2026 Formula 1 Calendar: 24 Races, Madrid Debut and Zandvoort’s Farewell
Explore the complete 2026 Formula 1 calendar featuring 24 races across iconic venues from Melbourne to Abu Dhabi, including sprint weekends and brand-new circuits like Madrid.

1. Australia
Albert Park, Melbourne / March 6-8
The right place for an F1 season to start. For the first 16 laps of last year’s race, the top five ran in their final points order!

2. China
Not the best-loved track but racing here can be good. Features first sprint of the year – remember Hamilton’s 2025 win?

3. Japan
One of the great drivers’ circuits, which is probably why Verstappen is unbeaten in the past four races.

4. Bahrain
Sakhir / April 10-12
Usually one of the better tracks for racing, and an F1 test venue of choice. Piastri won in 2025.

5. Saudi Arabia
Jeddah Corniche / April 17-19
Incredibly high speed for a temporary circuit, but track limits tend to make racing controversial.

6. Miami
Miami, US / May 1-3
Scene of McLaren’s renaissance in ’24 with Norris, and Piastri won in ’25. Second sprint of the year.

7. Canada
Montreal / May 22-24
One of the great races and venues. This year gets a sprint for the first time. Rain can always throw a curveball here.

8. Monaco
Circuit de Monaco / June 5-7
Norris won in 2025 – and cried. That’s because this one’s a classic, even if there’s no overtaking.

9. Barcelona-Catalunya
Barcelona-Catalunya / June 12-14
Reprieved despite new Spanish GP venue. Verstappen’s moment of madness on Russell overshadowed Piastri’s ’25 win.

10. Austria
Spielberg / June 26-28
Russell and Norris have won the past two races. Beautiful setting and decent track, if not as great as Österrichring.

11. Great Britain
Silverstone / July 3-5
Scene of Hamilton’s last ‘on-the-road’ GP victory, but it was Norris prompting flag-waving in ’25. Sprint race on menu.

12. Belgium
Spa-Francorchamps / July 17-19
Few dislike Spa, especially umbrella manufacturers – and McLaren, which took a 1-2 in the Ardennes last year.

13. Hungary
Hungaroring / July 24-26
Track is a bit twisty but it’s a great place to spectate. McLaren unbeaten here in past two years.

14. Netherlands
Zandvoort / August 21-23
Zandvoort’s swansong (for now) gets a sprint for ’26. One of the best tracks in Europe, amid Verstappenmania.

15. Italy
Monza / September 4-6
Italy’s sole F1 venue again after sad dropping of Imola. Scene of start of Verstappen resurgence last term.

16. Spain
Madrid / September 11-13
Brand-new venue for the Spanish GP. Let’s hope they’ve produced a better track than they did in Valencia in ’08.

17. Azerbaijan
Baku / September 24-26
The ‘Macau’ of the F1 calendar features great racing and high drama. Don’t forget it’s on Saturday this year though.

18. Singapore
Marina Bay / October 9-11
For the first time, this event gets a sprint – the last of 2026. Russell and Mercedes hit form to win last year on tricky track.

19. United States
COTA, Austin, Texas / October 23-25
Who will be allegro in Austin? We’ll predict Verstappen, winner of four out of the past five on this modern classic.

20. Mexico City
Hermanos Rodríguez / Oct 30-Nov 1
Full of atmosphere – and track-limits fury. Expect an outbreak of Pérez fever as the crowd’s hero returns to the grid.

21. São Paulo
Interlagos / November 6-8
An absolutely classic track and fervent crowd make this a highlight. Weather can be random at this time of year too.

22. Las Vegas
Nevada, US / November 19-21
It’s outlasted the old Caesars Palace car park track (just two F1 races). But you’ll need to be up at 4am to watch this one.

23. Qatar
Lusail / November 27-29
Designed for motorcycles, so four-wheel racing near-impossible. Verstappen unbeaten here in past three GPs.

24. Abu Dhabi
Yas Marina / December 4-6
Even if there’s a four-way title fight (see 2010), races here contrive to be dull. And if the title’s all done…