Formula E Berlin ePrix 2025 | Schedule & Sessions | MotorSportRadar

Formula E - Berlin ePrix

Dunlaing Watches
Event Start

Berlin ePrix

Dunlaing Watches
0 D
0 H
0 M
0 S

11 - 13 Jul

Completed
Tempelhof Airport Street Circuit

Tempelhof Airport Street Circuit

Free Practice 1
17:00 - Fri, 11 Jul
Free Practice 2
10:00 - Sat, 12 Jul
Qualifying 1
12:20 - Sat, 12 Jul
Race 1
17:05 - Sat, 12 Jul
Free Practice 3
10:00 - Sun, 13 Jul
Qualifying 2
12:20 - Sun, 13 Jul
Race 2
17:05 - Sun, 13 Jul

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Upcoming in Formula E

Upcoming in Formula E
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1 - 3 May
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16 - 17 May
Sanya ePrix
19 - 20 Jun
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Track Info

Tempelhof Airport Street Circuit - Berlin, Germany

Formula E’s concrete-airfield classic on the apron of the historic airport terminal - anti-clockwise - 2.343 km with 15 turns since 2024, famed for abrasive concrete slabs and wide racing lines

First Race
23 May 2015
Round 8 of Season 1 on a 2.469 km 17-turn layout at Tempelhof.
Circuit Length
2.343 km / 1.460 mi
Current layout introduced for 2024 and retained for 2025. Earlier layouts included 2.355 km (2017–2023), 2.505 km extended (2020), and 2.469 km original (2015).
Turns
15 (current)
Season 10 update expanded the corner count and altered mid and final sectors.
Lap Record
0:58.917 - Nick Cassidy (Formula E), 2025
Fastest official race lap on the 2.343 km layout in a Jaguar I-Type 7. Prior record on the 2.355 km layout was 1:06.604 by Jake Dennis (2023).
Attack Mode
Turn 2 (outside)
Season 11 race guides place activation on the outside of T2.
Surface
Concrete apron slabs
Low-grip, highly abrasive concrete designed for aircraft drives tyre wear and thermal management strategy.

When was the track built?

Tempelhof is a temporary course mapped across the vast apron of the former airport. The inaugural 2015 layout featured 17 turns and even ran beneath the terminal’s covered canopy in places. After a downtown detour in 2016, racing returned here in 2017 with a simpler 10-turn map. In 2020, the pandemic season finale used three variants across six races, including reverse and extended layouts. For 2024, Formula E unveiled a revised 2.343 km 15-turn course that sharpened overtaking while keeping the airfield’s character.

When was its first race?

The venue’s first race was the 2015 Berlin e-Prix on 23 May 2015, won on track by Jérôme d’Ambrosio. Formula E has raced at Tempelhof every season since 2017, making Berlin the series’ ever-present host city.

What’s the circuit like?

  • Airfield width - street style: Wide concrete lanes create multiple lines and pack racing, but the 90-degree linkers and hairpins keep it classic Formula E.
  • Abrasion and heat: The concrete slab surface is uniquely abrasive, so energy and tyre management are as critical as raw pace.
  • Season 11 flow: 2025 tweaks opened T3–T4 and reworked T9–T10 into double lefts, boosting rhythm and overtaking at T1, T6 and T9.
  • Benchmark pace: Cassidy’s 58.917 race-lap headlines Gen3 speed here, with rookie testing laps dipping into the high 57s in optimal trim.

Lap records and benchmarks (by layout)

  • Current 2.343 km 15T (2024–present) - race lap: 0:58.917 - Nick Cassidy, Jaguar I-Type 7, 2025.
  • 2017–2023 2.355 km 10T - race lap: 1:06.604 - Jake Dennis, Porsche 99X Electric, 2023.
  • 2020 extended 2.505 km 16T - race lap: 1:17.232 - Lucas di Grassi, Audi FE06.
  • 2020–2022 reverse 2.355 km 10T - race lap: 1:07.849 - Nick Cassidy, Audi FE07, 2022.
  • 2015 original 2.469 km 17T - race lap: 1:24.435 - Nelson Piquet Jr., SRT_01E.

Why go?

Tempelhof delivers some of Formula E’s wildest pack racing. The wide apron invites side-by-side duels, Attack Mode gambles at T2 mix up the order, and the fan village sits inside a piece of architectural history. Berlin’s been on every FE calendar, so you’re watching a cornerstone of the championship.

Where’s the best place to watch?

  • Main straight - T1 braking: Classic dive zone with multiple lanes into the opening complex.
  • Turn 2 Attack Mode zone: Strategy comes alive here as leaders risk the off-line pickup to grab extra power without losing track position.
  • Final sector rework (T9–T10): The double-lefts generate last-lap opportunities and photo finishes to the line.

Not just one series - headline moments at Tempelhof

Six-race 2020 finale: Three different layouts over nine days crowned DS Techeetah and António Félix da Costa after the COVID-19 pause.

Grand slams in Berlin: Two of Formula E’s rare “grand slams” have been achieved at Tempelhof.

Rookie tests and development: Annual rookie days regularly produce headline lap times and showcase future stars.

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