When his racing career ended, Barber's belief that auto racing was "coachable" in the same manner as any other sport—at the time, a distinctly minority position—led him to create the eponymously named racing school, and a year later the equal-car race series. In 1975, with two borrowed Lola Formula Fords and four students, Barber started the Skip Barber School of High Performance Driving. In 1976 it was renamed the "
Skip Barber Racing School", and that same year he created the Skip Barber Race Series. Barber divested from the racing school in 1999. Barber was the owner and operator of
Lime Rock Park, a road-racing venue in Connecticut. In April 2021 he sold the facility to Lime Rock Group, LLC. He maintains a minority stake. He lives in the nearby town of
Sharon, Connecticut with wife Judy. Barber was inducted into the
SCCA Hall of Fame on March 2, 2013. Barber was inducted into the
Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 2025. ==Racing record==