
Imola dropped and two races in Spain for F1 2026 calendar
Formula One will have two races in Spain next season with Madrid making its debut in September and Italy's Imola dropping off the 24-round calendar, the governing FIA announced on Tuesday.
Melbourne's Australian Grand Prix will again be the season-opener on 8 March with China's Shanghai circuit hosting round two a week later, as the sport enters a new engine era with Cadillac also arriving as an 11th team.
Monaco will be the first European round on 7 June with Barcelona's Circuit de Catalunya scheduled the following week.
Madrid's new street circuit will debut as the last race in Europe on 13 September, the weekend after the Italian Grand Prix at Monza. Imola was out of contract after this year's race and drops off the list.
The season will end in Abu Dhabi on 6 December.
"We are excited to welcome Madrid to the calendar, and to see huge automotive brands like Audi, Cadillac and Ford join the Formula One grid," said Formula One Chief Executive Stefano Domenicali in a statement.
Swiss-based Sauber will become the Audi works team in 2026 while Ford are partnering with Red Bull.
2026 Calendar:
8 March - Australia, Melbourne
15 March - China, Shanghai
29 March - Japan, Suzuka
12 April - Bahrain, Sakhir
19 April - Saudi Arabia, Jeddah
3 May - United States, Miami
24 May - Canada, Montreal
7 June - Monaco
14 June - Spain, Barcelona
28 June - Austria, Spielberg
5 July - Britain, Silverstone
19 July - Belgium, Spa-Francorchamps
26 July - Hungary, Budapest
23 August - Netherlands, Zandvoort
6 September - Italy, Monza
13 September - Spain, Madrid
27 September - Azerbaijan, Baku
11 October - Singapore
25 October - United States, Austin
1 November - Mexico, Mexico City
8 November - Brazil, Sao Paulo
21 November - United States, Las Vegas
29 November - Qatar
6 December - Abu Dhabi
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RTÉ News
2 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Hopes of significant UK funding allocation for Casement Park
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The 42
2 hours ago
- The 42
A game soon forgotten but it does pose the question: just what do we want from Ireland?
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He's drilled that into us in the sessions and I think everyone buys into that. As soon as someone sets the press off you need to go with them or else it's not going to work.' On the eve of this friendly with Luxembourg, with Collins sitting alongside him, Hallgrímsson emphasised once more that he wanted to see consistency in the performance and stability with the team shape. He made five changes to his starting XI and was forced into another within 20 minutes when Ryan Manning replaced the injured Robbie Brady. But the message would have been the same. Ireland were content for Luxembourg to enjoy harmless possession – 61% over the opening half hour, dropping to 56% towards the end – with players scuttling from side to side and ensuring the distances between them didn't become too vast so as to allow passing lanes opening up in behind. And some of this brings us back to what it is we want from an Ireland team. 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The Irish Sun
3 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Island nation nine times larger than UK banned from World Cup as statement released
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