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Formula E’s 2026 Schedule: Season 12’s Global Street-Racing Blueprint

What season is Formula E currently in?

Formula E is currently competing in Season 12.

  • Season name: 2025–26 ABB FIA Formula E World Championship
  • Season length: December 2025 through August 2026
  • Total races: 17
  • Race format: Single races and multiple double-header weekends

While the season opens in late 2025, the majority of the championship—Rounds 2 through 17—takes place in 2026, making this year the defining stretch of Season 12.

The 2026 Formula E race schedule (by month)

January

Mexico City E-Prix The first race of 2026 is traditionally one of the fastest on the calendar. The altitude and flowing layout reward efficiency and smooth power delivery.

Miami E-Prix A high-profile street race that emphasizes energy strategy and track position. Miami often produces unpredictable outcomes early in the year.

February

Jeddah E-Prix (Double-Header) Two races in one weekend mean double the pressure. Teams that miss the setup on Friday often struggle to recover, while those who adapt quickly can make huge gains.

March

Madrid E-Prix A key European stop that often serves as a momentum reset. Strong results here can shape the middle third of the season.

May

Berlin E-Prix (Double-Header) Berlin is a strategy race. Grip levels evolve constantly, and energy planning matters more than aggression.

Monaco E-Prix (Double-Header) One of the most important weekends of the season. Formula E cars can genuinely race at Monaco, and the double-header format rewards teams that learn and adapt overnight.

June

Sanya E-Prix Mid-season flyaway races often introduce unknown variables. This is where championship contenders stay calm while others unravel.

July

Shanghai E-Prix (Double-Header) Two races that can swing the standings dramatically. Mistakes here are expensive.

Tokyo E-Prix (Double-Header) One of the tightest street circuits on the calendar. Precision matters more than bravery.

August

London E-Prix (Double-Header – Season Finale) The championship concludes in London with two races that often decide titles. Indoor-outdoor transitions, changing grip, and massive pressure define the weekend.

Why the 2026 schedule matters

Double-headers amplify everything

Season 12 leans heavily into double-header weekends. That means:

  • A bad setup hurts twice
  • A good strategy pays off immediately
  • Momentum can shift in 48 hours

This format rewards teams that adapt quickly and punishes those that don’t.

Travel blocks shape momentum

The calendar groups races geographically, which creates natural “runs” of form. Teams that get on top of a region early often carry confidence forward.

Drivers to watch in 2026

Formula E success isn’t just about speed—it’s about judgment. These drivers consistently shape races and championships.

  • Pascal Wehrlein – Calm, precise, and deadly efficient late in races.
  • Mitch Evans – Aggressive when it matters, especially in the final laps.
  • Nick Cassidy – One of the smartest racers in chaotic conditions.
  • Jake Dennis – A qualifying specialist who converts track position into points.
  • Oliver Rowland – Renowned for energy management and race pacing.
  • Jean-Éric Vergne – Veteran instincts and ruthless efficiency.
  • Nyck de Vries – Tactical, methodical, and difficult to out-think.
  • António Félix da Costa – Proven winner with championship discipline.

These drivers excel not just at pushing hard—but at knowing when not to.

Two must-watch weekends in 2026

Monaco E-Prix (May)

Monaco is where Formula E proves itself. The cars are quick enough to feel serious but nimble enough to race wheel-to-wheel. With two races back-to-back, Monaco rewards precision, confidence, and adaptability.

London E-Prix (August)

The season finale is pure pressure. Championships are often undecided heading into London, and the circuit’s unique layout exposes even small mistakes. If the title is close, this weekend delivers drama.

In Closing

The 2026 Formula E schedule isn’t just a list of destinations—it’s a test of consistency. Season 12 rewards teams and drivers who:

  • adapt quickly
  • manage energy precisely
  • stay calm under pressure

With a global calendar, multiple double-headers, and a deep field of elite drivers, 2026 stands out as one of Formula E’s most competitive seasons yet.

If you want electric racing that’s unpredictable, tactical, and relentlessly intense—this is the year to watch.

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By Joe Clarke