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F1 Gears Up for Exciting New Triple-Header This Season
Highlights
- Formula 1 may add a triple-header in October 2026.
- Race planned between Azerbaijan and Singapore Grands Prix.
- Possible return of Saudi Arabian or Bahrain Grand Prix.
- Triple-header would run from October 2nd to 4th, 2026.
- Final decision depends on Middle East geopolitical situation.
Formula 1 evaluates adding a triple-header to the 2026 calendar, inserting a Middle East race between Azerbaijan and Singapore on October 2–4, subject to regional stability and operational feasibility.
Talks involve F1’s commercial rights holder, promoters, and teams. David Croft said on the Sky F1 podcast there is appetite to reinstate Saudi Arabia or Bahrain during that window.
Both events were scrubbed earlier this year amid Middle East instability. Bahrain currently looks pragmatic logistically, with freight already positioned regionally and turnaround times aligning with Baku–Singapore transit constraints.
Croft also referenced a Canadian Grand Prix paddock meeting with a Saudi-linked representative, who expressed optimism about Jeddah’s return in 2026 if conditions allow.
The concept plugs the calendar gap cleanly, enabling a three-week run without major replanning. This mirrors recent three-week sequence precedents as F1 normalises consecutive-event logistics.
A decision is sought soon. Organisers and the FIA need long-lead certainty for freight bookings, visas, accommodation, and broadcaster planning ahead of the October block.
Team workload remains the principal constraint. Budget cap accounting, staff rotation, and curfew rules intensify debate, as highlighted in recent FIA and F1 teams debates.
Flexibility exists because either venue could slot in. Jeddah’s fast street circuit attracts praise for spectacle, while Bahrain’s proven infrastructure and history support a low-risk operational choice.
Triple-headers increase freight efficiency but compress recovery time. F1 can lean on established planning, including revised routings and staffing models, reflected in its contingency plan approach.
An announcement is expected in the coming weeks. The outcome will shape competitive flow through October and frames a crucial challenge for the evolving 2026 schedule.
Visual Summary
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⏱️ 3 races, 3 weeks – Baku, Middle East ??/??, Singapore
Logistics Challenge
(TBD)
Your calendar could be packed—if the green light comes soon.

James William covers the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, from the Rolex 24 at Daytona to sprint-race formats. His reports include prototype performance reviews, GT class battles, and pit-stop strategy insights for endurance-racing fans.






