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How to Buy Formula 1 Tickets

Formula 1 doesn't run a single global box office. Each Grand Prix is sold by its own circuit or local promoter, so the buying experience, prices and on-sale dates differ from race to race. Tickets are almost always sold as three-day weekend passes covering practice, qualifying and the race, and the main tiers are General Admission (standing/roaming access, cheapest, no reserved seat), reserved Grandstand seats, and premium hospitality such as the F1 Paddock Club. Official all-in packages are sold under the F1 Experiences brand, the official Experience, Hospitality and Travel Program of Formula 1.

Where to buy Formula 1 tickets

  • The individual circuit or promoter website for each race (e.g. singaporegp.sg, the Las Vegas GP site), which sells base-price tickets set by the promoter.
  • The official F1 Ticket Store at tickets.formula1.com, which links through to events and lists hospitality.
  • F1 Experiences (f1experiences.com) — the official hospitality, ticket and travel package program, including the F1 Paddock Club and Champions Club.
  • Official appointed resellers/agents (e.g. Motorsport Tickets) carrying General Admission, grandstand, hospitality and Paddock Club inventory across rounds.

The buying process

Decide on a ticket tier: General Admission (roaming, cheapest, no seat), a reserved Grandstand (choose location carefully), or hospitality / Paddock Club.

Buy the standard three-day weekend ticket that covers Friday practice, Saturday qualifying and Sunday's race — most F1 tickets are sold this way rather than per day.

There's no single global on-sale date; each circuit sets its own timeline, typically opening roughly 6–10 months before race day, often with early-bird pricing that rises as the event nears.

Join the circuit/promoter mailing list to be notified when tickets go on sale, as popular categories (e.g. Singapore's Pit and Pit Exit grandstands) sell out and only get topped up later.

For hospitality or all-in travel packages, book through F1 Experiences or an official agent; not every hospitality suite is offered at every race.

Resale & secondary tickets

Resale is risky. Most promoters make tickets strictly non-transferable and not for resale except as they authorise; a ticket resold for profit without the promoter's authority can be voided, so a touted ticket may not get you in. Monaco and Silverstone are noted for especially strict transfer controls. Use only the circuit's own channel or an official/authorised fan-to-fan exchange rather than open secondary marketplaces.

How much do tickets cost?

Rough guide in USD for a three-day weekend (varies a lot by race): General Admission typically about $100–$300; reserved Grandstands roughly $400–$1,000+, with seats on the start/finish straight or key overtaking corners at a premium; F1 Paddock Club hospitality commonly $3,000–$10,000+ per person. Singapore 2026 is a useful example, with categories advertised from around S$198 (Zone 4 Walkabout) up to roughly S$1,698 for a Pit Exit Grandstand. Treat all figures as indicative — confirm current prices on the official site for your race.

Insider tips

  • Most overtaking happens at heavy braking zones at the end of long straights, so grandstands overlooking the first corner or a DRS hairpin give the best chance of seeing passes — at Singapore, the Turn 1, Turn 3 and Pit Exit grandstands are good picks.
  • General Admission is the cheapest way in and lets you roam multiple vantage points, but you get no guaranteed seat or shade — bring sun/heat protection, especially for hot or night races.
  • Buy early: prices generally climb as race weekend approaches and the best grandstands sell out first.
  • Buy direct from the circuit/promoter or an official channel to get base prices and avoid void-ticket risk from unauthorised resale.
  • A grandstand seat with a big-screen view nearby helps you follow the wider race, since any single trackside spot only shows part of the lap.

Formula 1 tickets available now

21 priced events, from EUR 181. Prices convert to your currency at checkout.

Travelling from Australia? Read our Formula 1 from Australia guide for flights, visas and timing.

Frequently asked questions

Where do I buy official F1 tickets?

From the specific circuit or promoter's website for that race (each Grand Prix sells its own tickets), via the official F1 Ticket Store at tickets.formula1.com, or through F1 Experiences for official hospitality and travel packages. Buying direct gets promoter base prices and avoids void-ticket risk.

What's the difference between General Admission, Grandstand and Paddock Club?

General Admission is the cheapest entry and lets you roam viewing areas but gives no reserved seat. A Grandstand is a reserved seat at a fixed location. The F1 Paddock Club is premium all-inclusive hospitality above the pit garages with catering and extras like pit-lane walks — and costs the most, often several thousand dollars.

Are F1 tickets sold per day or for the whole weekend?

Almost always as three-day weekend tickets covering Friday practice, Saturday qualifying and Sunday's race. Some events also sell single-day options, but the standard ticket is the full weekend.

When do tickets go on sale and how early should I book?

There's no single global date — each circuit sets its own, typically opening around 6–10 months before the race, often with early-bird pricing that rises closer to the event. Book early: top grandstands sell out and prices climb.

Which grandstand should I pick to see overtaking?

Aim for grandstands overlooking heavy braking zones at the end of long straights or DRS hairpins, where passes happen. At Singapore, the Turn 1, Turn 3 and Pit Exit grandstands are well regarded. A nearby big screen helps you follow the rest of the lap.

Do Australians need a visa for the popular F1 destinations?

Australians are visa-free for Singapore (90 days, plus a free SG Arrival Card) and Japan (90 days), and the UAE gives a free visa on arrival. The USA needs an approved ESTA (about US$40). For Monaco via France/Schengen it's currently visa-free, but a new ETIAS authorisation (about €20) is being introduced from late 2026 — check if it applies to your dates.

How long are the flights from Australia?

From Sydney roughly: Singapore 8–8.5h and Abu Dhabi about 14h are direct; Tokyo (for Suzuka) about 9.5–10h direct; Las Vegas about 14h on Qantas's seasonal non-stop (Dec 2026–Mar 2027) or via a US hub; Nice for Monaco has no direct flight — around 20–27h with one stop.

Is buying from resale or ticket touts safe?

It's risky. Most promoters make tickets non-transferable and not for resale without authorisation, and unauthorised resold tickets can be voided — meaning you might be refused entry. Stick to the official circuit channel or an authorised fan-to-fan exchange.

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