Formula One has kept Sunday’s season-opening Australian Grand Prix alive by using charter planes to fly hundreds of affected members of the sport’s travelling circus to Melbourne.
Following the travel chaos caused by airspace closure in the Middle East, the Press Association has been told that two chartered aircraft departed London on Monday night.
A British Airways plane, which stopped at Singapore, and a business-class only Air X flight via Tanzania, carried staff from 10 of the grid’s 11 teams as well as F1 officials to Australia. The eleventh-hour flights were coordinated by sports travel agency, Travel Places.
Update: Qatar Airways flight operations remain temporarily suspended due to the closure of Qatari airspace. Qatar Airways will resume operations once the Qatar Civil Aviation Authority announces the safe reopening of Qatari airspace. A further update will be provided on 04 March…
— Qatar Airways (@qatarairways) March 3, 2026
The affected personnel are due to land in Melbourne on Wednesday morning, 48 hours out from the opening practice session of the season at Albert Park.
Roughly 2,000 people work at every F1 race, and it is thought at least a quarter had been due to travel to Australia via travel hubs such as Doha and Dubai.
However, the conflict in the Middle East caused hundreds of staff to re-route or take chartered flights. One leading UK-based team told PA that more than 50 per cent of its travelling staff had been affected.
China, Thailand, Korea, Japan, America, Singapore and Hong Kong have all been used as stopovers by those scrambling to make it to Australia.
However, despite the disruption, F1 bosses are understood to be confident the race in Melbourne will go ahead as planned.
A paddock insider told PA: “It is a great testament to the sport how they are able to pull this off at such short notice, and to get us to the other end of the world.”
Following this weekend’s race in Albert Park, the sport will immediately move on to Shanghai for the Chinese Grand Prix.
A race in Japan follows on March 29 before two rounds in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia on April 12 and April 19 respectively.
The trouble in the Middle East places those races in significant doubt with F1 “closely monitoring” the situation.
An F1 spokesperson said: “The safety and security of everyone in F1 will always be our priority.
“The next three races are in Australia, China and Japan, not in the Middle East – those races are not for a number of weeks.
“As always we closely monitor any situation like this and work closely with relevant authorities.”
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