F1 2026 to begin in Australia, Imola axed as 24-event calendar announced
10 Jun 2025 6:00 AM

This is a breaking news story from PlanetF1.com
The F1 2026 season will begin with the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne, it has been confirmed.
As exclusively revealed by PlanetF1.com last month, the Australian Grand Prix will open the season on March 6-8.
F1 introduces new-look calendar for F1 2026
The timing of Ramadan will see Round 1 of F1 2026 racing around Albert Park, just as it did to begin the 2025 season.
In doing so, it will usher in an all-new era for the world championship with sweeping new chassis and power unit regulations set to be introduced.
That promises to radically shake up the pecking order as teams grapple with active aerodynamics and an increased reliance on hybrid power.
As predicted by PlanetF1.com last month, from Australia, the F1 schedule heads to China and Japan before taking in the Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands Prix.
While the opening stanza of the calendar is the same as it was this year, notably different for F1 2026 is the tempo of those early races, with China a week after Australia, before a two-week break to Japan, and another two weeks to Bahrain.
Absent from the calendar is the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix, which was out of contract following its F1 2025 event, with the Imola race replaced by the new Madrid Grand Prix.
The Spanish event will conclude the European leg of the season, falling after the Italian Grand Prix in mid-September.
That event remains subject to confirmation as, like any new venue, it must be homologated by the FIA ahead of time. The Madring remains under construction around the IFEMA exhibition centre.
It has, however, prompted a reshuffle of events ahead of F1’s 2026 entry into Europe, which will be delayed until the Monaco GP on June 7.
The Canadian and Monaco Grands Prix have swapped dates, with Montreal hosting Round 7 of the season, three weeks after F1’s first visit to the United States at the Miami Grand Prix.
From Canada, F1 heads to Monaco, kicking off a nine-event run through the sport’s traditional heartland.
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There are a total of just six back-to-back weekends in F1 2026 with the first triple-header coming only once the schedule reaches the United States in October.
That heralds the start of a busy finale to the year, with Mexico City and Sao Paulo Grands Prix following in consecutive weekends.
There is then less than two weeks before the Las Vegas Grand Prix, which is followed by Qatar and Abu Dhabi in a fast-paced conclusion to the championship with six events in seven weeks.
Next year’s calendar also likely marks the final appearance of the Spanish Grand Prix at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya and the final Dutch Grand Prix with officials stating they will not be seeking a renewal.
Also included on the F1 2026 calendar is the Las Vegas Grand Prix on November 21 – another Saturday night race – despite its contract expiring this year. We can therefore deduce that an extension has been put in place, though there has been no formal announcement of such.
The 24-event calendar is the longest allowed under the Concorde Agreement without the unanimous approval of teams.
The new-look schedule is the product of efforts to streamline the sport’s logistics to both reduce its carbon footprint and ease the burden on those who work in the paddock.
Full F1 2026 calendar
March 8: Australian Grand Prix
March 15: Chinese Grand Prix
March 29: Japanese Grand Prix
April 12: Bahrain Grand Prix
April 19: Saudi Arabian Grand Prix
May 3: Miami Grand Prix
May 24: Canadian Grand Prix
June 7: Monaco Grand Prix
June 14: Spanish Grand Prix
June 28: Austrian Grand Prix
July 5: British Grand Prix
July 19: Belgian Grand Prix
July 26: Hungarian Grand Prix
August 23: Dutch Grand Prix
September 6: Italian Grand Prix
September 13: Madrid Grand Prix
September 27: Azerbaijan Grand Prix
October 11: Singapore Grand Prix
October 25: United States Grand Prix
November 1: Mexico City Grand Prix
November 8: Sao Paulo Grand Prix
November 21: Las Vegas Grand Prix
November 29: Qatar Grand Prix
December 6: Abu Dhabi Grand Prix
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