MotoGP resumes this weekend nearly a month after the USA Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas, because the Grand Prix of Qatar in Lusail was delayed until November, hoping the the war in the Middle East would have ended by then. Marco Bezzecchi is the leader after winning the first two races of the year (and five races in a row), but the 2024 champion Jorge Martín has started well too, hoping to leave behind the disaster of the 2025.
And nobody can write Marc Márquez off, especially on a circuit where he has won three times already... but the last time was in 2019. It was his brother Álex Márquez the one that won in 2025. Who will win in the 40th edition of the Spanish GP in Jerez?
These are the times you can follow the Spanish Grand Prix this weekend:
Friday, April 24
Moto3 - FP1: 09:00 CEST, 09:35 BST
Moto2 - FP1: 09:50 CEST, 10:30 BST
MotoGP - FP1: 10:45 CEST, 11:30 BST
Saturday, April 25
MotoGP - Qualifying 1: 10:10 CEST
MotoGP - Qualifying 2: 11:15 CEST
Moto3 - Qualifying 1: 12:45 CEST
Moto3 - Qualifying 2: 13:10
Moto2 - Qualifying 1: 13:40
Moto2 - Qualifying 2: 14:04
MotoGP - Sprint: 15:00 CEST
Sunday, April 26
Moto3 - Grand Prix: 11:00 CEST, 10:00 BST
Moto2 - Grand Prix: 12:15 CEST, 11:15 BST
MotoGP - Grand Prix: 14:00 CEST, 13:00 BST
How to watch MotoGP live in Europe:
Here's a list of MotoGP broadcasters to watch MotoGP in 2026:
Austria: Sky, Servus TV
Balkans countries (Bosnia, Serbia, Macedonia, Montenegro): Arena Sports
Baltic countries: Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia: 3 Sport
Belgium: PlaySports, RTBF
Bulgaria: Max Sport
Croatia: Sportklub
Cyprus: Cyta Vision
Czechia: Nova Sport6
Denmark: 3 Sport
Finland: Viaplay
France: Canal+
Germany: Sky, Red Bull, DF1
Greece: Cosmote TV
Hungary: 4 Arena
Italy: Sky, Canala 8
Netherlands: Zigo Sport, NOS
Norway: Sport3
Poland: Polsat Sport
Portugal: Sport TV
Romania: Prima Sport 3
Spain: DAZN
Sweden: Sport Motor
UK: TNT Sports
After Spain, the MotoGP continues nearby: France (Le Mans) on May 8-10, Catalonia on May 15-17 and Italy-Mugello on May 29-31.