Huge F1 Events Left on the Calendar – And What They Hold for Racing Fans

09:46, 15 Sep
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The F1 season isn’t over, and if you think it’s just a few boring circuits left, think again. If you’re looking for neon lights, desert heat, and streets that turn into racetracks where speed demons rule, then 2025 still has some treats in store for you. Read on to find out more about these last five events, where engines roar louder, drama hits harder, and the kind of racing stories you’ll tell for years happen. Skip the FOMO -- here’s what’s coming

Brazil – São Paulo Showdown

If F1 had a greatest hits album, Interlagos would be track one.
This circuit has it all: tricky corners, unpredictable weather, and fans who treat race day like a carnival.
Why it matters? Because Brazil is chaos, in the best way. Rain can show up mid-race, so pit stops get even more frantic – and strategies can implode in seconds. Remember Hamilton’s legendary comeback here? Yeah, this is that track.
For fans: expect Samba beats in the grandstands and on-track drama that tends to mess with the championship maths.
Keep an eye on the weather forecast: it might tell you more about the podium than qualifying does.

Las Vegas 

Las Vegas's famous betting establishments may be under threat from their convenient digital counterparts like Skrill Payment casinos that let you place a wager from anywhere, at any time, but the city itself offers some incredible attractions for F1 fans.
The Las Vegas Grand Prix has transformed the city into a year-round destination for motorsport visitors who can have fun at attractions like the F1 Drive go-karting experience just off the Strip. It’s the closest most of us will get to taking Eau Rouge flat-out, and yes, you’ll probably spin out at least once.
The race itself? Fast, slippery, and packed with drama. Street circuits punish mistakes, and in Vegas, one wrong move can turn your weekend into an expensive holiday.

Qatar – Desert nights under the lights

Welcome to Lusail, where the racing happens under the stars. Literally. Qatar’s night race is a spectacle of glowing track lights cutting through desert blackness, with cars streaking past like rockets.
This is a circuit that’s all about endurance. High speeds across a layout that punishes drivers who can’t manage their tires. Combine that with desert temperatures that turn cockpits into saunas, and you get one of the most physically brutal races on the calendar.
For fans, it’s pure theatre. The night-time setting makes everything look sharper, faster, cooler. Think Tron: Legacy but with pit stops.

Abu Dhabi – The big curtain call

Abu Dhabi is more than a race – it's the finale
Yas Marina has become the place where titles are sealed, and dreams are crushed.
Yes, the track layout has its critics, but the drama here is usually incredible Remember 2021? Exactly. Abu Dhabi has a way of serving up chaos when it matters most.
The setting? Utter luxury. The track runs through a marina filled with yachts and a five-star hotel looms over turn seven. Fireworks wrap things up whether the championship is on the line or not.
If you’re watching at home, don’t tune out once the flag drops: the post-race celebrations are part of the show. If you’re there in person, bring sunglasses. Not for the sun, but for all that reflective chrome and champagne spray!

Final lap thoughts

The closing stretch of the season is where F1 stops being predictable and starts feeling cinematic.
Brazil gives us the raw, unpredictable energy that only Interlagos can deliver. Vegas brings a brand-new flavour, with neon-lit straights that feel more like a movie set than a racetrack. Qatar shows off F1’s endurance side, pushing drivers and cars to their physical limits under the desert lights. Abu Dhabi adds the curtain call, mixing glitz with genuine tension as championships (and reputations) often hang in the balance.
But beyond the big headlines, it’s the smaller stories that make this run unforgettable: the midfield driver pulling off a shock podium, the pit crew nailing (or botching) a stop by a fraction of a second, the rookie who refuses to play it safe.
Watch out for these, as they’re the ingredients that turn the final five races from “just another calendar finish” into a must-watch crescendo.
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