F1 is back this weekend with the Miami Grand Prix, the first of three races in the U.S. during the 2025 season. After McLaren’s Oscar Piastri picked up back-to-back wins in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, the F1 leaderboard has had a bit of a shakeup, adding to the excitement headed into this weekend in Miami. Piastri is now in first place in drivers’ standings, followed by fellow McLaren driver Lando Norris and Rebull’s Max Verstappen.
This weekend’s race features 57 laps at the Miami International Autodrome. All the action will air on ESPN and ABC. Here’s everything you need to know about F1 this weekend, including how to watch this latest race, along with the full 2025 F1 Grand Prix schedule.
How to watch the 2025 Miami Grand Prix:
Date: Sunday, May. 4
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Time: 4 p.m. ET
Location: Miami International Autodrome, Florida, USA
TV channel: ABC, ESPN
Streaming: F1 TV Pro, ESPN+, Hulu + Live TV, DirecTV, ESPN+, or with a VPN
When is the Miami Grand Prix?
The 2025 Miami Grand Prix is this Sunday, May 4 airing at 4 p.m. ET. You can also tune in to practices and qualifying races on Friday and Saturday.
What channel is the Miami Grand Prix on?
You can tune into Sunday’s race on ABC, ESPN or ESPN+. This season, ESPN+ will also offer alternate viewing options, including an Onboard Cameras Channel, which gives fans a look at the race from select drivers’ perspectives, plus a Driver Tracker that plots every driver’s location on the course in real-time.
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For super-fans who don’t want to miss a single race, all the action is streamable through an F1 TV Pro subscription. For those wanting to tune in without having to pay for one of those services, a VPN can also help you watch F1 races.
Schedule of events at the 2025 Miami Grand Prix:
All times Eastern
Friday, May 2
Practice 1: 12:30 – 1:30 p.m.
Sprint Qualifying: 4:30 – 5:14 p.m.
Saturday, May 3
Sprint: 12 – 1 p.m.
Qualifying: 4 – 5 p.m.
Sunday, May 4
Grand Prix Race: 4 p.m. (ABC, ESPN+ for Driver Tracker and more alternative viewing options)
How to watch the 2025 F1 season:
An F1 TV Pro subscription lets you stream every F1 race live, plus all the practices, qualifying races and pre-race shows. F1 TV is also home to F1’s post-race live shows, analysis, Tech Talks, documentaries and the official F1 archive. You can subscribe to F1 TV Pro for $10.99/month or pay $85 for the entire season.
Try free for 7 days at F1 TV
Some F1 coverage will stream on ESPN+ this season, and this weekend you can catch alternative coverage of the Miami Grand Prix, including the Onboard Cameras Channel, which gives fans a look at the race from select drivers’ perspectives, plus a Driver Tracker that plots every driver’s location on the course in real-time.
If you’re a general sports lover and want to occasionally tune into F1 coverage, an ESPN+ subscription could be an option.
ESPN+ grants you access to exclusive ESPN+ content including live events, fantasy sports tools and premium ESPN+ articles. You can stream ESPN+ through an app on your smart TV, phone, tablet, computer and on ESPN.com.
$11.99/month at ESPN
Watch the Miami Grand Prix with the help of a VPN
Looking for a way to stream F1 coverage from anywhere in the world without access to ESPN or ABC? One option for catching this weekend’s coverage of the grand prix is with the help of a VPN. With a VPN, you can change your location to one in Belgium and stream every race this weekend on RTBF for free. You can also check out free Austrian coverage on ServusTV.
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A VPN (virtual private network) helps protect your data, can mask your IP address and is perhaps most popular for being especially useful in the age of streaming. Whether you’re looking to watch Friends on Netflix (which left the U.S. version of the streamer back in 2019) or tune into the F1 race this weekend without a cable package, a VPN can help you out.
ExpressVPN offers “internet without borders,” meaning you can tune into a Belgian or Austrian live stream of the race for free as opposed to paying for ESPN or ESPN+ for US coverage of F1. All you’ll need to do is sign up for ExpressVPN, change your server location to one in Belgium and then find the F1 live stream on RTBF. Or change your location to Austria to watch free coverage on ServusTV.
ExpressVPN’s added protection, speed and range of location options make it an excellent choice for first-time VPN users looking to stretch their streaming abilities. It’s Engadget’s top pick for the best streaming VPN, and the service offers a 30-day, money-back guarantee in case you’re nervous about trying a VPN.
From $4.99/month at ExpressVPN
2025 F1 drivers’ standings:
1. Oscar Piastri, McLaren – 99 points
2. Lando Norris, McLaren – 89 points
3. Max Verstappen, Red Bull – 87 points
4. George Russell, Mercedes – 73 points
5. Charles Leclerc, Ferrari – 47 points
6. Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes – 38 points
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7. Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari – 31 points
8. Alex Albon, Williams – 20 point
9. Esteban Ocon, Haas – 14 points
10. Lance Stroll, Aston Martin – 10 points
11. Pierre Gasly, Alpine – 6 points
12. Nico Hulkenberg, Sauber – 6 points
13. Oliver Bearman, Haas – 6 points
14. Isack Hadjar – Racing Bulls – 5 points
15. Carlos Sainz, Williams – 5 point
16. Yuki Tsunoda, Red Bull – 5 points
17. Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin – 0 points
18. Liam Lawson, Racing Bulls – 0 points
19. Jack Doohan, Alpine – 0 points
20. Gabriel Bortoleto, Sauber – 0 points
F1 2025 grand prix schedule:
Sunday, May 4:
Miami Grand Prix, Miami International Autodrome (4 p.m. ET, ESPN, ABC)
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Sunday, May 18:
Emilia Romagna Grand Prix, Imola Circuit (9 a.m. ET, ESPN)
Sunday, May 25:
Monaco Grand Prix, Circuit de Monaco (9 a.m. ET, ESPN)
Sunday, June 1:
Spanish Grand Prix, Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya (9 a.m. ET, ESPN)
Sunday, June 15:
Canadian Grand Prix, Circuit Gilles Villeneuve (2 p.m. ET, ESPN)
Sunday, June 29:
Austrian Grand Prix, Red Bull Ring (9 a.m. ET, ESPN)
Sunday, July 6:
British Grand Prix, Silverstone Circuit (10 a.m. ET, ESPN)
Sunday, July 27:
Belgian Grand Prix, Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps (9 a.m. ET, ESPN)
Sunday, August 3:
Hungarian Grand Prix, Hungaroring (9 a.m. ET, ESPN)
Sunday, August 31:
Dutch Grand Prix, Circuit Zandvoort (9 a.m. ET, ESPN)
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Sunday, September 7:
Italian Grand Prix, Monza Circuit (9 a.m. ET, ESPN)
Sunday, September 21:
Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Baku City Circuit (7 a.m. ET, ESPN)
Sunday, October 5:
Singapore Grand Prix, Marina Bay Street Circuit (8 a.m. ET, ESPN)
Sunday, October 19:
United States Grand Prix, Circuit of the Americas (3 p.m. ET, ESPN, ABC)
Sunday, October 26:
Mexico City Grand Prix, Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez (4 p.m. ET, ESPN)
Sunday, November 9:
Sau Paulo Grand Prix, Interlagos Circuit (12 p.m. ET, ESPN)
Saturday, November 22:
Las Vegas Grand Prix, Las Vegas Strip Circuit (11 p.m. ET, ESPN, ABC)
Sunday, November 30:
Qatar Grand Prix, Lusail International Circuit (11 a.m. ET, ESPN)
Sunday, December 7:
Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Yas Marina Circuit (8 a.m. ET, ESPN)