F1 - FORMULA 1
F1 - Formula 1

The crazy amount you will have to pay to go to the Las Vegas GP

The Las Vegas street circuit will host the penultimate round of the season

Max Verstappen driving on the Las Vegas circuit
Max Verstappen driving on the Las Vegas circuitAP

The Las Vegas Grand Prix has announced the prices for each of its different tickets for the 2025 Formula 1 season. The cost ranges from $50, the cheapest, to $25,000, offering the most exclusive experience on the Nevada track.

This decision was made mainly to make the race "a little bit more accessible to a wider audience", said Las Vegas GP president and CEO Emily Prazer. "We've lowered prices and created flexible payment plans, which will be interest-free. In American sport it's quite normal to be able to pay over a period of time and something we felt we were missing," she said.

Pleasure took last season's prices as a reference, as they started from $330 upwards. "We're going to make sure that our selling prices are as low as possible. I think everybody has seen that we've changed the model a little bit, lowering prices closer to the race."

We will ensure that our selling prices are as low as possible

Emily Prazer,presidenta y CEO del GP de Las Vegas

Similarly, just as they enjoy one of the cheapest tickets of the season, they also have one of the most exclusive experiences. "We still have a $25,000 ticket, and the Paddock Club is very, very established and understood very well, so people believe it. We've had a lot of feedback and I think people perhaps forget that when we started we were a real startup. We didn't have data. We didn't necessarily know the people who were going to attend," said the GP's CEO.

Fans will be able to own tickets for the event from April 9, when they will go on sale. However, flexible payment plans will be available until August 2025.

A contract that doesn't seem to be ending soon

The Las Vegas street circuit will host the 20 fastest drivers in the world from November 20-23, 2025, the year it is contracted to F1. However, according to Emily Prazer, it does not seem that it will go anywhere, as there are already talks to extend it

"Like everything, contracts come to an end," he said. "However, with all the different stakeholders in Las Vegas, we are currently going through a renewal process, so we feel, again, very comfortable that the race will continue. Obviously, everyone is very committed to this," Prazer concluded

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