Drive to Survive Season 8 arrives with something Formula 1 fans haven’t seen before: a streaming partnership that brings Apple TV and Netflix together around one of motorsport’s most influential series.
The eighth season will recap key moments from the 2025 Formula 1 campaign, while also expanding into live coverage. Both Apple TV and Netflix are set to share live streaming of the 2026 Canadian Grand Prix weekend, scheduled from May 22 to May 24. For U.S. viewers, the new season becomes available after midnight on premiere day, accessible directly through Apple TV and Netflix.
For fans already inside the Apple ecosystem, that means every episode can be streamed without switching platforms. It also signals a deeper push into sports programming at a time when streaming services are competing for live rights and loyal audiences.
A New Streaming Dynamic Around Formula 1
Drive to Survive helped transform Formula 1’s presence in the United States. What began as a behind-the-scenes documentary series evolved into a cultural catalyst. Viewership grew. Younger audiences engaged. Grand Prix weekends began trending beyond traditional motorsport circles.
Netflix’s early investment in the series established the format’s success. Now, with Season 8, Apple steps into the picture in a more visible way. The collaboration aligns with Apple’s five-year U.S. Formula 1 rights agreement, strengthening its sports portfolio.
Instead of splitting content across services, the arrangement allows Apple TV subscribers in the U.S. to watch the entire season natively within the app. The addition of live Canadian Grand Prix weekend coverage adds a new layer, blending documentary storytelling with real-time race action.
For Apple, live sports have become an increasingly important pillar. Formula 1 complements existing sports content and deepens engagement during race weekends.
What Season 8 Covers
Drive to Survive Season 8 revisits defining moments from the 2025 Formula 1 season. As in previous installments, the series follows drivers, team principals, and internal rivalries that shape championship outcomes.
The appeal remains consistent: personal access. Cameras capture private negotiations, strategy tensions, and emotional turning points that rarely appear in standard race broadcasts.
By pairing that narrative recap with live coverage of the 2026 Canadian Grand Prix weekend, the streaming collaboration creates continuity between past drama and present competition.
Canadian Grand Prix weekend streaming from May 22 to May 24 will bring fans closer to qualifying sessions, race buildup, and race-day intensity, all within platforms many already use daily.
Strategic Timing for Apple and Netflix
The partnership reflects shifting priorities in the streaming industry. Netflix’s success with Drive to Survive demonstrated the power of sports-adjacent storytelling. That momentum has pushed the platform further toward live sports experimentation.
Apple, meanwhile, continues building its sports portfolio, positioning Apple TV as a destination for premium live content. Formula 1 fits that ambition, especially in the U.S., where interest has expanded significantly over the past several seasons.
Formula 1 CEO Stefano Domenicali has previously credited Drive to Survive with accelerating the sport’s popularity in key markets. Apple’s involvement adds another distribution channel and could widen the reach further in mature territories.
Drive to Survive Season 8 therefore arrives not only as a new chapter in the series, but as a signal of how streaming platforms are reshaping sports consumption — blending documentary storytelling with live race weekends under a single subscription experience.