The 2026 British Grand Prix runs 2–5 July at Silverstone, in the heart of Northamptonshire. Sprint format is back — main race on Sunday 5 July at 3:00 pm BST. Tickets start from £99 General Admission on Friday; the most sought-after grandstands still available are Club Corner (podium view), Becketts (covered, ultra-fast corners) and Village (overtaking action). From London: Euston to Milton Keynes Central takes 30–35 min, then the official shuttle drops you at the gates in 50 minutes — budget £30–50 return. National Express runs direct coaches from London Victoria and Stratford from around £35 return. Book your grandstand and shuttle now — availability is tightening.
Silverstone, 5 July 2026, 3:00 pm BST: 22 Formula 1 cars launch in front of 168,000 fans to a wall of sound. The British Grand Prix is the best-attended race on the F1 calendar — 500,000 visitors over four days in 2025, a world record since Indianapolis 2000. For 2026, it gets even bigger: the Sprint format returns, the new 2026-regulation cars make their home-crowd debut, and five British drivers are on the grid — including Lewis Hamilton back at Silverstone in Ferrari red for the first time. This guide covers everything you need before you book: which grandstand to pick, what tickets cost, how to get there, and where to stay.
1. Race weekend schedule: four days of racing and concerts

Four packed days at Britain’s greatest motorsport event
According to Silverstone and Formula 1, the weekend breaks down across four distinct days. Thursday 2 July is the opening evening — gates from 11:00 am and David Guetta headlining from 9:00 pm (his only UK date in 2026). Friday 3 July kicks off on-track action with Free Practice 1 (12:30–1:30 pm) and Sprint Qualifying (4:00–5:14 pm), followed by a Richard Ashcroft concert. Saturday 4 July is the build-up: Sprint Race at noon (100 km, 8 points for the winner) then F1 Qualifying at 4:00 pm, with Chase & Status closing the night. Sunday 5 July — gates open at 6:30 am, two hours earlier than other days, ahead of the Grand Prix at 3:00 pm (52 laps, 306.198 km).
2026 weekend highlights
- Sprint format returns to Silverstone for the first time since 2021 — more action from Friday
- Four concerts: David Guetta (Thu), Richard Ashcroft (Fri), Chase & Status (Sat), James Arthur (Sun)
- First-ever 2026-regulation cars in action: active aero, 50% electric energy, 30 kg lighter
- Five British drivers on the grid: Hamilton, Norris, Russell, Bearman, Lindblad
2. Grandstand guide: where to sit for your style of fan

Comparing the best grandstands still available
According to Silverstone’s official grandstand guide, the circuit offers over 25 reserved locations. The Landostand (Stowe) — Lando Norris’s own grandstand, expanded to 16,000 seats for 2026 — sold out shortly after tickets went on sale. But the remaining options are genuinely excellent.
Club Corner gives you a rare triple view: the Hamilton Straight (start/finish), the pit lane exit and podium, and the heavy braking zone into the final corner. Blocks B and C are covered — handy when the Great British weather turns. For those who love technical driving, Becketts overlooks the Maggotts–Becketts–Chapel sequence, the fastest corners on the entire F1 calendar (250+ km/h), and it’s fully covered. Copse puts you at the flat-out entry corner from £329 (3 days), with 25% off for under-11s. Village combines pit-lane exit with the first heavy braking point of the infield loop — Block B is covered (~£519 for 3 days). New for 2026, BOXPARK takes a festival approach: street food, bars, DJs, premium Wi-Fi and free parking, with a view of the Hangar Straight, from £169 a day.
| Grandstand | Main view | Covered | 3-day price | Availability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Landostand (Stowe) | Overtaking on Hangar/Stowe | No | £539 | Sold out |
| Club Corner | Podium + pit lane + action | Partial (B/C) | ~£450 | Limited |
| Hamilton Straight | Start/finish + pit lane + podium | Partial (A) | £629+ | Available |
| Becketts | Maggotts–Becketts fast sequence | Full | ~£500 | Limited |
| Copse | Ultra-fast entry corner | Partial | £329+ | Limited |
| Village | Braking zone + pit-lane exit | Partial (B) | ~£519 | Available |
| BOXPARK (new 2026) | Hangar Straight + festival | N/A | £629 | Available |
Key points
- General Admission (£99 Friday, £269+ weekend): free movement across all outer circuit zones
- Free GA spots (Vale Corner, Chapel Corner) with wristbands handed out from 5:30 am Sunday
- Under-11s: FREE on GA Friday, 50% off at the weekend
3. Getting to Silverstone: from London, Birmingham, Manchester and beyond

Getting there without the stress
According to National Rail and Silverstone, the recommended route from London is: Avanti West Coast from London Euston to Milton Keynes Central (30–35 min, from £15 return booked in advance), then the official Silverstone shuttle from Milton Keynes (50 min, £12/person/day before 15 June 2026). Door-to-door from central London: roughly 1 hour 20 minutes. National Express is the official 2026 transport partner, running direct coaches from London Victoria and Stratford directly to the circuit gates — return fares from around £35. Megabus covers over 20 UK cities including Bristol, Birmingham, Leeds and Sheffield.
From Birmingham: Birmingham New Street to Milton Keynes Central takes around 45 minutes, then catch the shuttle. Or take a direct National Express coach — roughly 75 minutes by road via the M40. From Manchester: Manchester Piccadilly to Milton Keynes on the West Coast Main Line takes about 2 hours; a direct Megabus coach is another option. Driving is best avoided on race day: queues of 1–3 hours are common on Sunday evening, and parking must be pre-booked through Silverstone at around £170 for 3–4 days. Motorcycles enter free.
Key travel tips
- Shuttle buses from Milton Keynes run every 30 minutes from 6:00 am on race day — arrive early to skip the queues
- Shuttles also run from Northampton (40 min, £12), Banbury (50 min, £12), Coventry (80 min, £12) and Oxford Parkway (£12)
- Book shuttle tickets before 15 June 2026 to lock in the £12/day rate — prices rise after that date
4. Where to stay: on-site camping, hotels and alternatives

Five accommodation options for every budget
According to Silverstone and GPDestinations, on-site camping is the classic Silverstone experience — no transport headaches, you wake up to the sound of F1 cars, and the festival atmosphere runs Thursday to Sunday. Options include: Silverstone Woodlands (£149/adult + £72/child, walking distance from the circuit), Woodcote Fields (tent and campervan pitches, under-12s free), and for something more comfortable, NOVA Glamping (new for 2026, fewer than 190 pitches, already very limited) with breakfast, restaurants and a bar included.
For those who prefer a hotel, Milton Keynes (15 miles) is the sweet spot — plenty of 3-star options (Leonardo, Moxy, Holiday Inn) at £125–200 per night over race weekend, with easy train-and-shuttle access. Northampton (10 miles) is even closer: Mercure, Hilton and Holiday Inn Express at £100–175 per night. Five minutes’ walk from the circuit, Whittlebury Park Hotel & Spa (4-star) is the go-to for F1 teams — book well in advance. The Escapade Silverstone trackside residences overlooking Maggotts–Becketts are sold out for 2026.
Key points
- On-site camping: the only way to skip transport stress entirely and live the event 24/7
- Milton Keynes: best train-shuttle connection + restaurants and bars for evenings out
- Northampton: closest hotel option to the circuit, with slightly lower prices than Milton Keynes
5. What’s at stake: Hamilton in Ferrari, Antonelli leading, Norris defending

Round 10 of a season that’s already rewriting the record books
According to RacingNews365, Silverstone 2026 is round 10 of 22 following the Austrian GP. Championship standings: Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes, 156 points) leads Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari, 90 pts) and George Russell (Mercedes, 88 pts). The 19-year-old Italian has won five consecutive races since Monaco 2025 — and his first F2 win came at Silverstone in 2024. How he handles 168,000 partisan British fans will be worth watching. If you’ve been following the season so far, our Austrian GP guide is a useful reference point for comparing race weekend formats.
Lewis Hamilton returns to Silverstone in Ferrari red after 11 years at Mercedes. He’s won here eight times between 2008 and 2021 — the outright record for any driver at a single venue. Watching him in red at his home race, in front of 168,000 fans, is one of the moments of the season. Lando Norris defends his title from Silverstone 2025 in front of his 16,000+ fans in the Landostand — now sold out. According to Silverstone, the Sprint format adds a 100 km sprint race (8 points for the top 8) on Saturday at noon, replacing the usual free practice session — a denser programme with less breathing room for teams and fans alike.
2026 storylines to watch
- Hamilton’s first Silverstone home race in Ferrari — 11 years in the making
- Norris defending his 2025 Silverstone title in front of his home crowd
- Two debutants to watch: Arvid Lindblad (Racing Bulls, 18) and the Mercedes vs Ferrari championship battle
6. Full budget breakdown: from £400 to £5,000 depending on comfort

Three budget profiles
According to GPDestinations, a budget weekend from anywhere in the UK runs around £400–450: 3-day General Admission ticket (£269), camping at Silverstone Woodlands (£149), and shuttle buses (£36). Add food from home — it’s allowed and saves you £30–50 per day versus circuit prices. A mid-range trip with a grandstand ticket (Village or Abbey, ~£519) and a shared 3-star hotel in Milton Keynes (~£250/person for 3 nights) comes in at roughly £950 all-in. The premium experience with Paddock Club (~£3,100 for 3 days) and a 4-star hotel (~£500/person) comes in around £4,500.
Ways to save
- Friday only (£99 GA + one hotel night): around £200 on the day — the ideal entry-level option or for a tight budget
- Shuttle before 15 June 2026: £12/day — prices go up after that date
- Bring your own food: fully allowed, no restrictions — saves £30–50 per day versus circuit prices
Practical information for your trip
Stay connected at Silverstone and across the UK without roaming charges. Activate in minutes, works on iPhone and Android. Essential for the Silverstone app (interactive map, live session times) and GPS navigation to the circuit.
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From $62.72 / 4 weeksFrequently asked questions about the 2026 British Grand Prix
What are the dates for the 2026 British Grand Prix at Silverstone?
The 2026 British Grand Prix runs from Thursday 2 July to Sunday 5 July at Silverstone. Thursday is the opening evening with a David Guetta concert. Friday 3 July features Free Practice 1 and Sprint Qualifying. Saturday 4 July: Sprint Race at noon and F1 Qualifying at 4:00 pm. The main race takes place on Sunday 5 July at 3:00 pm BST. According to the official Silverstone timetable, gates open at 6:30 am on Sunday — two hours earlier than other days.
How much do tickets cost for the 2026 British Grand Prix?
Tickets for the 2026 British Grand Prix at Silverstone range from £50 (Thursday concert only) to £879 (Hamilton Straight grandstand, 4 days). General Admission on Friday is £99 (under-11s free); GA for the full weekend starts at £269 for 3 days. Grandstands start from £329 for 3 days (Copse). Becketts and Club Corner are around £450–550 for 3 days. The Landostand (Stowe) at £539 is sold out. Tickets use dynamic pricing — the earlier you buy, the less you pay. According to Silverstone, a limited number of Sunday tickets were still available in early June 2026.
How do I get to Silverstone from London?
The recommended route from London is: train from London Euston to Milton Keynes Central (30–35 min, from £15 return booked in advance), then the official Silverstone shuttle (50 min, £12/person/day before 15 June 2026). Total door-to-door: roughly 1 hour 20 minutes. Alternatively, National Express runs direct coaches from London Victoria and Stratford to the circuit gates from around £35 return. According to Oversteer48, shuttle buses also run from Northampton (40 min, £12), Banbury (50 min, £12), Coventry (80 min, £12) and Oxford Parkway (£12).
Can you bring your own food and drink to Silverstone?
Yes — your own food is fully permitted at the 2026 British Grand Prix at Silverstone with no restrictions. Non-alcoholic drinks are also allowed. Alcohol has been banned since 2025, so you can’t bring your own. Glass bottles and glass containers are also not permitted. The maximum bag size is 20 litres. Bringing your own food is genuinely worth it: on-site prices reach £10 for a burger and £7.70 for a beer. Earplugs are strongly recommended, especially for children.
What is the Sprint format and how does it change the Silverstone weekend?
The Sprint format returns to Silverstone for the first time since 2021. It adds a 100 km sprint race on Saturday at noon — no mandatory pit stop, with points awarded to the top 8 (8 points for first place). Friday free practice is replaced by Sprint Qualifying (SQ1/SQ2/SQ3) from 4:00–5:14 pm, making Friday a much more action-packed day. According to Silverstone, the format means more on-track action from Friday and less downtime — good news if you’re on a day ticket.
Which is the best grandstand for overtaking at the British Grand Prix?
For overtaking action, Village (pit-lane exit and first heavy braking zone of the infield loop, ~£519 for 3 days) and Club Corner (the final braking zone before the finish line) are the best grandstands still available in 2026. The Landostand (Stowe) — the go-to for Hangar Straight overtaking — is sold out. Becketts is ideal for technical driving at maximum load rather than overtaking. According to EnterF1, Club Corner has the added bonus of a podium and pit lane view.
What’s the total budget for the 2026 British Grand Prix from the UK?
From anywhere in the UK, there are three budget levels. Budget option: £400–450 all-in (3-day GA ticket £269, on-site camping £149, shuttle buses £36, bring your own food). Mid-range with a grandstand ticket: around £950 (Village grandstand £519, shared 3-star hotel in Milton Keynes ~£250/person for 3 nights, transport and food). Premium with Paddock Club and 4-star hotel: £4,500 and upwards. For families: under-11s get in free on GA Friday. According to GPDestinations, Friday only is the most affordable way to experience the event for the first time.
Sources
- Formula 1: Official British Grand Prix 2026 page: schedule, results, calendar
- Silverstone: Formula 1 Pirelli British Grand Prix 2026: official circuit information
- Silverstone: Full 2026 timetable: session times
- Silverstone: Ticket Prices Explained 2026: grandstand pricing breakdown
- Silverstone: Grandstand guide: comparison of seating locations
- Silverstone: Getting Here: official transport, shuttles and parking
- Silverstone: Camping Guide 2026: on-site camping options
- Silverstone: Sprint format returns in 2026
- National Rail: F1 Grand Prix travel information
- National Express: British Grand Prix 2026 travel: official coach partner
- Megabus: British Grand Prix 2026 travel: coaches from 20+ UK cities
- RacingNews365: F1 championship standings after Monaco 2026
- GPDestinations: Budget Planner British GP
- Oversteer48: Public transport guide to Silverstone
- EnterF1: Guide to the best seats at Silverstone
- F1Destinations: 500,000 attend the 2025 British Grand Prix
- GP Fans: FIA Becketts technical controversy 2026
Data verified 12 June 2026. Ticket prices and grandstand availability may change.
Plan your British Grand Prix trip
Get your UK eSIM before you go to stay connected at the circuit — and explore Pixidia’s itineraries to combine Silverstone with the Cotswolds or a stop in London.
Explore itineraries around Silverstone