Formula 1 driver Valtteri Bottas will not serve a five-place grid penalty at the 2026 Australian Grand Prix after the FIA applied a new rule retroactively. The penalty stemmed from incidents in the 2024 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. Bottas, now with Cadillac, returns to full-time racing in Melbourne.
Valtteri Bottas, who sat out the 2025 Formula 1 season, was initially set to carry a five-place grid drop into his return race with the new Cadillac team at the 2026 Australian Grand Prix. The penalty originated from the 2024 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, where Bottas, driving for Sauber, spun Red Bull's Sergio Perez on lap one, earning a 10-second time penalty. Later in the same race, Bottas collided with Haas driver Kevin Magnussen at Turn 6 after locking his front wheels, leading to his retirement. Stewards issued the grid penalty in lieu of a drive-through for that incident.
Under previous regulations, such penalties applied to the driver's next race participation, regardless of time elapsed. With no full-time seat in 2025 and limited opportunities as Mercedes reserve, Bottas's next event became the 2026 season opener in Melbourne. However, updated Formula 1 sporting regulations now limit grid penalties to those accumulated in the previous 12 months. Article B1.9.5h defines a grid penalty as "a drop of any number of grid positions for the next sprint or race in which the driver participates in the subsequent twelve (12) month period."
On Thursday, the FIA confirmed that a tweak to article B2.5.4b applies this rule retroactively. As a result, Bottas's penalty from December 2024 falls outside the 12-month window. "Apparently it's vanished thanks to some new regulation," Bottas said. "So no grid penalty."
The 41-year-old Finn expressed optimism about Cadillac's debut. "It's been hard work, lots of problem solving, but we've already made great progress," he noted. "And really hats off to the whole team being here ready for race one, which I think already is incredible. So looking forward to this journey." Bottas emphasized progress as the team's priority: "We need to get better from the start of the year to the end of the year."
Cadillac, F1's 11th entrant, is not anticipated to advance beyond Q1 in qualifying, minimizing the penalty's potential impact even if it had applied. Separately, the penalty points Bottas received have expired after 12 months, clearing his super license.