Formula 1 Calendar
Details
Stay on track with every Formula 1 weekend. This calendar includes all Grand Prix session times, including practice, qualifying, sprint sessions (when scheduled), and race start times. Subscribe to get automatic updates if schedules change, so you never miss lights out.
When you subscribe to this schedule, your calendar will show each Grand Prix at the correct local time for you, including daylight saving changes. This is especially helpful for international races where start times can be early morning or late night depending on your location.
Schedule
Australian Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix is in Melbourne, Australia, and it’s often an early-season benchmark for pace. The circuit mixes quick sections with heavy braking, so race strategy can matter as much as raw speed.
Chinese Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Chinese GP takes place in Shanghai, China, at a track known for a long straight and tricky corner combinations. In F1, traffic and tire wear can shape the race, especially when teams split strategies.
Japanese Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Japanese Grand Prix in Japan is known for strong fan attendance and a technically demanding layout. It’s a weekend where confidence and precision tend to pay off, and small mistakes can be costly.
Bahrain Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Bahrain GP is usually run under floodlights in Bahrain, with plenty of overtaking opportunities compared with many tracks. Formula 1 races here often come down to tire management and well-timed pit stops.
Saudi Arabian Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Saudi Arabian GP is a night race in Saudi Arabia with a high-speed street-circuit style feel. In F1, clean execution is key here because margins are tight near the barriers.
Miami Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Miami Grand Prix is held in Miami, United States, and it’s one of the newer stops on the Formula 1 calendar. Race-day outcomes can hinge on strategy calls and restarts, which can shuffle the order quickly.
Canadian Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Canadian GP in Montreal, Canada is known for heavy braking zones and quick changes of direction. F1 weekends here can also be influenced by changing weather, which sometimes creates strategy surprises.
Monaco Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Monaco GP is a street race in Monaco with narrow roads and limited overtaking. That usually makes qualifying and track position central to the Grand Prix storyline.
Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Barcelona-Catalunya GP in Spain is often treated as a reference weekend because it tests car balance and tire wear. In Formula 1, teams frequently bring updates around this part of the season, which can shift the pecking order.
Austrian Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Austrian Grand Prix in Austria runs on a short lap, which can keep gaps tight and pressure high. In F1, small differences in pit timing can have an outsized impact when the field is close.
British Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The British GP at Silverstone in Great Britain is known for high-speed corners and sustained loads on the car. It’s also one of the longest-running races in Formula 1 and typically draws big crowds.
Belgian Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Belgian Grand Prix in Belgium features big elevation changes and long full-throttle sections. Weather can vary across the venue, which in F1 can make tire and strategy calls especially important.
Hungarian Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Hungarian GP in Hungary is often a track-position race where clean stops and smart timing matter. Overtaking can be tougher than at many F1 venues, so qualifying performance is a big piece of the puzzle.
Dutch Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Dutch Grand Prix is held in the Netherlands and is known for strong fan attendance. In Formula 1, its flowing layout puts emphasis on rhythm and consistent pace over a long stint.
Italian Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Italian GP in Italy is one of the historic Grand Prix weekends and is associated with high speeds and slipstreaming. In F1, that can translate into strategic battles around pit windows and track position.
Spanish Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Spanish Grand Prix in Spain often rewards consistent pace and tire management. It can be a useful “read” on where teams really stand in Formula 1 as the season progresses.
Azerbaijan Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Azerbaijan GP in Baku, Azerbaijan is a street circuit with tight corners and a very long straight. F1 races here have often featured safety cars in past seasons, which can swing strategy quickly.
Singapore Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Singapore GP is a night race in Singapore and is known for heat, humidity, and a demanding street layout. In Formula 1, race interruptions can play a big role here, which keeps strategy flexible.
United States Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The United States Grand Prix is a major stop on the F1 calendar and typically draws strong attendance. Depending on tire behavior, multiple strategies can be viable, which often keeps the race interesting deep into Sunday.
Mexico City Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Mexico City Grand Prix is held in Mexico (duh). The venue’s high altitude can affect Formula 1 car performance and cooling, which can influence strategy.
Sao Paulo Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Sao Paulo GP is held in Brazil (also commonly searched as the Brazilian Grand Prix). Weather can be changeable here, and in F1 that often means strategy needs to stay adaptable.
Las Vegas Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Las Vegas Grand Prix is a Formula 1 night race in Las Vegas, United States. Cooler evening conditions can influence tire grip and pace, which sometimes leads to different strategy choices.
Qatar Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Qatar GP in Qatar can put a spotlight on tire management and sustained pace over long stints. In Formula 1, the best result often comes from balancing speed with consistency across the race distance.
Abu Dhabi Grand Prix 2026 (F1)
The Abu Dhabi Grand Prix in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates is commonly scheduled near the end of the season. It’s often where final standings are settled, so teams tend to prioritize clean execution and points.