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Tickets for Formula 1 in Suzuka - Mar 27, 2026

Tickets, prices, location, and a helpful arrival guide – all in one place.

Formula 1 Tickets (Race)
Photo © Cronetik.com
Date and time Mar 27, 2026 at 10:00 AM (3 days)
Location Suzuka Circuit, Suzuka, Japan
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Event summary

Race Formula 1 – Mar 27, 2026 at 10:00 AM (3 days) – Suzuka Circuit, Suzuka, Japan
A Formula 1 race can flip on a single stop or safety call. You keep an eye on strategy, pace, and surprise moves that shake the order. The finish often stays open, right to the last corners. When you want to be part of it, explore options and decide calmly.

Suzuka Circuit - race track, capacity 155,000, address: Mie 510-0295, 7992 Inoucho, Suzuka, Japan. Find location details and a city guide further down the page.

Tickets

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Event details

Performer Formula 1
City Suzuka, Japan
Venue / arena Suzuka Circuit
Date Mar 27, 2026
Start time 10:00 AM
Duration 3 days
Venue type Race track
Tip: If you're traveling, plan your arrival and return in advance (traffic, parking, public transport).

Location and venue

Suzuka Circuit is one of the world’s most recognizable race tracks—an iconic venue that feels like far more than “just” an autodrome. Built for top-tier motorsport, it’s famous for a technically demanding layout and spectator areas designed to keep the action in view, making it a natural choice for major race weekends and all-day events.

Inside the complex, the experience is unapologetically event-driven: grandstands, fan zones, and practical facilities that match the tempo of a race day. Visitors often highlight how the atmosphere builds from morning onward—from early sessions to the main start—supported by convenient food and drink options and places to pause between on-track moments.

For location, the venue sits in Mie Prefecture at the exact address Mie 510-0295, 7992 Inoucho, Suzuka, Japan. Reaching the entrance is typically easiest via on-site/nearby parking, while Suzuka Circuit Ino Station is a handy drop-off point within close walking distance. For broader city transport and getting around beyond the venue, see the text further down the page.
Address Mie 510-0295, 7992 Inoucho, Suzuka, Japan
Capacity About 155,000
Enter your starting point and open directions to the destination:
Tip: For the most accurate directions, use Google or Apple Maps (depending on your device).
Note: Entry time depends on the organiser and entrance control; arrive earlier for the best experience and less stress.

Destination guide: Suzuka

Suzuka, a city in Japan’s Mie Prefecture, is known for a strong culture of entertainment and major events, where sporting adrenaline and live-music excitement naturally come together. Visitors often choose it for the city’s recognizable energy, but also for a calmer pace than the biggest metropolises, which makes travel feel more comfortable. With Suzuka Circuit as one of Japan’s best-known venues for large gatherings, the city offers a solid balance of attractions, local dining, and accommodation across different budgets—making it practical for both a short weekend trip and a longer getaway.

Getting to Suzuka is one of its key advantages. The region’s main air gateway is Chubu International Airport (Centrair), from which you typically reach the area by rail via Nagoya, using connections that include Nagoya Railway (Meitetsu) and then services such as Kintetsu Railway toward Shiroko Station. For easy access to the city’s main locations and arenas, combinations of JR Kansai Main Line and Ise Railway are also convenient, including Suzuka Circuit Ino Station. Once you’re in town, local links are straightforward: from Kintetsu Shiroko Station, travelers commonly use the Mie Kotsu bus or a taxi, and some routes even work well on foot—helping you plan without excessive transfers.

If you have time before or after an event, Suzuka has plenty of sightseeing “bonus” to round out the experience. Take a relaxed walk through calmer neighborhoods filled with local eateries and try regional specialties, and for a nature break, the foothills of the Suzuka Mountains create a distinctive backdrop to the city. Fans of tradition often visit Tsubaki Grand Shrine, one of the area’s important shrines, ideal for a short excursion and a closer feel for local identity. That combination of events, connectivity, and things to do beyond the venue is exactly what makes Suzuka a city people find easy to return to.
Airport Chubu Centrair International Airport (NGO), Tokoname, Japan
Country / Continent Japan / Asia
Time zone UTC+09:00
Tokyo Standard Time

About the performer

Formula 1 is the pinnacle of motorsport and a global spectacle where the fastest single-seaters and the most advanced teams compete through a season of Grand Prix races across multiple continents. As a FIA world championship with a heritage dating back to 1950, F1 combines driving mastery, engineering innovation, and a points system for drivers and constructors. The weekend format (practice, qualifying, and the race) creates a narrative followed by millions, on classic circuits and city street tracks alike.

Race-weekend production sets an industry benchmark: precise timing, multi-camera coverage, onboard footage, live graphics, and commentary turn every lap into a story. Trackside, that means powerful yet controlled sound, big screens, track maps, and information systems that help you follow order, penalties, and strategy. With official apps and live timing, it is easier to track pit activity, sector pace, radio messages, and tyre changes, so you do not lose context even in the most intense moments, wherever you sit at the circuit.

Beyond speed, Formula 1 offers an authentic look at modern technology and tactics: tyre management, second-perfect pit stops, aerodynamics, and data analysis often decide the outcome. Everything operates under the sport’s “formula” rules, so innovation is constantly pursued within defined limits. Hybrid power, energy recovery, and efficiency-focused operation underline performance with purpose, and the sport highlights reducing its carbon footprint, giving fans a mix of adrenaline, engineering, and solutions that increasingly influence road mobility.

Fans often highlight the unique launch of the start, the rhythm of qualifying, and dramatic finishes, with activities that last all day. The Paddock vibe, fan zones, driver parades, support series, official shops, and a strong food scene make it easy to plan a trip with friends or family. For the best sightlines, it helps to study grandstand layouts and elevation points in advance, arrive early for crowds, and use kids’ programmes, photo spots, and souvenirs to complete a relaxed, full experience.

Safety and professional organisation are central to the experience: circuits, stewards, and medical teams operate under strict protocols, while rules such as Safety Car procedures, pit-lane limits, and technical checks protect competitors and spectators. Queues and screening are normal at major events, but clear signage and entry planning usually keep movement straightforward. Bring sun or rain protection, comfortable shoes, and check item policies and accessibility options to keep the weekend smooth and secure.

Whether you follow F1 as elite sport, a technology show, or a social outing, a race weekend delivers memorable content. Take the chance to explore the host city, official fan activities, and on-site extras to round out the day. Buy tickets early, consider different categories (grandstands, general admission, hospitality), confirm entry rules, and follow the timetable for practice, qualifying, and the race. With a solid transport plan, you will feel the precision, speed, and emotion that define Formula 1.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Tickets are checked through our partners' offers – click "Check availability", choose a category, and complete the purchase on the seller's website.

Yes. Prices depend on the category, availability, and the seller's terms. The final amount may include fees and processing charges.

For major events, it is recommended to arrive earlier (entry checks, crowds, finding your section). If you're coming by car, keep in mind that parking is limited.

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Tickets – Availability And Prices

Formula 1 Suzuka

Prices from: 124.00 AUD
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Tip: If it matters to you to sit close to the stage, check availability early – the best seats usually sell out first.