Formula 1 street circuit under construction in Madrid with grandstands and urban skyline for the new Madring track
🏁 Formula 1 · First Look · Spanish Grand Prix 2026

First Look at Formula 1’s New
Madring Circuit for the Spanish GP

A 5.416km hybrid street circuit, a 24% banked corner unlike anything else on the calendar, and Formula 1’s return to Madrid after 45 years. Here’s everything confirmed about Madring.

📍 IFEMA & Valdebebas, Madrid
📅 September 11–13, 2026
⏱ 10 min read
🏎 22 turns · 340 km/h top speed
Formula 1 circuit construction in Madrid for the new Madring track and Spanish Grand Prix
🏁 F1 · First Look · 2026

Madring Circuit: F1’s New Spanish GP Home

A 5.4km hybrid circuit with a 24% banked corner — F1 returns to Madrid after 45 years.

📅 Sep 11–13, 2026
⏱ 10 min read

Formula 1 returns to Madrid for the first time since 1981 this September, and the venue waiting for it bears almost no resemblance to anything currently on the calendar. The Madring circuit threads through the IFEMA exhibition complex and the Valdebebas district in the northeast of the city, blending tight urban street sections with a purpose-built, high-speed northern loop.

At 5.416 kilometres with 22 corners, Madring will host the Spanish Grand Prix from September 11 to 13, taking over from the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, which keeps its own June date on the calendar. Therefore, Spain becomes only the fourth country, alongside Italy, the United States, and historically others, to host two Grands Prix in a single season. Here’s everything confirmed about the layout, the headline corner everyone is talking about, and what drivers have already said after walking the track.

5.416km
Circuit Length
22
Corners
340km/h
Top Speed
24%
La Monumental Banking
110K
Capacity
📍

What Is the Madring Circuit?

Location · FIA grading · construction · why it exists

Madring, officially the Circuito de Madring, is a new street circuit built around the IFEMA Madrid exhibition centre in the Barajas district, just five minutes from Adolfo Suárez Madrid-Barajas Airport. The venue carries an FIA Grade 1 certification, the top safety and design classification required to host a Formula 1 World Championship round, and construction has run at a cost of approximately €83.2 million.

The project marks the first new circuit to join the F1 calendar since Las Vegas debuted in 2023, and Madrid becomes the first major European capital to host a Grand Prix. The name itself is a deliberate hybrid — “Madring” fuses the city’s name with “ring,” the term long associated with iconic European racing circuits, while echoing the show-circuit branding established by Miami, Las Vegas, and Abu Dhabi.

🏗️
Built for More Than Just F1

Madring will also host Formula 2 and Formula 3 races during the Spanish Grand Prix weekend, with Formula 3 set to conclude its season at the venue. The facility hosts a 110,000-person capacity with the possibility of future expansion to 140,000, and roughly 90% of fans are expected to reach the venue by public transport via the Feria de Madrid metro stop.

New Formula 1 street circuit construction with asphalt paving and grandstand structures in an urban setting
Asphalt works at Madring reached over 90% completion ahead of the circuit’s September debut ·
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🏁

Madring Track Layout: Corner by Corner

22 turns · hybrid urban-permanent design · key overtaking zones

Madring splits cleanly into two distinct characters. The southern section, built around the IFEMA exhibition halls, feels distinctly urban — tight 90-degree corners, limited run-off, and the start-finish straight squeezed between paddock buildings. Meanwhile, the northern section, a purpose-built 2.2km stretch through Valdebebas, opens up into fast, flowing corners with genuine racing run-off and space for large fan zones.

The lights go out on a 523-metre start-finish straight, with just 252 metres separating pole position from the braking zone into Turn 1 — a setup organisers expect to produce intense opening-lap action. From there, the track transitions through Turn 3, a fast right-hander named Hortaleza after the surrounding Madrid neighbourhood, launching cars onto the 839-metre Ribera del Sena straight where speeds exceed 320 km/h.

Key Sections — Start/Finish → Valdebebas
T1
Opening Braking Zone
320 → 100 km/h · 252m from pole · major overtaking spot
T3
Hortaleza
Fast right-hander · lowest elevation point on track
T5
Ribera del Sena Exit
Circuit top speed of 340 km/h reached flat out
T11
Major Braking Zone
340 → 80 km/h · long urban straight into chicane
T13
Valdebebas Entry
Heavy braking after the flowing high-speed section
T14-16
Las Enlazadas
Three linked corners, each 12 metres wide
T17
Final Overtaking Zone
280 → 100 km/h · adjacent to main fan zone
T18-22
La Monumental Run
Banked sequence back to the start-finish straight

Two short tunnel sections connect the southern IFEMA portion to the Valdebebas expansion area, passing beneath an elevated motorway. Furthermore, Carlos Sainz, who took part in the circuit reveal as an official event ambassador, described the layout as combining tight street sections with a genuinely open, high-speed character — a deliberate design choice he says he pushed organisers toward personally.

Main Straight
523m
Start-finish straight, with Turn 1 just 252m from pole position
Longest Straight
839m
Ribera del Sena, where cars exceed 320–340 km/h
Projected Lap
~1:32
Estimated qualifying lap time at average 213 km/h

🌀

La Monumental: The Corner Built to Define Madring

550m · 24% banking · the steepest corner on the F1 calendar

Every modern Grand Prix venue needs a signature image, and Madring’s is La Monumental — a 550-metre banked corner reaching a 24% incline, the maximum permitted under current track design regulations and the steepest corner anywhere on the 2026 calendar. The turn forms a 270-degree arc around the purpose-built northern section, rising up to 10 metres in height through its span.

Unlike a uniform oval-style banking, La Monumental changes through elevation and camber as it progresses, opening progressively before finishing with a blind, uphill exit. Drivers are expected to enter at roughly 280 km/h, and Sainz has suggested the corner could be taken completely flat out by the fastest cars, creating a genuine slipstream and overtaking opportunity into the tight left-hander that follows.

“The banking will allow you to maybe position the car higher up or lower down if you want to get clean air, but if you stay tucked you will produce quite a bit of slipstream.”

— Carlos Sainz, Madring event ambassador

Paving La Monumental required more than 1,800 cubic metres of asphalt, produced locally in Vicálvaro and laid at 170 degrees using two next-generation pavers to achieve the precision the corner’s complex geometry demanded. For six seconds, drivers will hold a banking angle steeper than anything currently on the calendar — longer, organisers note, than most corners anywhere in modern Formula 1. To understand why banking angle matters so much for cornering speed, see our explainer on what is downforce and how it interacts with track geometry.

Banked race track corner under construction showing steep asphalt incline for high-speed cornering
La Monumental’s 24% banking required precision paving across more than 1,800 cubic metres of asphalt ·
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🔄

Why Madrid, and What Happens to Barcelona?

Spain’s two Grands Prix · the Jarama history · what Barcelona keeps

Madring does not actually replace the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya on the calendar in the way many fans initially assumed. Instead, Madrid joins Barcelona as a second Spanish round, with the long-standing Catalan venue retaining its traditional June date — running June 12–14, 2026 — while Madring debuts later in the year, on September 11–13.

This arrangement makes Spain only the third country on the 2026 calendar, alongside Italy and the United States, to host two Grands Prix in a single season. Therefore, the move reflects a deliberate F1 commercial strategy rather than Barcelona losing its place outright. The Spanish Grand Prix itself dates back to the 1950s, but Madrid’s own F1 history is far older than most fans realise — the city last hosted a round of the World Championship at the Circuito del Jarama in 1981, more than four decades before Madring’s debut.

📅
Where Madring Sits on the 2026 Calendar

The Spanish Grand Prix at Madring is the 16th round of the 2026 season, arriving immediately after the summer break as part of the calendar’s first post-break triple-header alongside Zandvoort and Monza. Imola was dropped from the 24-race calendar to accommodate Madrid’s arrival. See our full 2026 F1 schedule for the complete season order.

Local political reaction has been enthusiastic. Isabel Díaz Ayuso, President of the Community of Madrid, called the dual-race arrangement a sign that “Spain becomes one of the most powerful countries in the championship,” while Madrid Mayor José Luis Martínez-Almeida described the city as the “world capital of sport” ahead of the Grand Prix’s arrival.


🗣

What Drivers Are Saying About Madring

Carlos Sainz’s ambassador role · early reactions from the paddock

Carlos Sainz, born in Madrid and currently driving for Williams, has taken on an official ambassador role for the Grand Prix and has been the most vocal driver discussing the circuit publicly. Speaking after touring the under-construction venue, Sainz set genuinely high expectations for what the track could become.

“I think we can be the best circuit in the world and the best event of the whole calendar. There will be 24 or 25 races, and I honestly think along with Mexico, Miami, Las Vegas that do it very well — but sincerely I trust a lot in Madrid.”

— Carlos Sainz, on Madring’s potential

Sainz has also been clear that the circuit’s design reflects genuine driver input rather than a layout shaped purely around spectacle. He has said he specifically requested organisers build a track with “character and charisma,” pushing back against the criticism that has followed some of F1’s newer venues for prioritising show value over technical challenge. The combination of La Monumental’s banking, the tight IFEMA urban section, and the flowing Valdebebas corners appears designed to directly answer that brief.

For context on how new circuits typically compare against established venues like Barcelona’s technical layout, our explainer on what is grip and oversteer and understeer in F1 covers the fundamentals that determine how a new track drives compared to familiar ones.

Formula 1 car testing on a new circuit with grandstands and city skyline in the background
Early reaction from drivers involved in the design process has been notably positive ahead of Madring’s debut ·

🎟

Attending the Race: Tickets, Access & What to Expect

Getting there · ticket categories · the weekend schedule

Madring has been deliberately designed around public transport access, addressing one of the most common complaints about newer F1 venues built outside city centres. The Feria de Madrid metro stop delivers fans directly to the circuit entrance, while the Adolfo Suárez Madrid-Barajas Airport sits just five minutes away — a genuine logistical advantage over circuits that require lengthy shuttle journeys.

Interest has already proven strong well ahead of the inaugural race, with more than 70% of the circuit’s capacity reportedly sold before several newly revealed grandstand and hospitality sections went on sale. The race weekend itself runs the standard three-day F1 format, with Formula 2 and Formula 3 support races filling out the schedule alongside practice, qualifying, and the Grand Prix itself on Sunday, September 13.

🎫
Planning Your Trip

Ticket categories range from general admission through Section 1 Gold grandstands overlooking the start-finish straight, pit lane, and podium. Covered grandstands are available with direct metro access, and the venue includes dedicated fan zones with food, entertainment, and merchandise areas throughout the weekend. For a broader look at how F1 race weekends are typically structured, see our guide on what is a Grand Prix and F1 qualifying explained.


Frequently Asked Questions

Most-searched questions about the Madring circuit
What is the Madring Circuit?
Madring is a new FIA Grade 1 street circuit built around the IFEMA exhibition centre and Valdebebas district in Madrid, Spain. It will host the Formula 1 Spanish Grand Prix beginning in 2026, combining urban public roads with purpose-built racing sections in a hybrid layout.
Where is the new Formula 1 Madring Circuit located?
Madring is located in the Barajas district of northeast Madrid, built around the IFEMA Madrid exhibition centre, approximately five minutes from Adolfo Suárez Madrid-Barajas Airport and around 16 kilometres from Madrid’s city centre.
When will Formula 1 race at the Madring Circuit?
The inaugural Formula 1 Spanish Grand Prix at Madring takes place September 11–13, 2026, as the 16th round of the season. It marks Formula 1’s return to Madrid for the first time since the Circuito del Jarama hosted a round in 1981.
How long is the Madring Circuit?
The Madring Grand Prix circuit measures 5.416 kilometres (3.365 miles) and features 22 corners. Projected qualifying lap times are expected around 1 minute 32 seconds, with an average lap speed of approximately 213 km/h.
Why is Formula 1 moving to Madrid?
Formula 1 is not moving away from Barcelona — Madrid joins as a second Spanish round on the calendar. Madrid offers strong commercial appeal as a major European capital with excellent transport infrastructure, joining Italy and the United States as the only countries currently hosting two Grands Prix in the same season.
What are the key features of the Madring Circuit?
Madring’s standout feature is La Monumental, a 550-metre banked corner with a 24% incline — the steepest on the F1 calendar. The layout also includes the 839-metre Ribera del Sena straight where cars reach 340 km/h, multiple overtaking zones at Turns 1, 5, 11, and 17, and two tunnel sections connecting its urban and high-speed portions.
How many corners does the Madring Circuit have?
Madring features 22 corners across its 5.416km layout, combining tight 90-degree urban corners in the southern IFEMA section with fast, flowing turns in the purpose-built northern Valdebebas section.
Will the Madring Circuit replace Barcelona?
No. The Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya retains its traditional June date on the 2026 calendar, running June 12–14. Madring hosts a separate Spanish Grand Prix in September, making Spain one of the few countries to host two Formula 1 races in a single season.
Is the Madring Circuit a street circuit?
Madring is a hybrid circuit, combining genuine public street sections around the IFEMA complex with a purpose-built permanent racing section through Valdebebas. Approximately 75% of the track represents new construction rather than existing public roads, distinguishing it from pure street circuits like Monaco or Singapore.

Why Madring matters beyond a single new dot on the calendar

New Formula 1 venues live or die on whether they produce genuine racing rather than just a spectacular backdrop. What makes Madring worth watching closely is that it appears to have been designed with both goals in mind simultaneously — a banked corner unlike anything currently raced, multiple legitimate overtaking zones, and a layout shaped with direct input from a driver who grew up in the city it’s built in.

Whether La Monumental lives up to the hype Sainz has set will only become clear once cars are actually on track in September. However, the technical ambition behind the design — and the fact that Madrid secured a second Spanish round rather than simply displacing Barcelona — suggests this is a venue F1 is building for the long term, not just a one-off show race.

For the latest on how the 2026 season is shaping up before Madring’s debut, see our live Formula 1 standings and full season schedule.

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