Formula E - Jakarta ePrix
Display & Timezone
Display & Timezone
Showing times for Asia/Bangkok
Timezone
Asia - Bangkok
20 - 21 Jun
Completed
Jakarta International e-Prix Circuit
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Track Info
Jakarta International e-Prix Circuit - Ancol, North Jakarta, Indonesia
Purpose-built street-style Formula E venue by Ancol Beach - clockwise - 2.370 km with 18 turns, ~600 m main straight and a late-lap hairpin that shapes every finish
When was the track built?
Planned through 2019–2021 with multiple proposed downtown sites, the race ultimately moved to Ancol. Ground works began in January 2022 and the semi-permanent venue was completed just before the June 2022 debut, combining purpose-built sections with a street-circuit feel by the waterfront.
When was its first race?
The circuit’s first race was the Jakarta E-Prix on 4 June 2022, won by Mitch Evans. Formula E returned with a double-header on 3–4 June 2023, and again on 21 June 2025.
What's the circuit like?
- Designed for flow and duels: Long launch to Turn 1, a busy technical first sector, then fast sweeps by Ancol Beach City before a long straight into a heavy-brake hairpin.
- Energy and tyres matter: Heat and humidity make lift-and-coast strategy and rear-tyre protection decisive over a stint.
- Benchmark pace: Race-lap record 1:07.453 (2025) shows the step from early Gen3 weekends where fastest race laps were in the 1:09s.
Lap records and benchmarks (Formula E)
- Race lap - 2025: 1:07.453 - Norman Nato, Nissan.
- Race 10 - 2023: Fastest lap 1:09.755 - Sébastien Buemi; winner Pascal Wehrlein.
- Race 11 - 2023: Fastest lap 1:09.171 - Jake Dennis; winner Maximilian Günther.
- 2022 debut: Fastest lap 1:09.786 - Mitch Evans; winner Mitch Evans.
- Pole references: 2023 poles 1:08.141 and 1:07.753 - Maximilian Günther; 2025 pole 1:06.713 - Jake Dennis.
Why go?
Big-city waterfront vibes meet strategic, close-pack e-racing. You get late-brake lunges into Turn 1 and Turn 13, energy games in the flowing middle sector, and festival crowds a short walk from the beach. Recent runnings drew sellout atmospheres and headline storylines.
Where's the best place to watch?
- Main straight - Turn 1: Starts, restarts and classic slipstream passes after the 600 m run.
- Back straight - Turn 13 hairpin: The heaviest stop on the lap and prime divebomb zone before the run to the line.
- Final sector by the water: Great photo ops as cars thread the late corners and fire onto the straight.
Not just one series - headline events at Ancol
ABB FIA Formula E World Championship: Jakarta E-Prix hosted in 2022, 2023 (double-header) and 2025, with Dan Ticktum taking his first FE win in 2025.
Hotels & Accommodation
20 - 21 Jun
Completed
Jakarta International e-Prix Circuit
Track Info
Jakarta International e-Prix Circuit - Ancol, North Jakarta, Indonesia
Purpose-built street-style Formula E venue by Ancol Beach - clockwise - 2.370 km with 18 turns, ~600 m main straight and a late-lap hairpin that shapes every finish
When was the track built?
Planned through 2019–2021 with multiple proposed downtown sites, the race ultimately moved to Ancol. Ground works began in January 2022 and the semi-permanent venue was completed just before the June 2022 debut, combining purpose-built sections with a street-circuit feel by the waterfront.
When was its first race?
The circuit’s first race was the Jakarta E-Prix on 4 June 2022, won by Mitch Evans. Formula E returned with a double-header on 3–4 June 2023, and again on 21 June 2025.
What's the circuit like?
- Designed for flow and duels: Long launch to Turn 1, a busy technical first sector, then fast sweeps by Ancol Beach City before a long straight into a heavy-brake hairpin.
- Energy and tyres matter: Heat and humidity make lift-and-coast strategy and rear-tyre protection decisive over a stint.
- Benchmark pace: Race-lap record 1:07.453 (2025) shows the step from early Gen3 weekends where fastest race laps were in the 1:09s.
Lap records and benchmarks (Formula E)
- Race lap - 2025: 1:07.453 - Norman Nato, Nissan.
- Race 10 - 2023: Fastest lap 1:09.755 - Sébastien Buemi; winner Pascal Wehrlein.
- Race 11 - 2023: Fastest lap 1:09.171 - Jake Dennis; winner Maximilian Günther.
- 2022 debut: Fastest lap 1:09.786 - Mitch Evans; winner Mitch Evans.
- Pole references: 2023 poles 1:08.141 and 1:07.753 - Maximilian Günther; 2025 pole 1:06.713 - Jake Dennis.
Why go?
Big-city waterfront vibes meet strategic, close-pack e-racing. You get late-brake lunges into Turn 1 and Turn 13, energy games in the flowing middle sector, and festival crowds a short walk from the beach. Recent runnings drew sellout atmospheres and headline storylines.
Where's the best place to watch?
- Main straight - Turn 1: Starts, restarts and classic slipstream passes after the 600 m run.
- Back straight - Turn 13 hairpin: The heaviest stop on the lap and prime divebomb zone before the run to the line.
- Final sector by the water: Great photo ops as cars thread the late corners and fire onto the straight.
Not just one series - headline events at Ancol
ABB FIA Formula E World Championship: Jakarta E-Prix hosted in 2022, 2023 (double-header) and 2025, with Dan Ticktum taking his first FE win in 2025.