2025 Formula One World Championship
The 2025 FIA Formula One World Championship is a planned motor racing championship for Formula One cars which will be the 76th running of the Formula One World Championship. It is recognised by the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), the governing body of international motorsport, as the highest class of competition for open-wheel racing cars. The championship will be contested over twenty-four Grands Prix held around the world. It is scheduled to begin in March and end in December.
The 2025 season is planned to be the last year to utilise the power unit configuration introduced in 2014. A revised configuration without MGU-H but with a higher power output from the MGU-K will be introduced for the 2026 championship.[1] Drivers and teams are scheduled to compete for the titles of World Drivers' Champion and World Constructors' Champion respectively. This will be the last year of the generation of cars introduced in 2022 and the last year of the drag reduction system (DRS) introduced as an overtaking aid in 2011 as cars with active aerodynamics and moveable wings are being introduced from 2026.[2] This will also be the last year that Renault participates in the sport, as it will cease production of their engines to their team Alpine after this season.[3]
Entries
[edit]The following constructors and drivers are under contract to compete in the 2025 World Championship. All teams are due to compete with tyres supplied by Pirelli.[4] Each team is required to enter at least two drivers, one for each of the two mandatory cars.[5]
Driver changes
[edit]Lewis Hamilton will leave Mercedes after twelve seasons to join Ferrari, ending his record-breaking streak of the most consecutive seasons driving for a single constructor, as well as competing in his first season without a Mercedes power unit.[46] He will replace Carlos Sainz Jr, who will leave after four seasons to join Williams on a multi-year deal in place of the departing Logan Sargeant, whose contract was terminated mid-way through the 2024 season and replaced by Franco Colapinto until the end of the year.[19][47][43][48] Hamilton will be replaced by Mercedes junior Andrea Kimi Antonelli, who was promoted from Formula 2.[34][49]
Haas will field an all new line-up in 2025; Nico Hülkenberg will leave the team after two seasons to drive for Sauber, with whom he last competed in 2013.[50][51] He will be replaced by their reserve driver Oliver Bearman, who will step up from Formula 2, having previously raced in the 2024 Saudi Arabian and Azerbaijan Grands Prix for Ferrari and Haas, respectively.[23] Kevin Magnussen will also depart the team after seven seasons across two stints.[52] He will be replaced by Esteban Ocon, who will depart Alpine after five seasons with Team Enstone.[53] Ocon will be replaced by their reserve driver Jack Doohan, who last competed in the 2023 Formula 2 Championship.[11]
Calendar
[edit]The 2025 calendar features the same twenty-four Grands Prix as the previous season.[54][55] The Chinese, Miami, Belgian, United States, São Paulo and Qatar Grands Prix are scheduled to utilise the sprint format.[56][57] A single pre-season test will be held at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir on 26–28 February.[58]
Calendar changes
[edit]The Australian Grand Prix is planned to host the opening race of the 2025 season for the first time since 2019. The Australian Grand Prix was the third round in the past three seasons, after the Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands Prix, respectively, with those events being pushed back in 2025 to avoid a conflict with Ramadan.[59][60] The Russian Grand Prix was under contract to feature on the 2025 calendar.[61] However, the contract was terminated in 2022 in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[62]
Regulation changes
[edit]Technical regulations
[edit]Minimum weight changes
[edit]The minimum driver weight allowance has been increased from 80 kilograms (176.4 lb) to 82 kilograms (180.8 lb). As a consequence of this, the overall minimum weight limit of the car without fuel also increased from 798 kilograms (1,759 lb) to 800 kilograms (1,764 lb).[63]
Sporting regulations
[edit]Fastest lap point
[edit]The point awarded to drivers finishing in the top ten positions for setting the fastest lap in the race, which was reintroduced in 2019, will be abolished.[5][64]
Young driver free practice requirements
[edit]There will be an increase in requirement for fielding a young driver during free practice from once per season per car to two times per season per car.[65][66]
Testing of previous cars
[edit]The sporting regulations will tighten the restrictions on the testing of previous cars (TPC). This will see a twenty day limit imposed on TPC and drivers competing in the championship would only be allowed to cover a maximum of 1,000 kilometres (620 mi) over four days of testing. Testing will only be permitted at circuits that have featured on the calendar in the current or previous year. However, testing is not permitted on tracks which will host a race within sixty days of a test, nor “if the circuit is deemed, at the sole discretion of the FIA, to have undergone significant modification” since the last Formula One race.[67]
Notes
[edit]- ^ a b Jack Doohan and Andrea Kimi Antonelli have both stated their intention to use the number 12, but it remains unclear who will use it.[9][10]
References
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