Hockenheim could yet return to the Formula 1 calendar, but its circuit director has admitted that there are certain conditions to its re-entry.
Germany hasn't hosted an F1 race since 2020, despite having two grade 1 circuits, making it eligible to host one. The two circuits which could host a race are Hockenheim, located 20km south of the city of Mannheim and the Nurburgring, situated in the town of Nurburg in the west of Germany.
However, Germany's chances of hosting a race look doubtful due to F1's persistence in expanding into new markets and a switch from permanent circuits to temporary ones based around a city.
There is also the financial aspect, with Azerbaijan and Saudi Arabia paying over 50 million dollars in hosting fees, according to RacingNews365, for a spot on the F1 calendar in 2023.
"Everyone knows that the new countries can pay different amounts than the traditional European circuits," Hockenheim circuit director Jorn Teske told German publication Auto Motor und Sport. "I don't know to what extent the upward spiral will continue. I don't have concrete figures, after all, we don't talk every week.
"If nothing changes or Formula 1 is not prepared to make major compromises, it cannot work. We have already been told that there is great interest in Hockenheim as a location, and I don't think it's just lip service.
"But it's not entirely clear to me to what extent they might be prepared to reduce the maximum achievable race fees. If nothing changes or Formula 1 is not prepared to make major compromises, it cannot work.
"There was an initiative by Stefano Domenicali who wanted to make [a return of the German GP] a top priority and bring all parties to the table, nothing came of that."
Germany’s long F1 history
Germany has a long history of Grand Prix racing, with the first German Grand Prix in 1926 held at the AVUS circuit in Berlin and was won by German Rudolf Caracciola in a Mercedes.
The Nurburgring hosted the race from 1927 until 1958, with races being held on the circuit's Nordschleife layout, widely regarded as the most challenging race track in the world.
Safety concerns led to the German GP's relocation from the Nurburgring to Hockenheim in 1970, with Jochen Rindt winning from Jacky Ickx on his way to becoming the sport's first posthumous world champion in the same year.
Although the race returned to the Nurburgring in 1971, Hockenheim resumed hosting rights in 1977 after Niki Lauda's near-fatal accident on the Nordschleife in 1976.
Michael Schumacher's arrival into F1 in 1991 boosted the sport's popularity in Germany, with an average of 10 million people watching Schumacher secure his fourth world title in 2001 on German free-to-air TV channel RTL.
Schumacher's seven world titles also helped the Nurburgring return to the calendar, hosting the European and Luxembourg GPs from 1995 to 2007 alongside Hockenheim. Hockenheim and Nurburgring then shared the German GP from 2008 onwards, with the former hosting races in even years and the latter in odd years.
Following Schumacher's retirement in 2006, Sebastian Vettel became Germany's next world champion, winning four consecutive titles for Red Bull from 2010 to 2013.
However, Schumacher's retirement and the advent of pay-to-view television caused the sport's popularity to wane, with the attendance at the 2019 German GP dropping to 61,000. This marked a significant decline from the Schumacher era, where around 100,000 fans would attend Sunday's race.
Nurburgring did welcome back F1 during the Covid-19-stricken 2020 season, with the Eifel GP held in early October of that year. A capped crowd of 20,000 were allowed to see Lewis Hamilton match Schumacher's win record on his way to a seventh world title.
For 2024, German fans will be able to cheer on Haas' Nico Hulkenberg as their lone representative on the F1 grid. But there are seeds of growth for F1 in Germany, with Audi set to enter F1 in 2026 as part of its takeover of Sauber and the live broadcast of seven races on RTL who return to the paddock after a sabbatical of one year.