Apple inks new 5-year deal with Formula 1
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Formula 1 announced a five-year deal Friday with Apple, which will be the global motorsports series' U.S. broadcast partner beginning next season.
Formula 1 has entered a new media rights deal with Apple that will bring all F1 races to Apple TV for viewers in the United States beginning in 2026.
AUSTIN, Texas — After months of rumors swirling about the next holder of Formula One’s television rights in the United States, it was confirmed Friday morning of the 2025 U.S. Grand Prix weekend that Apple will become the sport’s exclusive broadcast partner from 2026.
Oscar Piastri heads into the United States Grand Prix this weekend with his championship lead over teammate Lando Norris down to 22 points.
Apple announced that it has signed an exclusive deal with Forumla 1 to broadcast all its races and related content exclusively on Apple TV in the U.S.
F1 has announced a landmark agreement with Apple to screen races in the United States. Here's how the deal came together.
The tech giant locks in a five-year partnership to bring Formula 1 races exclusively to Apple TV starting in 2026.
Apple and Formula 1 announced a five-year agreement under which all F1 races will be available exclusively on Apple TV in the U.S. beginning in 2026.
Formula 1 returns to the United States for an action-packed weekend, launching a six-race stretch to close out one of the most unpredictable championship battle in years.
Apple has signed a five-year deal with Formula One for the U.S. rights to air its races, broadening its menu of live sporting events it will offer on its streaming platform. Apple TV will begin airing races in 2026.
The 2026 F1 season has 24 rounds, and some of those races and practice sessions will be streamed for free, Apple says. To unlock the rest of the events and F1 TV Premium, you will have to pay for an Apple TV subscription. The standalone plan costs $12.99 per month, but you could get it for cheaper with a bundle.
Streaming Formula 1 in the U.S. is about to look very different. A new exclusive deal will change where and how fans watch the world's fastest sport.