
F1’s 24‑Race Calendar Limits New Hosts, Emphasizes Multi‑Year Deals
With a fixed 24‑race calendar, Formula 1 is tightening the race‑hosting market. Teams and promoters must present financially sustainable, multi‑year plans, as Liberty Media’s CEO warns against one‑off deals.
Formula 1’s calendar is capped at 24 races. With the sport’s popularity soaring, landing a new Grand Prix slot now requires a financially sustainable, multi‑year promise, warns Liberty Media CEO Stefano Domenicali.
Why it matters:
A locked‑in calendar gives Liberty Media predictable revenue and lets host cities spread the cost of new paddocks, hotels and transport over a decade. Without a long‑term pact, public funds can be wasted on a one‑off event.
The details:
- The 24‑race limit means only a handful of slots are available, turning every new proposal into a competitive bidding war.
- Premature announcements from India (2027) and South Africa have been dismissed by F1 management as unrealistic.
- Long‑term contracts are the norm: Austria’s Red Bull Ring secured until 2041; Melbourne, Madrid, Bahrain and Montreal all locked through at least 2032.
- Domenicali stresses that promoters must prove a durable fan base and commercial market – a single‑year peak isn’t enough.
- Infrastructure investment is tied to contract length: Miami’s new hospitality zone, Australia’s paddock rebuild, and Austin’s upgrades are all justified by ten‑year deals.
- Emerging markets like Thailand (Bangkok street race) and South Korea (Incheon) have presented solid financial plans, but political timelines and elections still delay finalisation.
- The European calendar remains under pressure, with Barcelona, Belgium and the Dutch GP facing financial risk, prompting extensions at Silverstone, Monza and Monaco.
What's next:
F1 will keep extending existing venues while only adding new races if a current contract expires – Mexico’s 2028 renewal could free a slot. The series will also fine‑tune the calendar to cut trans‑Atlantic freight and meet CO₂ goals, such as the proposed Canada‑Miami swap.
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