Marina Bay Street Circuit is a 4.940 km (3.069 miles) street circuit in Singapore’s downtown core, with 19 corners across a 62-lap race distance of 306.143 km. It became Formula 1’s first night race in 2008 and remains the most physically demanding event on the calendar. Kevin Magnussen holds the lap record at 1:35.867, set in 2024. Drivers regularly lose 3 kg of body weight during the two-hour race: tropical heat, extreme humidity, and zero-airflow street canyons combine into an endurance test unlike anywhere else on the calendar.
The layout winds past Singapore’s most recognizable landmarks, including the Marina Bay Sands hotel, the Padang, and the Esplanade. Turn 5, a tight left-hander, and Turn 7, a sharp right after the Anderson Bridge, are key technical challenges. The long straight between Turns 5 and 7 provides the main DRS zone and overtaking opportunity. The circuit is tight and unforgiving throughout, with concrete walls on both sides and no run-off. Safety car appearances are frequent, often reshuffling the order and adding a strategic variable that keeps teams guessing.
The 2008 debut on 28 September produced both a spectacular night race and the infamous “Crashgate” scandal, when Renault instructed Nelson Piquet Jr. to deliberately crash to trigger a safety car that benefited Fernando Alonso. On 2 October 2022, Sergio Perez won a dramatic rain-affected race. On 17 September 2023, Carlos Sainz took victory after a safety car period reshuffled the order. Sebastian Vettel won five times in Singapore between 2011 and 2019, making it one of his strongest venues.
The timezone is Asia/Singapore at SGT (UTC+8), but the 19:00 local start is designed for European broadcast. The race begins at 11:00 GMT and 13:00 CEST, giving European fans a comfortable afternoon slot. North American viewers get a morning start at 07:00 EDT. Asian fans across the region can watch in prime evening time. Check Singapore time and Singapore city time for conversions.
October in Singapore is hot and humid, with temperatures around 30 degrees Celsius and high humidity even after dark. Thunderstorms are common in the late afternoon, but the evening race start usually avoids the worst of the daily rainfall cycle. The floodlit skyline reflected in the water of Marina Bay creates an atmosphere that photographs cannot fully capture. Singapore’s food scene, from hawker centres to fine dining, makes it one of the most rewarding cities on the calendar to visit.
See the full race schedule and session times at the Singapore Grand Prix page.