F1 Removes Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Races From April Calendar Amid Security-Driven Schedule Collapse
Formula One has confirmed both Middle East Grands Prix will not take place in April 2026 after escalating regional instability forced a full calendar suspension of support series and a five-week gap in the season.
SYSTEM-DRIVEN disruption in Formula One’s 2026 calendar has forced the cancellation of both the Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands Prix from their scheduled April slots, after governing bodies concluded that holding the races was not feasible under current regional conditions.
The Bahrain Grand Prix in Sakhir and the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix in Jeddah were originally positioned as consecutive rounds in April, forming the sport’s traditional early-season Middle East swing.
What is confirmed is that both events, along with their associated Formula 2, Formula 3, and F1 Academy support races, will not take place as scheduled, and no replacement events have been inserted into the calendar.
The decision was taken jointly by Formula One management, the sport’s governing federation, and local promoters after extended internal evaluations.
The central determining factor was safety and operational viability amid escalating instability in the wider region.
Organisers assessed a range of alternatives, including rescheduling or relocation, but concluded that none could be implemented within the constraints of the 2026 calendar structure.
The cancellations remove two of the most financially significant races on the schedule.
Both Bahrain and Saudi Arabia are high-value hosting partners, contributing substantial hosting fees and playing a central role in Formula One’s commercial expansion strategy in the Gulf region.
Their removal creates an immediate five-week gap between the Japanese Grand Prix at the end of March and the Miami Grand Prix in early May, altering the rhythm of the championship.
The operational consequences extend beyond the headline calendar change.
Freight movements, race-specific car components, and logistical preparations for the cancelled events have been disrupted.
Teams that had already begun preparing upgrades and shipping equipment for the Middle East rounds have been forced to halt or redirect resources, compressing development cycles and reshaping early-season engineering plans.
The support categories are also affected.
Formula 2, Formula 3, and F1 Academy rounds scheduled to run alongside both Grands Prix have been removed, reducing track time for junior drivers and eliminating key competitive weekends used for talent evaluation and development.
The broader structural implication is a reduced 2026 race calendar footprint, with the total number of events falling from its planned schedule after no replacements were found for the April gap.
That constraint reflects both the limited flexibility of an already tightly packed global calendar and the logistical difficulty of staging new events at short notice in Formula One’s freight-dependent operating model.
For teams and drivers, the immediate impact is a prolonged mid-spring pause in competitive racing.
While some view the gap as an opportunity for development work, the loss of back-to-back races in similar conditions also reduces comparative performance data across circuits that were originally intended to form a continuous competitive block.
The cancellations also highlight the growing exposure of global sport to geopolitical instability.
Formula One’s expansion into new markets has increased commercial reach but also tied parts of its calendar to regions where operational continuity can be vulnerable to external shocks.
The removal of both Middle Eastern races in April underscores how quickly a planned season structure can be disrupted when safety and logistics intersect.
With no replacement venues scheduled, the championship proceeds into its next phase with a reshaped calendar, fewer early-season races, and a widened break that teams will now have to absorb into development and recovery cycles across the remainder of the season.