The Australian F1 GP is just one month away, and some limited ticket options remain for those who have left things to the last minute.
The Australian F1 Grand Prix is just one month away, and some limited ticket options remain for those who have left things to the last minute.
The Australian F1 Grand Prix is one month away, and limited ticket options across park passes, grandstands, and lounge experiences remain availble for fans.
Park passes are still available for Thursday or Friday, and this option will set you back $45 and $90 respectively.
The Park Pass allows general entry and does not include any reserved seating, so racegoers will need to get in early and find their “favourite trackside viewing spot”.
The majority of grandstand tickets have sold out, however, limited tickets are still periodically becoming available for the Piastri, Fangio, Prost, Schumacher, and Senna stands .
These remaining grandstand tickets are verified resale tickets, with some being offered at lower prices than they were originally sold for. For example resale tickets for the Piastri grandstand were recently available for $430, when these were originally sold for $610.
Limited Friday passes are also still available for two of the ‘hospitality’ lounge experiences at the F1 in the Lakeside Studio suite for $625 and T8 Lakeside suite for $1,375.
The most expensive lounge option for 2026, the American Express Lounge, has sold out of its $6,895 three day passes.
You can see the available tickets on the Ticketmaster site here. Any tickets that appear are likely to be verified resale tickets, Ticketmaster provides detailed information about their resale tickets here.
Many ticket options for the 2026 Australian F1 Grand Prix saw increases from 2025 prices, with some grandstands increasing their prices by up to 24 per cent from 2025.
Australian Grand Prix Four-Day Ticket Prices
The 2026 F1 Australian Grand Prix returns to Melbourne’s Albert Park Grand Prix Circuit from Thursday, March 5, until Sunday, March 8.
Max is the News Publishing Coordinator for Drive. He enjoys creating engaging digital content, including videos, podcasts, interactive maps, and graphs. Prior to Drive, he studied at Monash University and gained experience working for various publications. He grew up playing Burnout 3: Takedown on the PS2 and was disappointed when real life car races didn’t have the same physics.

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