F1 start time: What time does the Las Vegas GP start? How to watch and live stream

Henry Valantine
F1 start time information for the Las Vegas Grand Prix.

F1 start time information for the Las Vegas Grand Prix.

The Las Vegas Grand Prix returns for a third run around the streets of Sin City, and here is the F1 start time information from around the world for the event.

A brand-new street circuit arrived on the calendar to much fanfare two seasons ago, marking Las Vegas’ return to Formula 1 after four decades – and the action has been brought forward by two hours this time around, so make sure to set those watches correctly.

F1 start time: What time does the Las Vegas Grand Prix start?

The Las Vegas Grand Prix will start at 8pm local time on Saturday 22 November 2024, which equates to these times in the following territories around the world:

United States and Canada*: 8pm Pacific, 10pm Central, 11pm Eastern
Mexico: 10pm [Mexico City]
United Kingdom: 4am [Sunday 23 November]
Central European Time**: 5am [Sunday 23 November]
South Africa: 6am [Sunday 23 November]
Gulf Standard Time: 8am [Sunday 23 November]
India: 9.30am [Sunday 23 November]
Indonesia*: 11am [Western Indonesia Time] [Sunday 23 November]
China: 12pm [Sunday 23 November]
Singapore: 12pm [Sunday 23 November]
Malaysia: 12pm [Sunday 23 November]
Philippines: 12pm [Sunday 23 November]
Japan: 1pm [Sunday 23 November]
Australia*: 3pm [Australian Eastern Daylight Time] [Sunday 23 November]
New Zealand: 5pm [New Zealand Daylight Time] [Sunday 23 November]

*Convert to check locally if you do not live in an area of this territory with these time zones.

**Covers 30 nations and territories: Albania, Andorra, Austria, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Czechia, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Kosovo, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco, Montenegro, Netherlands, North Macedonia, Norway, Poland, San Marino, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain (except the Canary Islands), Sweden, Switzerland, Vatican City.

How to watch the Las Vegas Grand Prix on TV

Viewers in the UK can stream every F1 race live with a Sky Sports subscription or a NOW Sports Month Membership. With NOW TV, There is no contract in place and you can cancel anytime!

Different nations and territories around the world have their own broadcasting rights deals with Formula 1, and here is a selection of where F1 fans will be able to watch the Las Vegas Grand Prix from across the globe, be it through pay TV or free-to-air:

Argentina: Fox Sports
Australia: Fox Sports
Brazil: BandSports, TV Bandeirantes
Canada: RDS (French), TSN (English)
Central Asia: Setanta Sports
China: CCTV
France: Canal+
Germany: Sky Sport F1
India: FanCode
Italy: Sky Sport F1
Japan: DAZN, Fuji TV
Latin America (except Argentina and Mexico): ESPN
Malaysia: beIN Sports
Mexico: Fox Sports
Middle East and North Africa: beIN Sports
Netherlands: Viaplay
New Zealand: Sky Sport, Prime (highlights)
Pakistan: A Sports
Republic of Ireland: Sky Sports F1, Channel 4 UK (highlights)
South Korea: Coupang Play
Spain: DAZN
Sub-Saharan Africa: SuperSport
United Kingdom: Sky Sports F1, Channel 4 (highlights)
United States: ESPN, ESPN Deportes

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Las Vegas Grand Prix live stream: How to watch online

F1 fans will be able to live stream the Las Vegas Grand Prix through platforms such as NOW and Sky Go in the UK.

F1 TV Pro is available worldwide in selected territories, which offers exclusive features like onboard cameras from all 20 cars, pre and post-race shows and much more.

F1 TV Pro is also able to be live streamed via Apple TV, Chromecast Generation 2 and above, Android TV, Google TV, Amazon Fire TV, and Roku, without ad breaks and with commentary available in six languages.

Here is a list of all the territories where F1 TV Pro is available.

How long is the Las Vegas Grand Prix?

Every race except from the Monaco Grand Prix runs to around the same distance measured to 300km plus one lap, which gets closest to 305km – or is time-limited to a two-hour race within a three-hour window.

For the Las Vegas Grand Prix, this distance equates to 50 laps.

Read next: F1 schedule: When is the next F1 race and where is it being held?