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The 2026 Miami Grand Prix features a luxurious $90,000 superyacht suite by MSC Cruises, offering prime views and upscale amenities. The multi-level structure includes pools and lounges, designed for elite networking and hospitality.
At the 2026 Miami Grand Prix, MSC Cruises is turning F1 hospitality into a full-blown spectacle with a landlocked, multi-level superyacht towering over Turns 5–9. For $90,000, guests get pools, lounges, and prime sightlines, less a ticket than a high-status venue built for ultra-wealthy networking as much as racing.
The multi-level MSC Yacht Club structure towers 50 feet above the track, stretches 264 feet in length and 96 feet in width, and is designed to evoke the scale and grandeur of an actual superyacht. This isn’t a hospitality tent with nautical branding slapped on it.
Spread across multiple levels, the facility combines elegant lounges, open-air terraces, shaded areas, and swimming pools, all positioned for proximity to the racing below.
The MSC Yacht Club sits along turns 5 through 9 of the Miami circuit, giving guests a sightline across up to five consecutive corners of the race.
That’s not a bad patch of track, either. Turn 5 is one of the heavier braking zones on the circuit, and the stretch through to Turn 9 produces genuine wheel-to-wheel moments. For $90,000, the views had better be worth something.
This represents MSC Cruises’ most significant hospitality opportunity at the Miami Grand Prix since first appearing in 2023, and it marks the first time a permanent structure of this kind has been built on-site to properly change what race-day viewing looks like.
The concept is drawn directly from MSC’s signature “ship within a ship” approach, the same ultra-premium model the cruise line uses for its top-tier cabins at sea.
For context, the F1 Paddock Club, long considered the gold standard of Grand Prix hospitality, sits directly above the pitlane and offers gourmet dining, premium bars, and guided pitlane walks.
Weekend packages there typically start around $8,000 to $12,000 per person.
The MSC Yacht Club is charging roughly ten times that. The gap between those two numbers is essentially the price of the view from a pool deck fifty feet in the air while a Formula 1 car does 200 mph past your sunlounger. Here’s exactly what the ticket gets you:
The suite includes pools, lounges, open-air terraces, and shaded areas, all designed for optimal viewing of the race.
The MSC Yacht Club is 50 feet tall, 264 feet long, and 96 feet wide, designed to resemble a real superyacht.
The MSC Yacht Club is situated along turns 5 through 9, providing views of up to five consecutive corners of the race.
The MSC Yacht Club serves as a high-status venue for ultra-wealthy networking and hospitality during the race.

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That depends entirely on who is buying it.
GP Management, one of the firms operating in this space, markets its Miami packages to CEOs, entrepreneurs, and ultra-high-net-worth individuals.
For that crowd, $90,000 is closer to a corporate entertainment line item than a personal indulgence. The yacht is a venue as much as it is a ticket, somewhere to host clients, conduct business in a setting that signals serious money, and do it with a Formula 1 race happening just below.
The Miami GP has moved well beyond motorsport since its debut in 2022 and is now a three-day spectacle that blends world-class racing with live entertainment, celebrity appearances, and the kind of hospitality excess that Miami has always done well.
The MSC Yacht Club is simply the furthest point on that spectrum and the logical endpoint of a race weekend where the experience has, for a meaningful portion of attendees, always mattered more than the result.
Whether it represents value is a question only someone spending $90,000 on a Grand Prix ticket gets to answer. The rest of us will be watching on Apple TV.