After a sold-out 2025 race weekend, the Formula 1 Heineken Las Vegas Grand Prix is doubling down on what has quickly become one of the sport’s most distinctive fan experiences: blending accessible ticket pricing with the kind of luxury hospitality only Las Vegas can deliver.
Organizers announced Monday that tickets for the Nov. 19–21, 2026 race weekend will go on sale to the public May 7 at 10 a.m. PDT, with prices beginning at $50 for single-day general admission and $492 for three-day Flamingo Zone passes, including taxes and fees.
The event will also feature a 48-hour American Express presale beginning May 5, while fans can still secure priority access and waived fees by placing a deposit through April 30.
But beyond the headline prices, race officials say the bigger story is how the event continues to evolve based on direct fan feedback.
“The first three years of the Las Vegas Grand Prix have been a vital period of growth and evolution,” said Emily Prazer, president and CEO of Las Vegas Grand Prix, Inc. “Today, we have a clearer picture than ever of the experiences our fans are looking for.”
That evolution is something Alli England, vice president of premium sales and service, said has become central to how the race is built year over year.

“Last year was obviously great. We sold out,” England told Action Sports Today. “I think last year was a good year where we finally figured out the balance of how much premium we needed, but still accessible products for everyone coming to the race.”
That balance is especially important in Las Vegas, where the expectations of visitors are fundamentally different from other races on the Formula One calendar.
Unlike Monaco or Baku, where the city largely revolves around the event, Las Vegas remains fully alive during race weekend.
“The whole city is the track,” England said. “The second you get off the airplane, you arrive in the city, you’re kind of at the track.”
That citywide atmosphere has become one of the defining features of the event.
From the Bellagio Las Vegas and Wynn Las Vegas hospitality partnerships to trackside clubs and premium suites, organizers say the fan journey begins long before lights out.

Among the returning fan favorites is the Grand Prix Trio, a three-night package that offers guests three different perspectives of the race weekend, including seats in the Heineken® Grandstands, the Turn 3 Grandstand, and an elevated Skybox hospitality experience.
England said the product was one of last year’s biggest successes.
“It gives someone the opportunity to have that taste of hospitality,” she said. “Then maybe they want to splurge on it the following year.”
The Trio package returns for 2026 starting at $3,178.
This year’s ticket menu again spans a broad range of experiences.
General admission begins at $50 for Thursday practice, $99 for Friday qualifying, and $393 for Saturday’s Grand Prix.
Three-day grandstand seating ranges from $925 to $2,051, while hospitality packages extend from club offerings such as Club Paris and Skybox to ultra-luxury experiences like Gordon Ramsay at F1 Garage, the Bellagio Fountain Club, and the Wynn Grid Club, where packages can exceed $25,000.
England said corporate hospitality demand has continued to rise.
“We’ve seen an increase in demand on hosting requests,” she said. “Now it’s very intentional.”
That includes businesses bringing clients across multiple nights, employees for one session, and top-tier partners for the race itself.
Still, organizers remain focused on local fans and first-time racegoers.
“We want locals to come too,” England said. “That ticket introduces someone maybe to the sport who loves Vegas but has never seen a race.”
One of the most notable changes for 2026 is the repositioning of the Turn 3 Grandstand, which was moved after fan surveys indicated the previous location did not provide the ideal viewing angle.
Because the Las Vegas Strip Circuit® is temporary, the race has a rare ability to pivot.
“We’re able to be dynamic and switch up products like that because we’re a temporary track,” England said.
That flexibility, she added, is what keeps the event from becoming stale.
“If something’s not big, or something’s working really well, we can add more of it or switch it up.”
The race weekend will also feature the return of F1 Academy, which will conclude its season on the Las Vegas Strip Circuit®, along with live entertainment, interactive fan activations, expanded food and beverage offerings, and additional single-day ticket options to be announced later.
For England, the constant evolution is part of what makes the Las Vegas race unique.
“My job will never be the same year after year,” she said. “Which I personally love.”

