F1 schedule: March races, practice session times and key dates

Introduction — Why the F1 schedule matters
The F1 schedule shapes teams’ preparations, broadcasters’ plans and fans’ viewing calendars. Recent listings from PlanetF1 and Sky Sports highlight early-season race dates and detailed session timing, offering a practical snapshot for followers planning travel, viewing or analysis. Accurate session times and dates are crucial for teams, media partners and supporters worldwide.
Main body — Races and session details from current listings
Early-season race venues
PlanetF1 lists headline early-season events including the Australian Grand Prix at the Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit (05–07 March) and the Chinese Grand Prix at the Shanghai International Circuit (12–15 March). The Japanese Grand Prix is also noted in race listings, with further information available from official calendars.
Detailed session times from Sky Sports
Sky Sports’ schedule and results pages provide a breakdown of practice, sprint and qualifying sessions across the opening months. Key sessions published include:
- 06 March — Practice 1: 01:00–01:30; Practice 2: 04:45–05:00
- 07 March — Practice 3: 01:15–01:30
- 13 March — Practice 1: 03:00–03:30
- 27 March — Practice 1: 02:00–02:30; Practice 2: 05:45–06:00
- 28 March — Practice 3: 02:15–02:30
- 23 May — Sprint: 16:00–17:00
- 21 August — Practice 1: 11:00–11:30
- 22 August — Qualifying: 14:00–15:00
- 10 October — Sprint: 09:00–10:00; Qualifying: 13:00–14:00
- 24 October — Qualifying: 21:00–22:00
These entries appear within Sky Sports’ coverage of the 2026 Formula 1 season, underlining a mix of early practice blocks, mid-season sprint events and later-season qualifying windows. The listings offer a practical guide to when teams and drivers will be on track during race weekends.
Conclusion — What this means for fans and stakeholders
The available F1 schedule information from PlanetF1 and Sky Sports gives fans and stakeholders an actionable outline of key race weekends and session windows. Supporters should note practice blocks and sprint events that can affect weekend formats, while teams and broadcasters will base logistics on these published slots. For a full, up-to-date calendar and any time-zone specifics, readers should consult the official F1 calendar and the original PlanetF1 and Sky Sports schedule pages linked by organisers and media partners.









