using best-of-five series, with two MSI qualification spots on the line.
  • Two Roadtrips will bring live LEC action to regional fanbases outside Berlin for the first time in this format, with events at Madrid Arena in Spain and Les Arenes de Grand Paris Sud in France, each running three days of full weekend competitive play.


The LEC is moving quickly after LEC Versus wrapped with G2 Esports' 20th title win in Barcelona. The 2026 LEC Spring Split, officially branded as the LEC Spring Primer, begins on March 28th and brings back a format that the League of Legends community has been asking for across multiple splits: best-of-three regular season matches.

The Spring Primer Format in Full

The regular season runs for seven weeks with all matches played as best-of-three series. That means every league game produces at minimum two games of competitive League of Legends and up to three, which gives fans, analysts, and players considerably more to engage with each week compared to single-game results.

After seven weeks the standings feed into a six-team playoff bracket. Playoffs operate on a best-of-five rotation, which is the appropriate step-up for high-stakes elimination play. The schedule details provided by Riot confirm: "Playoffs will start on May 23 at 17:00 CEST with gamedays from Saturday to Monday each week with one Best-of-Five each day. The lower bracket finals and MSI qualification decider will be on June 6 and the Split Finals will be on June 7."


The Roadtrips: Madrid and Paris

The Roadtrips are the headline innovation of the 2026 Spring Primer. Rather than centralising all live action at the Riot Games Arena in Berlin, the LEC will take competitive matches on the road to two European destinations that represent regions with deep League of Legends fanbases.

The first Roadtrip lands at the Madrid Arena in Spain. The second heads to Les Arenes de Grand Paris Sud in France. Both events span three full days of competitive play across the weekend, meaning fans in both locations get a complete event experience rather than a single showcase day. The LEC Versus Final having just taken place in Barcelona suggests Riot has been building confidence in the regional live event model and is ready to extend it into the regular season calendar.

Studio-Only Mondays in Berlin

Not every element of the Spring Primer is an expansion of access. Monday matches at the Riot Games Arena in Berlin will be studio-only events, closed to public attendance, and the reason given is practical rather than ambiguous. Riot cited lower attendance figures on Mondays and rising production costs as the factors driving the decision to remove the live audience component from the start of the working week.

More:Top Esports Opens Investigation Into LPL Jungler Naiyou Over Unusual Build and Fair Play Concerns

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LEC Spring Split 2026 Guide: Roadtrips to Madrid and Paris, Best-of-Three Format and MSI Qualification Explained

More

09 March 2026 09:19

TL;DR

  • The LEC Spring Primer 2026 kicks off March 28th with a best-of-three regular season running over seven weeks, culminating in a six-team playoff bracket using best-of-five series, with two MSI qualification spots on the line.
  • Two Roadtrips will bring live LEC action to regional fanbases outside Berlin for the first time in this format, with events at Madrid Arena in Spain and Les Arenes de Grand Paris Sud in France, each running three days of full weekend competitive play.


The LEC is moving quickly after LEC Versus wrapped with G2 Esports' 20th title win in Barcelona. The 2026 LEC Spring Split, officially branded as the LEC Spring Primer, begins on March 28th and brings back a format that the League of Legends community has been asking for across multiple splits: best-of-three regular season matches.

The Spring Primer Format in Full

The regular season runs for seven weeks with all matches played as best-of-three series. That means every league game produces at minimum two games of competitive League of Legends and up to three, which gives fans, analysts, and players considerably more to engage with each week compared to single-game results.

After seven weeks the standings feed into a six-team playoff bracket. Playoffs operate on a best-of-five rotation, which is the appropriate step-up for high-stakes elimination play. The schedule details provided by Riot confirm: "Playoffs will start on May 23 at 17:00 CEST with gamedays from Saturday to Monday each week with one Best-of-Five each day. The lower bracket finals and MSI qualification decider will be on June 6 and the Split Finals will be on June 7."


The Roadtrips: Madrid and Paris

The Roadtrips are the headline innovation of the 2026 Spring Primer. Rather than centralising all live action at the Riot Games Arena in Berlin, the LEC will take competitive matches on the road to two European destinations that represent regions with deep League of Legends fanbases.

The first Roadtrip lands at the Madrid Arena in Spain. The second heads to Les Arenes de Grand Paris Sud in France. Both events span three full days of competitive play across the weekend, meaning fans in both locations get a complete event experience rather than a single showcase day. The LEC Versus Final having just taken place in Barcelona suggests Riot has been building confidence in the regional live event model and is ready to extend it into the regular season calendar.

Studio-Only Mondays in Berlin

Not every element of the Spring Primer is an expansion of access. Monday matches at the Riot Games Arena in Berlin will be studio-only events, closed to public attendance, and the reason given is practical rather than ambiguous. Riot cited lower attendance figures on Mondays and rising production costs as the factors driving the decision to remove the live audience component from the start of the working week.

More:Top Esports Opens Investigation Into LPL Jungler Naiyou Over Unusual Build and Fair Play Concerns

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