The 2026 Formula 1 season opens on March 8 at the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne's Albert Park, launching a new era with smaller redesigned cars, 50% electrified hybrid engines, active aerodynamics replacing DRS, and an expanded 11-team grid including newcomers Cadillac and Audi. Defending champion Lando Norris of McLaren faces strong preseason favorites Mercedes and George Russell (+200 odds), with Ferrari and Red Bull close behind; Aston Martin struggled in testing despite Adrian Newey's leadership. US broadcasts shift to Apple TV, and fans can submit championship predictions until March 6.
Following McLaren's 2025 dominance—securing back-to-back constructors' titles early and Lando Norris' first drivers' championship—the 2026 season promises unpredictability across a 24-race calendar from March to December, concluding in Abu Dhabi. Highlights include the Australian opener, early Asian races (China, Japan, Bahrain), Monaco shifted to June, and a new Spanish Grand Prix at Madrid's Madring circuit on September 13 alongside Barcelona-Catalunya.
Major regulations introduce smaller cars with redesigned front/rear wings for reduced downforce and better overtaking, Active Aero (driver-controlled wing flaps on straights to cut drag), and power units deriving half their output from electrification—demanding precise energy management via lift-and-coast or downshifting. Max Verstappen called engine rules something he dislikes, while Lewis Hamilton deemed them 'ridiculously complex.' Preseason testing in Barcelona and Bahrain showed Mercedes (powering McLaren), Ferrari (fastest Bahrain lap), McLaren, and Red Bull (new Ford unit) at the top. George Russell (+200) leads betting ahead of Verstappen (+300); Norris aims to defend, with Oscar Piastri eyeing a home podium.
Key lineups: McLaren (Norris, Piastri); Mercedes (Russell, Kimi Antonelli); Ferrari (Leclerc, Hamilton); Red Bull (Verstappen, Isack Hadjar); Racing Bulls (rookie Arvid Lindblad). New entrants: Cadillac (Valtteri Bottas, Sergio Pérez; Ferrari engines); Audi (ex-Sauber; Nico Hülkenberg, Gabriel Bortoleto; own units). Aston Martin (Honda partner, Newey team principal) endured a 'extremely tough' preseason with reliability woes, battery issues, and just 128 laps in Bahrain's second test, but expects race-by-race gains. The FIA advances Mercedes engine compression checks to June 1. Starts vary sans MGU-H (Ferrari quickest off-line in tests, aided by new five-second warning for turbo spool); Brembo supplies brakes to all, tuned for hybrid phases.
Broadcasts: Sky Sports F1 (UK), Apple TV (US). BBC Sport predictions for drivers'/constructors' titles close March 6 (01:00 GMT).