The Qatar Grand Prix runs at the Lusail International Circuit, a purpose-built permanent track 20km north of central Doha. Every session runs under full floodlighting — the circuit was built for night racing and the infrastructure reflects it. This is not a street circuit. The track is fast and flowing, with no slow corners and sustained lateral loads that are hard on tyres.
The race starts at 18:00 local time on Sunday — an early evening start that finishes around 20:00. Qualifying on Saturday runs at 21:00 under full floodlighting and is the coldest session of the weekend. The circuit is the penultimate round of 2026: if the championship is close, you are at the race where it may be decided.
Qatar is also a different country to attend an F1 race than Europe, North America, or even Bahrain. Public dress codes, restricted alcohol access, and cultural expectations mean first-timers need to prepare more specifically than for most other rounds.
| Day | Session | Local time (AST) |
|---|---|---|
| Friday Nov 27 | Free Practice 1 | 18:30 |
| Friday Nov 27 | Free Practice 2 | 22:00 |
| Saturday Nov 28 | Free Practice 3 | 17:30 |
| Saturday Nov 28 | Qualifying | 21:00 |
| Sunday Nov 29 | Grand Prix | 18:00 |
All times AST (UTC+3). Confirm on the official F1 schedule closer to race weekend.
Qatar has public dress standards that apply on the metro, in shopping malls, and throughout general public areas. Shoulders and knees should be covered in these spaces. This is relevant because you will be taking public transport to the circuit — the metro is the most efficient way to get there.
In public (metro, streets, malls)
Covered shoulders and knees. No sleeveless tops or short skirts/shorts in conservative lengths.
Inside the circuit venue
Normal outdoor and sports clothing is appropriate. The organiser operates under event conditions — the stricter public rules are relaxed within the venue.
The practical approach: wear modest clothing for the metro journey, then change at your hotel before or after if needed. Or simply wear layers that work in both contexts — a light shirt over a sports top is usually sufficient.
Alcohol is available inside the circuit entertainment zone and licensed F1 hospitality areas. Outside the circuit, it is available only at licensed hotel bars and specific licensed venues in Doha — not in general restaurants, supermarkets, or public areas.
Qatar law prohibits drinking in public and being visibly intoxicated in public. This applies in parks, streets, the metro, and general shopping areas. Drink within licensed venues only. The circuit venue itself is licensed during the Grand Prix event.
The circuit is 20km north of central Doha. The Doha Metro (Red Line) connects the city to Lusail, with a free race weekend shuttle running from the Lusail metro station area to the circuit entrance. This combination is free for ticket holders during the race weekend and is the most reliable option on race days.
Taxis (Karwa Taxis) and ride-share apps (Uber, Careem) are available and work well on practice days. On qualifying and race day, traffic around Lusail gets significant — taxis and ride-shares are slower and more expensive than the metro-shuttle route.
Once you pass through the Lusail circuit security perimeter, you cannot leave and return on the same day. Pack everything you need before you enter — food, layers, phone charger, sunscreen for the afternoon arrival period. There are food and drink outlets inside the venue.
Hamad International Airport is a major hub — many fans route through Doha anyway. Adding one or two days around the race weekend costs relatively little if you are already transiting. Souq Waqif (the traditional market), the Museum of Islamic Art, the Corniche waterfront, and The Pearl are all accessible from the city centre and are worth the time.
November is one of the most comfortable months of the year in Qatar for outdoor activity — not the extreme summer heat, and before any winter rain. The timing works in your favour.
Getting There →
Metro, shuttle, and the post-race exit from Lusail
Packing Guide →
What to bring for evening sessions in late November Doha
Bag Policy →
Size limits and what gets turned away at Lusail gates
What to Wear →
Circuit dress vs public dress — and how to manage both
Common Mistakes →
Five things that catch first-timers out at the Qatar GP
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