Miami for the Formula 1 Grand Prix
Seven Days That Prove the Race Is Just the Beginning
Miami is one of those cities that gets under your skin faster than you expect. Add a Formula 1 Grand Prix to the mix, seven nights in a South Beach boutique hotel, and temperatures nudging 30 degrees, and you have the ingredients for a trip that is genuinely difficult to come home from.
Miami for the
Formula 1 Grand Prix: Seven Days That Prove the Race Is Just the Beginning
There is a moment, somewhere between your second Cuban cocktail and the sound
of Formula 1 cars tearing past at 200 miles per hour, when Miami stops being a
destination and starts being an experience. I know this because I have just
come back from seven nights there, built around the 2026 Miami Grand Prix, and
I am already thinking about going back.
This is not a race guide. You can find those anywhere. This is an honest
account of what a week in Miami for the Formula 1 actually looks, feels, and
tastes like, written by someone who was there and who can put the whole thing
together for you if you want to do it too.
Why Arrive Early
We flew British Airways direct from London Heathrow, landing on the Wednesday
before race weekend. This is not an accident. Arriving midweek gives you two
full days in the city before the Formula 1 circus takes over, and Miami
absolutely rewards having time to breathe it in at your own pace.
By the time Saturday arrives and the crowds descend on Hard Rock Stadium, you
will already know where you are going, which restaurants are worth the queue,
and which cocktail bar is quietly brilliant rather than loudly overpriced. That
knowledge is worth at least as much as the race itself.
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Where We Stayed: The Tony Hotel, South Beach
The Tony Hotel on Collins Avenue is a South Beach institution that most people
walk past without noticing, which is exactly why it works. Tucked between
Ocean Drive and Collins Avenue, it is a beautifully preserved piece of 1930s
Art Deco architecture that was reimagined by fashion designer Todd Oldham, and
the result is something that feels genuinely characterful rather than
formulaic.
Shabby chic is probably the most honest description. It is not the Four
Seasons. The rooms have personality rather than precision, and the whole place
has a warmth to it that larger hotels simply cannot manufacture. The location,
though, is exceptional. One block from the beach, within walking distance of
everything South Beach has to offer, and positioned at the quieter, more
residential end of the strip.
The real highlight, though, was the rooftop pool. In a city where hotel pools
tend to operate as open air nightclubs with water features, the Tony's pool was
something genuinely unusual: calm, unhurried, and run by a team of staff who
seemed to actually enjoy being there. The cocktails they mixed up there were
seriously good, the service was attentive without being hovering, and on a
33 degree afternoon it was about as close to perfect as a hotel pool gets. If
you spend the whole trip on that rooftop and only venture out for food and the
race, you will not feel you have wasted your time.
One other thing worth knowing: the Tony Hotel includes complimentary VIP access
to the Wynwood Walls as part of the stay, which came in very useful later in
the week.
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The First Two Days: Getting the Feel of Miami
South Beach in May is warm, sociable, and entirely at ease with itself. We
spent the first couple of days doing nothing more structured than wandering the
beach, eating our way through the neighbourhood, and sitting by that pool.
The food in Miami is genuinely one of its great underrated pleasures. Cuban and
Mexican cooking is woven through the city, and the quality is a long way
removed from what you might expect from a beach resort. We ate well every day
without having to work particularly hard to find somewhere good which is not
something you can say about every sun destination. Ocean Drive has the famous
strip if you want the spectacle, but the better food tends to be a block or two
back from the beach, in places that are not competing for tourist traffic.
The cocktail culture is similarly strong. Miami takes its drinks seriously, and
the rum based Cuban cocktails in particular are worth seeking out.
If you are travelling to Miami for the Formula 1 Grand Prix, this pre-race
downtime is not filler, it is genuinely part of the experience. The contrast
between these quiet pool days and the noise and energy of race weekend makes
both feel better than they would on their own.
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Saturday at the Circuit: Sprint Race and Qualifying
Hard Rock Stadium sits in Miami Gardens, about 25 minutes from South Beach, and
the circuit built around it is unlike anything else on the Formula 1 calendar.
It has the feel of a street circuit but the pace of a permanent track, and the
atmosphere in the grandstands is closer to a music festival than a traditional
motor racing event.
One thing nobody tells you enough: it is very, very hot. Temperatures on
Saturday were sitting around 30 degrees Celsius, and the sun in Florida in May
is not the mild warmth of a British summer. It is relentless. Bring plenty of
water, wear light clothing, and if you have the option of covered or shaded
seating, take it.
The sprint race was the first session of the day, and Lando Norris gave McLaren
their first win of the 2026 season in fine style, controlling the race from
the front and never really being threatened. The McLarens had clearly found
something over the winter, and watching Norris work through the pack in clean
air was a reminder of just how fast these cars are in person. Television does
not do it justice.
Qualifying followed in the afternoon, and this was arguably the better session
of the two. Kimi Antonelli, the 19-year-old Mercedes driver who has been one of
the stories of the 2026 season, put in a stunning lap to claim pole position
ahead of Max Verstappen and Charles Leclerc. The noise when his time went up at
the top of the timing screens was something else. If you have never watched
Formula 1 qualifying from a grandstand, it is an experience that is genuinely
difficult to describe. It is intense, fast, and over before you have quite
processed what you just saw.
We left the circuit slightly sunburned, slightly hoarse, and already looking
forward to Sunday.
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Race Day: Drama, an Early Start, and a Proper Win
Sunday brought a change of tone. The Florida weather had been brooding
overnight, and by morning the forecast had deteriorated enough that the race
organisers made the decision to bring the start forward to avoid the predicted
thunderstorms. This is one of the things that separates a Formula 1 race
weekend from almost every other sporting event. The logistics are genuinely
complex, and when they move the schedule, you need to move with it.
We were across it early, arrived at the circuit with time to spare, and settled
in just as the tension was building. It was noticeably cooler than Saturday,
which the drivers seemed to appreciate as much as we did.
The race itself delivered everything you want from a Formula 1 Grand Prix.
Antonelli, starting from pole, came under pressure early when he and Verstappen
locked up into the first corner in a three-way battle with Leclerc. The lead
changed hands multiple times, the safety car came out twice, and for a long
stretch of the race it genuinely was not clear who was going to win it. Norris
pushed hard throughout and was right on Antonelli's tail in the final laps, but
the young Italian held his nerve and crossed the line to take his third
consecutive victory of the season.
Watching a 19-year-old win a Formula 1 Grand Prix from pole position, in front
of a crowd that was largely there for the spectacle and the sun, is a sporting
moment that stays with you. If you are going to travel to watch Formula 1 live,
Miami gives you a weekend that is almost impossible not to enjoy.
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After the Race: Wynwood and Beyond
The final few days of the trip were for the city itself, and Miami has more to
offer beyond South Beach than most first-time visitors expect.
The Wynwood Walls are essential. This is an outdoor street art museum in the
Wynwood district, about five miles from South Beach, where internationally
renowned artists have turned an entire neighbourhood of warehouse walls into
something genuinely extraordinary. As Tony Hotel guests, we had complimentary
VIP access included, which made the visit even more straightforward but it is
worth going regardless. The scale and quality of the work is unlike anything
you will have seen in quite the same way, and the surrounding area has
developed into one of the most interesting creative neighbourhoods in the
United States. Good food, independent shops, and the kind of energy that comes
from somewhere being genuinely alive rather than manufactured for tourists.
We also did a boat cruise along the waterways around Star Island, which I would
recommend to anyone spending more than a couple of days in Miami. Star Island
sits in Biscayne Bay and is home to some of the most extravagant private
properties in the United States, owned by people whose names you will
recognise. The cruise takes you past the water-frontage of these extraordinary
homes at close enough range to genuinely appreciate the scale of them, and the
commentary keeps it entertaining throughout. It is a couple of hours well spent, relaxed, scenic, and the kind of thing that gives you a real sense of Miami's
geography and culture beyond the beach strip.
Getting around Miami itself also threw up one of the more unexpectedly
entertaining experiences of the trip: a ride in a Waymo, which is a fully
autonomous, driverless taxi that operates across parts of the city. There is no
driver. No steering wheel in use. Just the car, making its own decisions,
navigating traffic, and pulling smoothly to a stop at your destination while
you sit in the back trying to decide how you feel about it. For a British
visitor it is a genuinely surreal experience. Miami is one of the few places
in the world where this is simply a normal way to get around and I say that
as someone who has seen a fair few things on his travels. Whether you find it
fascinating or mildly unnerving probably depends on your relationship with
technology, but either way it is memorable.
We also took in a baseball game, which is one of those things that sounds like
an optional extra but turns out to be one of the more memorable evenings of the
trip. If you have never watched American professional sport in a stadium, there
is a particular atmosphere to it. Relaxed, sociable, and surprisingly easy to
follow even if you have no prior knowledge of the game. Miami's baseball scene
is well worth an evening if you have the time.
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Who Is This Trip For?
Honestly? Almost anyone who likes sport, good food, warm weather, and the
feeling of being somewhere that is genuinely alive.
The Formula 1 is the obvious draw, but I would argue that Miami works as a
destination in its own right, and the race gives you a compelling reason to
build a week around it rather than just passing through. Seven nights is the
right length. Long enough to see something beyond South Beach, short enough
that you leave wanting more.
It works particularly well for couples and groups of friends. It could also
work as a slightly different kind of family trip for older teenagers, though
the race weekend logistics require a degree of planning that makes it better
suited to adults travelling without young children.
The British Airways direct service from Heathrow is a significant plus. Seven
hours in the air, and you arrive directly into Miami without the faff of a
connection.
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Thinking About Doing This?
The 2027 Miami Grand Prix will sell out quickly. Miami's race weekend has
grown into one of the most in-demand on the calendar. Tickets, hotel rooms, and
flights all move faster than you might expect.
If you would like to talk through how a Miami Formula 1 trip might work for you, what to book, when to book it, where to stay, and how to get the most out of
the week, I would be happy to have that conversation.
Get in touch and I can
start putting something together.