grammys how long
The main Grammy Awards telecast usually lasts about three to four hours, with most recent shows landing around three and a half hours from start to finish.
Quick Scoop: How long are the Grammys?
- The televised ceremony is typically scheduled for roughly 3.5 hours, often in an 8 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. ET block.
- In practice, that means you’re settling in for a full “movie-length” night: red carpet, big performances, and the headline categories all packed into one extended show.
- For 2026 specifically, the broadcast window on CBS/Paramount+ runs from 8 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. ET (5 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. PT), which fits that same 3.5‑hour pattern.
But isn’t there more than the telecast?
Yes — what you see on TV is only part of “music’s biggest night.”
- With roughly 90+ categories, not all awards fit into the main three‑ish hours, so many Grammys are given out in an earlier, separate ceremony.
- In recent years there’s been:
- A premiere/early ceremony streaming in the afternoon (for 2026, starting at 3:30 p.m. ET).
* The **red carpet** beginning a couple of hours before the main show (around 6 p.m. ET in 2026).
- If you count early awards + red carpet + telecast, the whole experience can stretch to 6–7 hours of continuous Grammy content.
Why does it feel so long?
The runtime comes from how much they try to squeeze in.
- Big live performances across genres (pop, rap, country, R&B, Latin, and more).
- Tributes, memorial segments, and lifetime‑style honors.
- Only a fraction of the ~90+ categories can be shown on TV, so producers balance “must‑see” awards with performances and keep the main program near that 3–4 hour mark.
Simple rule of thumb
If you’re just asking “Grammys how long?” for planning your night:
- Block off about 3.5 to 4 hours for the main televised show.
- Add another 1–2 hours if you’re also watching the early ceremony and red carpet streams.
TL;DR: The Grammys telecast runs about 3.5 hours, typically 8–11:30 p.m. ET, with additional early awards and red carpet coverage if you want the full marathon.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.