Formula 1 was a niche sport in the United States five years ago. Today it sells out three American venues and is competing with NASCAR for viewership. What happened?
The numbers:
- US F1 viewership increased over 50% from 2021 to 2024. Source: Nielsen ratings via ESPN press releases.
- Three US races on the calendar: Austin (COTA), Miami, Las Vegas.
- The 2024 Las Vegas GP drew peak viewership that rivaled some NFL games in the same time slot.
- F1 merchandise sales in the US grew significantly year over year. Source: F1 commercial reports.
What drove the growth:
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Drive to Survive (Netflix). The docu-series premiered in 2019 and created millions of new American fans. It did for F1 what The Last Dance did for NBA nostalgia -- except it created new fans rather than just reviving old ones.
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Social media strategy. F1's YouTube channel, Instagram, and TikTok presence is best-in-class among global sports. They understood short-form content before most sports leagues did.
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American investment. Liberty Media (an American company) bought F1 in 2017 and deliberately targeted the US market. Three US races, American-friendly broadcast times for two of them, ESPN partnership.
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Celebrity crossover. Brad Pitt's F1 film, celebrity appearances at races, team ownership by American investors. The sport became culturally relevant in the US.
What could slow it down:
- Race ticket prices are astronomical. Miami GP GA tickets exceeded $500.
- The sport is still confusing for casual fans. The strategy layer that makes F1 fascinating for hardcore fans alienates newcomers.
Sources:
- Nielsen — US viewership data
- ESPN — broadcast metrics
- Liberty Media — investor presentations
- Netflix — Drive to Survive viewership data