🏎️
2026 Season

Formula 1

The new regulation era begins. 24 races. 11 teams. 22 drivers. One World Champion.

24 Races
6 Sprint Weekends
11 Teams
22 Drivers
5 Engine Suppliers

Australian Grand Prix — Albert Park, Melbourne

The 2026 season opener and the first race under the new regulations is in the books. George Russell converted pole position into victory, leading a Mercedes 1-2 with rookie Kimi Antonelli finishing second. Charles Leclerc rounded out the podium for Ferrari.

FP1 ✓
FP2 ✓
FP3 ✓
Qualifying ✓
Race ✓

Key Storylines

  • Russell wins season opener! — George Russell converted pole into victory, leading a dominant Mercedes 1-2 with rookie Antonelli finishing P2 (+2.974s)
  • Leclerc charges to the podium — Charles Leclerc surged from P4 to lead early in the race, swapping positions with Russell before pitting during the VSC period, ultimately finishing P3
  • VSC drama — Virtual Safety Car deployed after Hadjar pulled off the track, followed by Bottas retiring — reshuffling the strategies
  • Piastri DNS after sighting-lap crash — Oscar Piastri crashed on the sighting lap and could not take the start, a major blow for McLaren
  • Verstappen recovers to P6 — After qualifying P20 due to his crash, Max Verstappen carved through the field to finish an impressive sixth
  • Hulkenberg DNS — Nico Hulkenberg could not start the race due to a reliability issue with his Audi
  • Lawson/Perez feud revived — Liam Lawson and Sergio Perez renewed their on-track rivalry with combative racing
  • Rookies deliver — Bearman P7, Lindblad P8, and Bortoleto P9 all finished in the top ten on their race debuts
PosDriverTeamGapStatus
1George RussellMercedesWinnerFinished
2Kimi AntonelliMercedes+2.974sFinished
3Charles LeclercFerrari+15.519sFinished
4Lewis HamiltonFerrari+16.144sFinished
5Lando NorrisMcLaren+51.741sFinished
6Max VerstappenRed Bull+54.617sFinished
7Ollie BearmanHaas+1 lapFinished
8Arvid LindbladRacing Bulls+1 lapFinished
9Gabriel BortoletoAudi+1 lapFinished
10Pierre GaslyAlpine+1 lapFinished
11Esteban OconHaas+1 lapFinished
12Alex AlbonWilliams+1 lapFinished
13Liam LawsonRacing Bulls+1 lapFinished
14Franco ColapintoAlpine+2 lapsFinished
15Carlos SainzWilliams+2 lapsFinished
16Sergio PerezCadillac+3 lapsFinished
17Lance StrollAston MartinFinished
DNFFernando AlonsoAston MartinDNF
DNFValtteri BottasCadillacDNF
DNFIsack HadjarRed BullDNF
DNSOscar PiastriMcLarenDNS — Sighting lap crash
DNSNico HulkenbergAudiDNS — Reliability

2026 F1 Season Calendar

24 rounds across 5 continents. Six Sprint weekends marked in pink. The season opens in Melbourne and closes in Abu Dhabi.

Rd Grand Prix Circuit Dates Format
1🇦🇺 Australian GPMelbourneAlbert ParkMar 6–8Race
2🇨🇳 Chinese GPShanghaiShanghai InternationalMar 13–15Sprint
3🇯🇵 Japanese GPSuzukaSuzuka CircuitMar 27–29Race
4🇧🇭 Bahrain GPSakhirBahrain International CircuitApr 10–12Race
5🇸🇦 Saudi Arabian GPJeddahJeddah Corniche CircuitApr 17–19Race
6🇺🇸 Miami GPMiami, FloridaMiami International AutodromeMay 1–3Sprint
7🇨🇦 Canadian GPMontréalCircuit Gilles VilleneuveMay 22–24Sprint
8🇲🇨 Monaco GPMonte CarloCircuit de MonacoJun 5–7Race
9🇪🇸 Barcelona-Catalunya GPBarcelonaCircuit de Barcelona-CatalunyaJun 12–14Race
10🇦🇹 Austrian GPSpielbergRed Bull RingJun 26–28Race
11🇬🇧 British GPSilverstoneSilverstone CircuitJul 3–5Sprint
12🇧🇪 Belgian GPSpa-FrancorchampsCircuit de Spa-FrancorchampsJul 17–19Race
13🇭🇺 Hungarian GPBudapestHungaroringJul 24–26Race
14🇳🇱 Dutch GPZandvoortCircuit ZandvoortAug 21–23Sprint
15🇮🇹 Italian GPMonzaAutodromo Nazionale MonzaSep 4–6Race
16🇪🇸 Spanish GP ★ NewMadridMadring Street CircuitSep 11–13New Venue
17🇦🇿 Azerbaijan GPBakuBaku City CircuitSep 25–27Race
18🇸🇬 Singapore GPSingaporeMarina Bay Street CircuitOct 9–11Sprint
19🇺🇸 United States GPAustin, TexasCircuit of the AmericasOct 23–25Race
20🇲🇽 Mexican GPMexico CityAutódromo Hermanos RodríguezOct 30–Nov 1Race
21🇧🇷 Brazilian GPSão PauloAutódromo José Carlos PaceNov 6–8Race
22🇺🇸 Las Vegas GPLas Vegas, NevadaLas Vegas Strip CircuitNov 19–21Race
23🇶🇦 Qatar GPLusailLusail International CircuitNov 27–29Race
24🇦🇪 Abu Dhabi GPYas IslandYas Marina CircuitDec 4–6Race

2026 Constructor Lineup

11 teams and 22 drivers contest the 2026 championship. Cadillac joins as the grid's first new constructor in over a decade. ★ Champ = reigning champion   Rookie = F1 debut

McLaren F1 Team
Mercedes Power Unit · Reigning Constructors' Champions
1Lando Norris★ Champ
81Oscar Piastri
Mercedes-AMG Petronas F1
Mercedes Power Unit
63George Russell
12Kimi AntonelliRookie
Oracle Red Bull Racing
Red Bull–Ford Powertrains
1Max Verstappen
6Isack HadjarRookie
Scuderia Ferrari HP
Ferrari Power Unit
16Charles Leclerc
44Lewis Hamilton
Williams Racing
Mercedes Power Unit
23Alexander Albon
55Carlos Sainz
Aston Martin Aramco F1
Honda RBPT Power Unit
14Fernando Alonso
18Lance Stroll
Visa CashApp Racing Bulls
Red Bull–Ford Powertrains
30Liam Lawson
7Arvid LindbladRookie
MoneyGram Haas F1 Team
Ferrari Power Unit
87Oliver Bearman
31Esteban Ocon
BWT Alpine F1 Team
Mercedes Power Unit
10Pierre Gasly
43Franco Colapinto
Audi F1 Team
Audi Power Unit
27Nico Hülkenberg
5Gabriel BortoletoRookie
Cadillac F1 Team New
Ferrari Power Unit · First season in F1
77Valtteri Bottas
11Sergio Pérez

Drivers' Championship Favorites

Pre-season odds from major bookmakers. George Russell enters as the clear favorite in the new regulation era, with Verstappen and Norris close behind.

Favorite Contender Long Shot
1
George Russell
Mercedes · #63
+200
Favorite
2
Max Verstappen
Red Bull · #1 · 4× World Champion
+300
Contender
3
Lando Norris
McLaren · #1 · Reigning Champion
+600
Contender
4
Fernando Alonso
Aston Martin · #14 · 2× World Champion
+700
Contender
5
Kimi Antonelli
Mercedes · #12 · Rookie
+900
Contender
6
Oscar Piastri
McLaren · #81
+1100
Long Shot
7
Charles Leclerc
Ferrari · #16
+2000
Long Shot
8
Lewis Hamilton
Ferrari · #44 · 7× World Champion
+3300
Long Shot
9
Carlos Sainz
Williams · #55
+5000
Long Shot
10
All Others
Stroll, Albon, Lawson, Hulkenberg & more
+10000+
Long Shot

The New Era Begins

2026 marks F1's most sweeping regulation overhaul in over a decade — smaller and lighter cars, a revolutionary power unit formula with a 50/50 ICE-to-electric split, active aerodynamics replacing DRS, fully sustainable fuel, and the sport's first new constructor entry in years. Every major system on the car has changed.

Power Unit Revolution

The 1.6-litre V6 turbo hybrid architecture continues, but the internal power balance has been fundamentally rewritten. The expensive and complex MGU-H (Motor Generator Unit — Heat) has been eliminated, lowering the barrier to entry for new manufacturers and improving road relevance.

ICE — 400 kW
ERS — 350 kW

Combined peak output: ~750 kW (~1,006 bhp). The electric motor output has nearly tripled compared to 2025 (120 kW → 350 kW).

🔋

Tripled Electric Power

The MGU-K now produces 350 kW — up from 120 kW in 2025. This near-300% increase means drivers deploy massive electrical energy through corners and on straights, fundamentally changing race strategies and energy management.

🌱

100% Sustainable Fuel

All cars run on Advanced Sustainable Fuel made from carbon capture, municipal waste, and non-food biomass — already trialled in F2/F3 in 2025. Fuel loads drop from ~100 kg to just 70 kg per race, shaving significant weight.

🏭

Five Engine Suppliers

Mercedes: McLaren, Williams, Alpine, works team. Ferrari: Haas, Cadillac, works team. Red Bull–Ford: Racing Bulls, works team. Honda: Aston Martin. Audi: works team (debut).

Power Unit Spec20252026Change
ICE Output~550 kW~400 kW↓ 27%
ERS (MGU-K) Output120 kW350 kW↑ 192%
Combined Peak Output~670 kW~750 kW↑ 12%
MGU-HPresentRemovedEliminated
ICE : Electric Split~80 : 20~50 : 50New balance
Fuel TypeE10 blend100% SustainableNew
Fuel Load~100 kg~70 kg↓ 30 kg
Engine Suppliers45+Audi
💨

Active Aerodynamics & the End of DRS

Ground-effect floor tunnels are removed, cutting mechanical downforce by 15–30%. In their place, F1 introduces active aerodynamics — movable front and rear wing elements that change angle depending on the driving scenario. DRS is abolished entirely.

Straight Mode Low Drag

Wings flatten automatically on straights (after 3+ seconds of straight-line driving), reducing drag for higher top speed. Available to all drivers at all times — no gap requirement.

Corner Mode High Downforce

Wings angle up for maximum grip through corners. The system transitions automatically, giving drivers significantly more cornering speed than a fixed-wing setup would allow.

Overtake Replaces DRS

When within 1 second of the car ahead at a detection point, the trailing driver unlocks extra electrical power from the MGU-K that the car ahead cannot access — creating a speed differential for overtaking.

The FIA originally named these systems "X-Mode", "Z-Mode", and "Manual Override Mode" but simplified the terminology after feedback. Unlike DRS, Straight/Corner Mode switching is available to all drivers regardless of gap — only Overtake requires the 1-second proximity rule.

📐

Smaller, Lighter, More Agile Cars

After years of F1 cars growing ever longer and heavier, the 2026 regulations mandate a significant reduction in size. The new cars will be the most compact of the hybrid era, reversing a trend that added ~200 kg over the past 20 years.

Dimension20252026Change
Wheelbase3,600 mm3,400 mm↓ 200 mm
Overall Width2,000 mm1,900 mm↓ 100 mm
Minimum Weight798 kg768 kg↓ 30 kg
Front Tyre Tread WidthStandard−25 mm↓ Narrower
Rear Tyre Tread WidthStandard−30 mm↓ Narrower
Front Tyre DiameterStandard−15 mm↓ Smaller
Rear Tyre DiameterStandard−30 mm↓ Smaller
Tyre Size18-inch Pirelli18-inch PirelliUnchanged
🛞

Narrower Tyres

Pirelli 18-inch tyres continue but are narrower front and rear, reducing drag and trimming weight. Tread width drops 25 mm (front) and 30 mm (rear), with smaller overall diameters for a more agile car.

🔧

Simplified Front Wing

Simpler front wing designs with in-washing bargeboards replace the complex out-washing aero philosophy of previous seasons. This is intended to reduce the "dirty air" effect and promote closer racing.

⚖️

Weight Reduction

The 30 kg minimum weight reduction (798 → 768 kg) is achieved through lighter sustainable fuel loads, the removal of the MGU-H, and narrower tyres — reversing the steady weight creep of recent years.

🛡️

Safety Improvements

Despite the push for lighter cars, the 2026 regulations introduce several significant safety upgrades targeting real-world crash scenarios observed in recent seasons.

🏗️

Stronger Roll Hoop

The roll hoop crash test load increases from 16g to 20g — a 25% increase in structural requirement. This addresses incidents where the halo and roll structure were stressed beyond previous test limits.

💥

Two-Stage Nose Cone

A new two-stage impact structure in the nose cone addresses secondary impacts. After the initial crash structure crumples as designed, a second stage absorbs energy from secondary collisions that often follow spins.

🔌

Improved EV Safety

Control electronics are now housed inside the safety cell (survival cell), eliminating high-voltage cable runs outside the central chassis. Side intrusion protection is increased to better protect the fuel cells.

💰

Financial Regulations & Cost Cap

The budget cap rises to $215 million for 2026 — up ~30% from 2024. This increase reflects the cost of developing entirely new cars and power units, inflation adjustments, and the expanded scope of items now counted within the cap.

📊

$215M Cost Cap

The headline figure is up ~30%, but much of this reflects previously excluded items (like sprint race costs) being pulled inside the perimeter, plus inflation. Per-GP allocation beyond 24 races rises from $1.2M to $1.8M.

🌍

Geographic Adjustment

A new geographic component compensates teams based in high-wage countries using OECD salary data. This levels the playing field for teams like Audi (Switzerland-based) compared to UK-based rivals.

🆕

New Entrant Support

Cadillac and Audi benefit from new-entrant provisions in the financial regs, providing a ramp-up period as they build their operations. The regulations are designed to make the sport accessible to new manufacturers.

🗓️

Calendar & Sporting Changes

🇪🇸

Madrid Joins the Calendar

A brand-new street circuit in the Spanish capital — the Madring — makes its F1 debut at Round 16 in September. Madrid becomes Spain's second race alongside Barcelona, replacing Imola on the calendar.

🆕

Cadillac Enters F1

The American Cadillac squad becomes F1's 11th constructor — the first new team to join the grid in over a decade. Powered by Ferrari, the team fields Valtteri Bottas and Sergio Pérez in their debut season.

🏎️

Six Sprint Weekends

The sprint format returns at six events: China, Miami, Canada, Britain, Netherlands, and Singapore. Sprint race costs are now included within the main cost cap for the first time.