The Baku City Circuit sits in central Baku. Getting in is simpler than most F1 circuits — for the majority of visitors staying in the city centre, walking is the answer. Getting out after the Saturday race is where planning helps.
At most F1 circuits, transport is the central challenge — trains fill up, car parks bottleneck, and shuttle systems have fixed capacity. Baku is unusual because the circuit runs through the centre of a major city. For people staying in the right area, there is no transport system to navigate at all.
Circuit location: Neftchilar Avenue and Old City streets, central Baku
Nearest metro stations: Icherisheher, 28 May (~700m), Sahil
No visitor parking: Roads close on race day — no car access to gates
Access method: Walk, metro, or app taxi to the circuit perimeter
If you are staying near Fountain Square, the Old City, or the seafront Bulvar (boulevard), the circuit gates are 10–20 minutes on foot. The main straight runs along Neftchilar Avenue — the seafront boulevard road. Walking there directly from city-centre accommodation is straightforward and the route is well-signposted during race weekend.
Best accommodation area for walking access
Hotels in the Fountain Square area, on or near the Boulevard, or adjacent to the Old City walls give the best walking access to different circuit gates. The circuit is 6km long — the gate closest to your grandstand matters. Check which section your ticket is for and find accommodation accordingly.
Baku metro runs three stations close to different circuit sections. Metro hours are extended during race weekend. The BakıKART transport card (0.30 AZN per journey) is the standard payment method — reusable or single-use versions are available.
Metro: Icherisheher
Closest to the Old City / castle section grandstands. Walk south from the station exit toward the Old City walls.
Metro: 28 May
Approximately 700m from the main straight grandstands. Closest to Turn 1 area. Useful if your ticket is for the Absheron or main-straight grandstands.
Metro: Sahil
Between the other two stations — useful for the middle sections of the circuit near the Fan Zone.
Access to circuit gates for ticket holders is via footbridge and underpass once roads are closed. Follow the signage from your metro station exit.
All three ride-hailing apps operate widely in Baku. For getting to and from accommodation during the week and on Friday, they work without issues. On Saturday when road closures are in effect, app taxis cannot reach the circuit perimeter — they drop you at the edge of the closed zone and you walk the rest.
After the Saturday race
Immediately after the race, road closures are lifting but the streets near the circuit are still heavy with foot traffic. App taxis surge in the immediate post-race window. Walking 10–15 minutes away from the circuit before booking a taxi gives significantly better availability and pricing.
Roads around the Baku City Circuit close progressively as sessions approach. The full circuit closure means sections of central Baku are inaccessible by vehicle during sessions. This affects the Boulevard (Neftchilar Avenue), the Old City approaches, and several parallel streets.
Ticket holders access gates via designated footbridges and underpasses that cut across the closed road sections. These are well-signed during race weekend.
For Saturday's qualifying and race, closures run from mid-morning. If you are planning to walk from your hotel, allow extra time and check which crossings are accessible from your starting point.
Unlike dedicated circuits where 60,000 people converge on a train station, Baku disperses into city streets in multiple directions. The post-race exit is more manageable here than at most venues — but the 30 minutes immediately after the chequered flag are still dense.
Rush to the nearest road immediately after the race
Roads adjacent to the circuit close during sessions and reopen gradually after the race. Immediately after the chequered flag, the streets are congested with all spectators heading in the same direction. This is the slowest exit approach.
Stay for the podium ceremony
The podium typically takes 15–25 minutes after the chequered flag. By the time it finishes, the worst of the immediate post-race crowd has dispersed. This is the easiest low-effort option.
Walk to the Bulvar (Boulevard) and head in a direction away from the crowd
Baku's seafront boulevard runs parallel to the main straight. After the race, the crowd disperses along it in multiple directions. Walking towards the Old City end (south) or the Heydar Aliyev side (north) quickly puts you ahead of the main stream.
Book a restaurant or stop for a drink and leave 45 minutes later
Baku's city-centre restaurants are busy but functional on race night. Waiting 45–60 minutes after the race ends means walkable streets and app taxis available at normal rates. This is the cleanest exit option.
For those with early Sunday flights
Baku Heydar Aliyev International Airport is approximately 25–30km from the city centre. After the Saturday race, roads reopen gradually. App taxis become available again at normal pricing within 1–2 hours of the race finishing. If you have an early Sunday flight, plan your exit carefully and keep the airport transfer time in mind.
Staying at a central Baku hotel (Fountain Square, Old City, Boulevard)
Walk to the circuit. 10–20 minutes depending on hotel location. No transport needed. This is the default for most attendees.
Staying further from the circuit (outside city centre)
Take the metro to Icherisheher (Old City section) or 28 May (main straight / Turn 1 end). Both are within walking distance of circuit gates. Metro hours extended during race weekend.
Getting around Baku during the weekend
Bolt, Uber, and Yango all operate in Baku. App taxis work well when roads are open. On Saturday when circuit roads close, walk or use the metro for the final stretch.
Post-race exit — best approach
Stay for the podium or find a restaurant. By 45–60 minutes after the race, streets are navigable and app taxis are available without surge pricing.
Common Mistakes →
Transport, bag issues, and what else catches people out at Baku
Azerbaijan GP Guide →
Circuit overview, grandstands, and race weekend info
The 2026 Azerbaijan F1 Grand Prix runs September 25–26 at the Baku City Circuit. Race is on Saturday. No on-track F1 sessions on Sunday.
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