Announcement of Apple’s US F1 rights confirmation tipped for United States GP
Apple is expected to secure the US Formula 1 rights in a deal worth a reported $140m per year with an announcement in Austin
Charles Leclerc, Ferrari SF-24
Photo by: Andreas Beil
Rise of Racing in America - Latest News, Videos, Photos
The latest on the Rise of Racing in America, examining the sport’s momentum in the U.S. with focus on car racing stars, technology, innovation, fandom, and investments.
According to a report from Puck, Apple is expected to confirm its United States Formula 1 media rights agreement at the United States Grand Prix in the Circuit of The Americas later this month. The package is reportedly worth around $140million per year, substantially more than what incumbent broadcaster ESPN is currently paying.
According to the industry outlet, there is still friction regarding how the contract will exist alongside the championship's own streaming service, F1 TV, but despite this, the news is expected at Circuit of The Americas on 17-19 October.
ESPN's three-year renewal, signed in 2022, comes to an end at the close of this year, and multiple reports have indicated that the company will not be renewing its partnership for another cycle as competition mounts for the rights to the series. With ESPN bowing out, this has allowed the tech giant to swoop in with a strong pitch after the success of F1: The Movie starring Brad Pitt.
As you would expect, there are issues surrounding the fact that F1 has created a competitor in F1 TV, also catering to the American market and boasting a number of strong features and high stream quality. How Apple could build a product that can live alongside this, if at all, is a big question.
Sergio Perez, Red Bull Racing RB20
Photo by: Red Bull Content Pool
An agreement with F1 would be a huge win for Apple after its success in securing a 10-year partnership with Major League Soccer three years ago. Reported to be worth $2.5billion, it sits alongside Major League Baseball's Friday Night Baseball package. A partnership with F1 would set it up nicely in the world of American sports.
After the success of Drive to Survive and the consistent push into the US market by Liberty Media, F1 is averaging an impressive 1.4 million viewers per race across ESPN and ABC coverage. With three races now in the country, this is only expected to increase.
If the announcement does indeed come this month, the Apple deal would likely begin in 2026 with the races expected to be streamed on Apple TV+. The fate of F1 TV is yet to be seen.
Share Or Save This Story
Subscribe and access Motorsport.com with your ad-blocker.
From Formula 1 to MotoGP we report straight from the paddock because we love our sport, just like you. In order to keep delivering our expert journalism, our website uses advertising. Still, we want to give you the opportunity to enjoy an ad-free and tracker-free website and to continue using your adblocker.
Top Comments