MONACO GRAND PRIX 2027
June 4–6, 2027 · Monte Carlo ×

Let’s skip the part where we tell you Monaco is iconic. You already know that. What you probably don’t know — until you’ve actually stood on a terrace above the Massenet section with a drink in hand and a Ferrari doing 280km/h twelve meters below you — is how different it feels from every other race on the calendar.

We’ve been placing groups at Monaco for years. The one thing that surprises people every single time isn’t the cars. It’s how close everything is.

Grandstands, Yachts, Terrace — What Actually Fits Your Group

We have all three options. Here’s the honest version:

Grandstands work well if your group wants pure race atmosphere and a lower price point. You’re in it, you’re loud, you’re surrounded by fans. Not ideal for client entertainment — great for a group of friends or die-hard F1 travelers.

Yachts are visually unbeatable. Port Hercule during race weekend is a different world. But you’re watching screens for most of the action, and the race becomes background to the party. Some clients love that. Others feel like they missed the race.

The terrace is where you actually watch the Grand Prix, with proper hospitality around it. Best of both. The groups who’ve done all three tend to stay with the terrace.

→ Full breakdown of all Monaco hospitality options

The Terrace. Not A Terrace — The Terrace.

There’s hospitality at Monaco, and then there’s what we offer.

Grandstands are fine. You’re sitting, you’re watching, the sun’s in your face. Yachts in the harbor are spectacular — incredible for the atmosphere, but you’re watching the race on a screen more than you’re watching the race. Both have their place. We’ll come back to that.

The terrace is different. You’re elevated, directly above the circuit, at a corner where the racing actually matters. Not a straight where cars blur past in half a second. A braking zone. A decision point. You watch drivers make choices in real time — and you’re close enough to see when it goes wrong.

We’re not going to pretend every seat at Monaco is equal. The terrace is the best hospitality location on this circuit. That’s not a marketing line — it’s why the same corporate groups rebook before they leave on Sunday.

Why Groups Work Better Here Than Anywhere Else

Monaco has a specific social dynamic that other races don’t. The weekend slows down. Guests who couldn’t tell you who’s leading the championship are leaning over the barrier trying to spot the difference between qualifying runs. That happens here. It doesn’t happen at Silverstone.

For corporate groups — 10 people, 35 people, a client dinner that turns into a race weekend — Monaco does the heavy lifting. You don’t need to brief your guests. The location does it for you. The principality, the harbor, the casino district two minutes walk away, the boats, the noise on Thursday morning when the circuit opens for the first time.

Groups we work with tend to come from finance, real estate, luxury, and tech. Not because those are the only industries that care about F1 — but because Monaco works as a client event regardless of whether anyone in the room follows the sport. The backdrop is the product.

2027 Is Already Moving

The dates are set — June 4, 5, 6. The calendar is locked through 2031. And the hospitality market for Monaco moves faster than any other race, full stop.

Race day terrace for a group of 20 in 2027? That conversation needs to happen now, not in twelve months. Not because we’re pushing — because that’s genuinely how Monaco works. The building doesn’t get bigger. The terrace doesn’t add rows. When it’s full, it’s full.

Groups who contact us before end of 2025 get confirmed allocation, locked pricing, and first choice on configuration. Groups who contact us in spring 2026 get a waitlist.

Experience the Sumptuous Terrace at the Monaco Grand Prix

Monaco Grand Prix — Sumptuous Terrace panoramic video showing the terrace location, views and hospitality atmosphere.

monaco grand prix 2027

Early Access — Book Your Monaco 2027 Experience

No commitment at this stage. We just need to know you’re interested before someone else takes the allocation.

    Monaco grand prix 2027 : FAQ

    Things people and Groups Ask Us Before Booking

    +Our guests don't really follow F1. Is that going to be a problem?
    Honestly? That group usually has the best weekend. People who arrive without expectations leave talking about the terrace, the city at night, the harbor, the fact they were having lunch above an active Formula 1 circuit. The race becomes part of the atmosphere rather than the whole point. We've had guests who couldn't name a single driver come back the following year.
    +Isn't a yacht more impressive than a terrace?
    For photos, yes. For the actual weekend — it depends what you want. Yachts are incredible socially, especially evenings. But most guests are surprised by how much of the race they watch on screen rather than directly. If your group is there for the experience of Monaco hospitality, a yacht delivers. If they want to actually watch the race from somewhere that makes sense, the terrace wins.
    +We have 30 people. Can we have our own space?
    For groups that size, yes — we can configure a dedicated section. Some companies want their clients mixed into the general terrace atmosphere. Others need a private setup for internal teams or specific client relationships. Both work. Just tell us upfront.
    +Do people genuinely book two years out?
    All the time. First-time groups always assume Monaco works like other races. It doesn't. The same companies come back every year, they know the window, they move early. By the time most people start thinking about 2027, the good allocation is already spoken for.
    +What catches guests off guard when they actually arrive?
    The noise. Every time. TV makes Monaco look cinematic and almost graceful. In person it's something else entirely — cars hitting barriers, the tunnel exit, the sound cutting through the harbor when qualifying starts. Conversations just stop. Nothing prepares you for it, and that moment is worth the whole trip.
    +Is Sunday the only day worth being there?
    No — and this comes up a lot. Saturday qualifying is genuinely the best pure racing day at Monaco. Drivers are on the limit, the gaps are tiny, and the atmosphere in the grandstands is more intense than race day. Friday is looser, more social — good for groups who want time to actually talk and move around the principality rather than sit and watch sessions.
    +What's actually different about Monaco versus other F1 weekends?
    At most circuits, hospitality is built around the race. At Monaco, the race is built into the city. You walk off the terrace and you're in Monte Carlo. Casino Square is ten minutes away. The restaurants are open, the harbor is right there, the whole principality is part of the weekend. That doesn't happen at Silverstone or Barcelona. It changes everything about how the weekend feels.
    +What's the minimum group size?
    No real minimum. Some of the weekends we remember most were six or eight people — the right six people, around the right table, above the right section of track. Monaco doesn't need volume to feel significant.