El Futuro de F1 Parte 1: Revelado el Calendario de Fórmula 1 2026
El Futuro de F1 Parte 1: Revelado el Calendario de Fórmula 1 2026

Calendario F1 2026: El Inicio de una Revolución

La temporada 2026 de F1 será un deporte completamente diferente. Nuevas regulaciones, nuevos motores, nuevo combustible. Y un nuevo calendario que vaya a la par. Como dice Stefano Domenicali, esta es "una era completamente nueva."

¿Qué está cambiando? Tres cosas transformarán todo.

La unidad de potencia se voltea boca abajo. El complejo MGU-H desaparece. Motor de combustión interna y motor eléctrico dividen el poder 50:50. El motor eléctrico se vuelve tres veces más poderoso. Audi y Ford se unieron por esto. La simplicidad ha atraído a los grandes fabricantes.

El chasis se vuelve más ágil. La distancia entre ejes y el ancho se reducen. El peso baja 30kg. Entra la aerodinámica activa que puede ajustar los alerones. Menos resistencia en rectas, más carga aerodinámica en curvas. Esto significa adelantamientos más fáciles.

El combustible se vuelve verde. 100% e-combustible sostenible. Carbono neutral. La piedra angular del objetivo de cero neto para 2030.

Toda esta revolución se desarrolla a través de 24 Grandes Premios en 5 continentes. Por eso F1 anunció el calendario y las regulaciones juntos. Innovación, crecimiento, sostenibilidad. Están vendiendo esta nueva visión con estas tres palabras.


Calendario F1 2026

RondaGran PremioSedeFecha
1AustraliaMelbourne6-8 Marzo
2ChinaShanghai13-15 Marzo
3JapónSuzuka27-29 Marzo
4BahreinSakhir10-12 Abril
5Arabia SaudíJeddah17-19 Abril
6MiamiMiami1-3 Mayo
7CanadáMontreal22-24 Mayo
8MónacoMónaco5-7 Junio
9Barcelona-CataluñaBarcelona12-14 Junio
10AustriaSpielberg26-28 Junio
11Gran BretañaSilverstone3-5 Julio
12BélgicaSpa-Francorchamps17-19 Julio
13HungríaBudapest24-26 Julio
14Países BajosZandvoort21-23 Agosto
15ItaliaMonza4-6 Septiembre
16EspañaMadrid11-13 Septiembre
17AzerbaiyánBaku25-27 Septiembre
18SingapurSingapur9-11 Octubre
19Estados UnidosAustin23-25 Octubre
20MéxicoCiudad de México30 Oct-1 Nov
21BrasilSão Paulo6-8 Noviembre
22Las VegasLas Vegas19-21 Noviembre
23QatarLusail27-29 Noviembre
24Abu DhabiYas Marina4-6 Diciembre

La Realidad de la Estrategia de Regionalización

El calendario 2026 predica 'regionalización' pero no es perfecto. El objetivo de mejorar la eficiencia logística está bien. Pero la realidad es complicada.

Asia-Pacífico toma la apertura. Australia, China, Japón en ese orden. Es un movimiento calculado para asegurar la presencia de F1 en mercados clave de crecimiento. Bahrein y Arabia Saudí se movieron a abril para evitar Ramadán. Creando programas dobles para aumentar la eficiencia.

Canada moved up to May. Shifted from traditional June to late May. The intention is to pair with Miami. But there's a three-week gap, so it's not a perfect back-to-back. This shows even F1 struggles to create ideal flow within existing contracts and climate constraints.

Europe got consolidated. With Canada out, the European season became more cohesive. Running from Monaco in early June through Madrid in mid-September. The logistical waste of going to Canada mid-season disappeared. Teams can have a much more efficient season.

The finale is still hell. Austin, Mexico, Brazil triple-header. Then Las Vegas, Qatar, Abu Dhabi triple-header. They couldn't find balance between commercial greed to cram in 24 races and the limits of team personnel.


Madrid: F1's New Gamble

The biggest talking point of 2026 is Madrid. This new circuit, nicknamed 'Madring', symbolizes F1's future.

It's a hybrid circuit. Total length 5.474km, 22 corners. Mixing public roads with dedicated track sections. Top speed reaches 340km/h. Features 2 tunnels and significant elevation changes. They've thrown in every diverse element.

The most special feature is the 'La Monumental' corner. Inspired by Zandvoort. A banked corner with 24% gradient extending over 550 meters. Such corners are rare in F1.

Three overtaking points are expected. The chicane at turns 1-2 with heavy braking from 320km/h to 100km/h. The tight chicane at turns 5-6. The slow turn 13. But some worry it combines Jeddah's speed with Monaco's overtaking difficulty.

Private money funds it. Entirely driven by private capital. Different from existing European Grands Prix. Claims to bring €450 million annual economic impact and 8,200 jobs to Madrid. Carlos Sainz stepped up as official ambassador.


Imola's Bitter Exit

The saddest news from the 2026 calendar is Imola. A circuit beloved by fans and drivers disappears.

Money is the core issue. F1 hosting fees skyrocketed. Imola couldn't afford it. As F1 pivots toward glamorous big-city events, small-town Imola was deemed mismatched with the image. The narrow, twisty layout is also unsuitable for modern F1 machinery. It only produces races with virtually no overtaking.

Drivers were furious. Verstappen and Piastri said "it's shameful to lose a historic drivers' circuit." They warned against losing the sport's tradition. Imola's mayor said "disappointing and bitter, but it's not over yet," expressing determination to return.

Madrid vs Imola Comparison

  • Madrid: Hybrid street circuit, 100% private capital, big-city event, designed for overtaking
  • Imola: Legacy track, public-private mix, history and tradition, difficult overtaking structure

Ultimately, Imola's departure means F1 values commercial potential in new markets over historical significance.


Rotation as a New Solution

With the 24-race ceiling and new venues emerging, F1 introduced 'rotation'. Spa is the first case.

Spa becomes biennial. From 2026, it appears on the calendar every other year. They don't completely lose the iconic track. But the tradition of annual hosting breaks. It's a disappointing compromise for fans.

This model will likely apply to other European circuits. It means even traditional venues like Silverstone and Monza aren't safe.


Unfinished Business

The 2026 calendar improved but isn't perfect.

European consolidation succeeded. With Canada out, the European season became cleaner. But the Americas triple-headers and the awkward gap between Miami-Canada remain.

Carbon footprint is still homework. 45% of F1's total emissions come from logistics. They promise reduction through regionalization, but there's a long way to go.


The Crossroads of Tradition vs Growth

The 2026 calendar reveals modern F1's core conflict. Growth represented by Madrid and Las Vegas sacrifices something. Imola's exit and Spa's rotation are the consequences.

F1 chose to abandon part of its traditional soul for more global, commercial entertainment. It's a calculated choice.

I think this is an inevitable trend. But I question whether they're finding the right balance between values drivers cherish and Liberty Media's financial realities.

Is F1 really heading down the right path?