F1 Season Opener Draws Record US Viewership Amid Rising Popularity

by Daniel Brooks
F1 Season Opener Draws Record US Viewership Amid Rising Popularity

F1 Season Opener Draws Record US Viewership Amid Rising Popularity...

The 2026 Formula 1 season opener in Bahrain shattered U.S. viewership records Sunday, signaling the sport’s accelerating growth in America. ESPN reported a 28% increase in live audience numbers compared to last year’s opener, with peak viewership hitting 1.4 million during Max Verstappen’s dominant victory.

The surge comes as F1 capitalizes on its Netflix “Drive to Survive” momentum and expands U.S. races to three events this season. Miami and Austin will be joined by a new Las Vegas night race in November, creating unprecedented stateside interest. Social media engagement around #F1Live spiked 73% during Sunday’s broadcast.

American driver Logan Sargeant’s points finish for Williams added local appeal, marking the first U.S. driver to score in a season opener since 1993. The 25-year-old Floridian’s performance trended nationally on Twitter, with NASCAR champion Kyle Busch tweeting: “About time we had an American mixing it up front.”

F1 CEO Stefano Domenicali confirmed the organization is tracking toward its goal of 30% U.S. fanbase growth by 2027. “The energy from American fans is transforming our sport,” he told CNBC Monday morning. Merchandise sales for U.S.-based teams Haas and McLaren reportedly doubled last quarter.

The next race, the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix on March 15, will air live at 12 PM ET on ESPN. Early betting lines show Verstappen as -250 favorite, with Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc at +400 following his Bahrain podium. Weather forecasts predict possible sandstorms that could disrupt practice sessions.

Industry analysts note the timing aligns perfectly with Americans’ growing preference for morning sports programming. With NFL and NBA seasons winding down, F1’s 10 AM ET Sunday slots are capturing displaced sports viewers. The league’s YouTube channel gained 420,000 new U.S. subscribers in February alone.

Las Vegas ticket sales for November’s race exceeded projections by 40%, according to Liberty Media filings. Resale prices for grandstand seats already average $1,200, nearly triple last year’s Miami GP rates. Local hotels are reporting 92% occupancy for race weekend nine months in advance.

This sustained stateside momentum comes despite criticism over F1’s environmental impact. A coalition of 12 U.S. environmental groups plans protests at the Miami GP in May, targeting the sport’s carbon footprint. F1 officials counter that their 2030 net-zero pledge includes sustainable fuel development.

With seven of F1’s ten teams now holding U.S. sponsorship deals, including Oracle’s $300 million title sponsorship of Red Bull, the financial stakes keep rising. Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff told Bloomberg: “America isn’t just our future market—it’s becoming our present.”

Daniel Brooks

Editor at Infoneige covering trending news and global updates.