The spiritual home of Formula 1. The 1950 race at Silverstone was the very first round of the F1 World Championship, and the British Grand Prix has appeared on the calendar every single season since — the only event that can make that claim. Fast, flowing, and roared on by one of the biggest crowds in the sport.
The race where Formula 1's World Championship began — and the one Britain treats like a national holiday.
On 13 May 1950, Silverstone hosted the first race of the inaugural Formula 1 World Championship — the start of everything the sport has become. Watched by King George VI, it remains the only Grand Prix attended by a reigning British monarch. The British Grand Prix has been held in every season of the championship since, a record of continuity no other race can match. To win here is to write your name into the founding story of the sport.
Where Monaco is the slowest circuit on the calendar, Silverstone is one of the fastest. Built on a former World War II airfield, its wide, sweeping corners are taken at extraordinary speed — and the famous Maggotts-Becketts-Chapel sequence is regarded by many drivers as the greatest test of car and courage in all of Formula 1. There is real room to race here, which makes for wheel-to-wheel battles that the streets of Monte Carlo simply cannot offer.
Silverstone is one of six rounds on the 2026 calendar to run the Sprint format. That means two races in one weekend: a short, points-paying Sprint on Saturday and the full Grand Prix on Sunday, plus two separate qualifying sessions. There is no traditional "practice then race" rhythm — the action is compressed and the stakes are higher from Friday, making it one of the most spectator-friendly weekends of the year for a first-time fan.
More than 480,000 fans pack Silverstone across the weekend — one of the largest attendances of any event in world motorsport. Britain has produced more Formula 1 World Champions and winning teams than any other nation, and the grandstands erupt for the home heroes. The wall of noise when a British driver leads at Silverstone — the "Hamilton wave," the sea of flags at Stowe and Copse — is one of the defining atmospheres in the sport.
Everything you need to follow the race — start here.
Two races, two qualifying sessions, three days. What the Sprint format means, when each session runs, and the times in the UK plus your own time zone.
Corner-by-corner guide to Silverstone — Copse, the legendary Maggotts-Becketts esses, the Hangar Straight, Stowe, and what makes each so fast and so demanding.
From the 1950 championship opener to Mansell-mania, Hamilton's record nine wins, and the races that made Silverstone a permanent fixture of the sport.
The 2026 grid at a glance — championship contenders, the British drivers chasing a home win, and who to track as Round 10 unfolds.
Never watched Formula 1 before? The hub page explains how the championship works, what the teams are, and how a race weekend unfolds — in plain English.
Silverstone sits at the heart of "Motorsport Valley" — the cluster of English counties where the majority of the F1 grid designs and builds its cars. This really is the sport's home.
Six things that set the British Grand Prix apart from every other round.
Silverstone began life as RAF Silverstone, a World War II bomber training base. When racing moved there in 1948, the layout simply followed the wide perimeter roads and runways of the airfield. That heritage is why the circuit is so fast and open — there were no tight village streets to work around, only acres of flat, sweeping tarmac. The runway-era width still allows cars to run side by side through corners where most circuits force single file.
The high-speed esses of Maggotts, Becketts and Chapel are widely considered the finest corner sequence in Formula 1. Drivers flick the car left-right-left-right at well over 250 km/h, the car loading up beyond 5G of lateral force in each direction. It rewards total commitment and a perfectly balanced car — get it right and you carry that speed all the way down the Hangar Straight; get it wrong and you lose tenths that can decide qualifying.
Unlike Monaco, where the grid order at the start usually decides the result, Silverstone offers real racing. The long Hangar and Wellington Straights feed into heavy braking zones at Stowe and Brooklands, giving brave drivers room to attack. Position changes happen on track here, not just in the pits — which makes for some of the most dramatic on-track battles of the season.
Even in July, Silverstone is famous for changeable, fast-moving weather. Sunshine can give way to rain within a single lap, and parts of the long circuit can be wet while others stay dry. Mixed conditions throw strategy into chaos and reward drivers who read the weather best — many of the most memorable British Grands Prix have been decided by a shower at the right (or wrong) moment.
For 2026, Silverstone runs the Sprint format — a shorter Saturday race worth championship points in its own right, on top of Sunday's Grand Prix. With only one practice session before everything starts to count, teams have far less time to set up the car, and a single mistake on Friday can echo across the whole weekend. It packs more competitive action into three days than a normal round.
No driver has won here more than Lewis Hamilton, whose nine British Grand Prix victories are a record for any driver at any single circuit. The home support for Britain's most successful racer turned Silverstone Sundays into a phenomenon — the post-race crowd invasion onto the start-finish straight, banners held aloft, is one of the great sights in modern sport.
A Sprint weekend — two races, two qualifying sessions, only one practice session.
No driver has ever conquered a single circuit the way Lewis Hamilton has mastered Silverstone. His nine British Grand Prix victories — the most by any driver at any one track in F1 history — have turned his home race into something close to a coronation each July. The most extraordinary came in 2020, when he crossed the line to win on three wheels after a front-left tyre failed on the final lap. Whatever the 2026 weekend brings, the roar that greets a British driver fighting for the lead at Silverstone is one of the great experiences in all of sport.