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From $50 to $25,000: Ticket options expanded for F1's Las Vegas Grand Prix

Having taken feedback onboard from the first two races, a key aspect to LVGP’s hat-trick year was to broaden the options available to fans wanting to attend

Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin AMR24

Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin AMR24

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

New ticketing options have been announced for the 2025 Formula 1 Las Vegas Grand Prix, with the cheapest entry now down to $50 as Nevada locals are also given a priority booking window.

The alterations have come as organisers look to make the race more available to a wider audience, although they have also maintained the elite-level experience that has helped set the Las Vegas weekend apart in its two years on the calendar.

The highest-value ticket is for the Gordon Ramsay experience at the F1 Garage luxury hospitality venue and will cost $25,000.

Emily Prazer, F1 president and CEO of the Las Vegas Grand Prix, is hopeful such a broad spectrum of options, coupled with increased grandstand capability, will open the race up to as many fans as possible.

“So essentially, we've taken quite a hard look at the product mix and decided to make the race a little bit more accessible to a wider audience,” she said.

“We've lowered the prices and created flexible payment plans, which will be interest-free. It is quite normal in US sports to be able to pay over a period of time and something that we felt we were missing.

“We are going to be guaranteeing our on-sale prices as the lowest possible price. I think everybody's seen that we've flipped the model somewhat where we've been lowering the prices closer to the race.

“This year we're saying this is the absolute bottom entry price with the hope that people buy earlier and try to reprint the markets somewhat.

“We're going to have a $50 entry-level ticket that the local community can have kind of a pre-sale for to make sure that they get first dibs at a very, very, very cheap ticket.

“We still have a $25,000 ticket, and the Paddock Club is very, very established and understood, so people do buy into that. We've taken a lot of feedback and I think people perhaps forget that when we started this, we were a true startup. We didn't have any data. We didn't necessarily understand the people that were going to be attending.”

Packed grandstands on race event

Packed grandstands on race event

Photo by: Erik Junius

With pricing adjusted, the promoters had already announced the start time for the Saturday night race would move forwards two hours to 8pm locally.

For Prazer, it was another example of listening to what was being asked: “You've all seen that we have this new race time with the 8pm start, trying really hard to listen to fans and to the F1 community. Listening to how tough the race is for everybody, particularly the drivers with the late start. So we have made that adjustment, which again, we hope obviously keeps everybody quite happy.”

When the Las Vegas Grand Prix first confirmed a deal to join the F1 calendar, it signed a three-year contract that runs until 2025. It does not look set to drop off the list any time soon though, as Prazer revealed extension talks are already under way.

“As everything, contracts come to an end,” she said. “However, with all of the different stakeholders in Vegas, we are currently going through a renewal process, so we're feeling, again, very comfortable that the race will continue. Obviously, everybody is very dedicated to this.”

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