The Monaco Grand Prix delivered the third-largest Formula One audience in history in the US despite heavy criticism of the iconic track after Sunday's race.
The race started at 9am and drew 2.3-million viewers on ABC, the most ever for the Monaco Grand Prix. The only F1 races to draw more viewers were the Miami Grand Prix in 2024 (3.1-million) and 2022 (2.6-million), according to Front Office Sports. This year's Monaco race brought in more US viewers than Miami (2.1-million) earlier this month.
Through seven races in 2025, F1 is averaging 1.3-million viewers. Each of the past two seasons averaged 1.1-million, though the first half of the year does include the popular Miami and Monaco events.
F1 signed an extension with Monaco last year that runs through to 2031. However, despite F1's experiment to require teams to make at least two pit stops, Sunday's race featured a largely unchanged top 10.
McLaren's Lando Norris won the event from the pole, though he did overtake Max Verstappen on the second-to-last lap when the Red Bull star was forced to take his second required pit stop on the penultimate lap. That drew widespread criticism from drivers and fans, but F1 CEO Stefano Domenicali defended rule change.
"We know the width of the street is (limited) and the cars are quite big, so the attempt is to create attention to that," Domenicali told Sky Sports F1.
"It was great to see the day before everyone was thinking that everyone has to (do a pit) stop on the first lap, and a lot of discussion, so no one understood exactly anything. I think it was the right attempt and the attention was definitely there."
A decision on whether the two-stop rule will return for 2026 has not been made, but Domenicali pushed back against critics of the race.
"The Monaco event has been amazing," he said. "We never had so many people, so many boats, so much attention. That means the event itself is what Formula 1 wants, and that is great."
Monaco Grand Prix scores with US viewers despite criticism
Image: Mark Thompson/Getty Images
The Monaco Grand Prix delivered the third-largest Formula One audience in history in the US despite heavy criticism of the iconic track after Sunday's race.
The race started at 9am and drew 2.3-million viewers on ABC, the most ever for the Monaco Grand Prix. The only F1 races to draw more viewers were the Miami Grand Prix in 2024 (3.1-million) and 2022 (2.6-million), according to Front Office Sports. This year's Monaco race brought in more US viewers than Miami (2.1-million) earlier this month.
Through seven races in 2025, F1 is averaging 1.3-million viewers. Each of the past two seasons averaged 1.1-million, though the first half of the year does include the popular Miami and Monaco events.
F1 signed an extension with Monaco last year that runs through to 2031. However, despite F1's experiment to require teams to make at least two pit stops, Sunday's race featured a largely unchanged top 10.
McLaren's Lando Norris won the event from the pole, though he did overtake Max Verstappen on the second-to-last lap when the Red Bull star was forced to take his second required pit stop on the penultimate lap. That drew widespread criticism from drivers and fans, but F1 CEO Stefano Domenicali defended rule change.
"We know the width of the street is (limited) and the cars are quite big, so the attempt is to create attention to that," Domenicali told Sky Sports F1.
"It was great to see the day before everyone was thinking that everyone has to (do a pit) stop on the first lap, and a lot of discussion, so no one understood exactly anything. I think it was the right attempt and the attention was definitely there."
A decision on whether the two-stop rule will return for 2026 has not been made, but Domenicali pushed back against critics of the race.
"The Monaco event has been amazing," he said. "We never had so many people, so many boats, so much attention. That means the event itself is what Formula 1 wants, and that is great."
READ MORE:
Could Formula One rule change challenge McLaren's reign in Spain?
Big win, small shift: what Monaco win really means for Norris
Monaco’s magic fades as Formula 1 seeks answers
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