Countdown to F1 Las Vegas Grand Prix begins with tickets on sale

by · Las Vegas Review-Journal

Formula One Las Vegas Grand Prix tickets went on sale Thursday, allowing fans to begin getting their seats to race weekend planned for Nov. 19-21.

Tickets for this year’s race, available for purchase on the Las Vegas Grand Prix website, range between $50 for a single-day general admission to the Nov. 19 practice round to approaching $30,000 for a three-day pass to the high-end paddock area with access to famed chef Gordon Ramsay’s garage space.

Three-day grandstand seating tickets start at $925, Grand Prix Trio packages (fans sit in a different spectator zone each day) start at $3,178, with hospitality tickets starting at $2,542. The highest-priced tickets are the Wynn Grid Club at $25,997 and the Gordan Ramsay at F1 Garage at $28,885. All hospitality tickets include varying levels of all-inclusive food and beverage options, while the general admission and grandstand tickets are pay as you go for food and drinks.

“It is our fourth year, so we’ve really found our stride this year with a great mix of products,” said Alli England, the Las Vegas Grand Prix vice president of premium sales and service. “We have general admission starting at $50 for a single-day ticket, all inclusive of taxes and fees in the Flamingo zone. We also have a three-day ticket starting at $492 in that same zone, but really a range of tickets this year.”

This year’s race marks the fourth year F1 will take over a 3.8-mile street circuit, mainly run on public roads including Las Vegas Boulevard, Koval Lane and Harmon and Sands avenues. The track also runs through Grand Prix Plaza, where pit lane and the start/finish line are located, and around Sphere, where the headlining entertainment acts for the weekend will perform each night.

New this year is allowing fans to roam three different fan zones if they have a ticket in any of the East Harmon, West Harmon or Koval zones, England said.

The move came after evaluating fan feedback from the 2025; a practice race officials have done each year to fine tune the ticketing and experiences of the race. Aside from the connected fan zones, fan feedback led to the adjusting of the Turn 3 grandstand.

“Last year it was on one side of the track and we’re essentially moving it to the other side of Turn 3,” England said. “So it’ll still be Turn 3 but it should have a better vantage point for all of the fans and also the F1 Academy paddock.”

Bellagio Fountain Club

The premier hospitality space outside of the F1 pit building built over the Fountains of Bellagio, dubbed the Bellagio Fountain Club, also returns this year. The exclusive space offers fans races views of the Strip straightaway on one side of the temporary structure and of the Bellagio fountain show on the other.

A three-day ticket to the Bellagio Fountain Club runs $8,400 this year, up from the $7,750 charged for the 2025 race, but below the $12,500 price seen for the 2024 Grand Prix.

The space includes unlimited premium food and beverage offerings, tiered front-row seats, private indoor and rooftop hospitality decks, racing simulators, and appearances from Las Vegas entertainers and A-list DJs entertaining guests throughout the weekend.

Notable culinary names are planned to prepare exclusive dishes for guests all weekend, with previous races seeing chefs such as Jose Andres, Mario Carbone, David Chang and others. The culinary lineup for this year’s race will be revealed at a later date.

“We created Bellagio Fountain Club to deliver an unforgettable race-watching environment that could only exist in the heart of the Las Vegas Strip,” Ryan Abboushi, MGM Resorts president of entertainment, said in a statement. “Along with the best views of the race, the first-class hospitality suite welcomes cuisine from a talented lineup of globally celebrated chefs, unique wine and cocktail offerings, exceptional service, and picturesque views of Bellagio’s Fountains.”