Formula One Preview: Cadillac and Arvid Lindblad Arrive In Season Of Change
A record number of races, altered rules for cars and the push for sustainability highlight other developments
Posted On: March 6, 2026 By :The Formula One World Championship returns for its 77th edition this weekend. Starting in Australia on March 7, the 2026 season is set to usher in a new era for F1 and elite motorsport, with a record number of races, altered regulations for cards and a glitzy new team.
In recent years, Netflix’s “Drive to Survive” series has drawn new legions of fans to Formula One, inspired by the drivers, the iconic locations and the craft and innovation demonstrated by the teams as they seek to find an edge on their rivals.
With new teams, new drivers, new locations and a wave of enhanced rules and regulations designed to reduce the sport’s carbon footprint and improve the viewer experience, it promises to be one of the most captivating F1 seasons to date.
Last year, Lando Norris won the driver’s championship title in his debut season. Whether he can repeat this season is just one key question for F1 this year. Below we explore those questions as well as, challenges and opportunities facing Formula One in 2026 and beyond:
Additions to Formula One Calendar
One of the most striking alterations to this year’s schedule is the transferring of the Spanish Grand Prix from Barcelona to Madrid from September 11-13, 2026. The race weekend will now be held at the Madring, a new purpose-built street track complete with 22 corners, which also uses both public roads and private land.
Barcelona, however, is not disappearing from the F1 calendar entirely. Instead, it will host the European Grand Prix (temporarily renamed to the Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix) on the June 12-14 weekend, although it will then alternate with Belgium’s Spa-Francorchamps circuit until 2032, as the competition seeks to balance an increasingly widespread calendar with historic venues and newer, more lucrative settings.
The new Madrid Grand Prix has been introduced to replace the Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix at Imola in Italy, and its timing in September means that it will conclude the European section of this year’s F1 season. This, along with the Canadian Grand Prix moving to follow the Miami race at the start of May, is part of Formula One’s strategy to limit long-distance travel and reduce carbon emissions.
Meanwhile, traditional favorites such as Monaco, Silverstone (returning to a Sprint format) and Abu Dhabi’s season finale remain on the schedule, but Zandvoort in the Netherlands will have its final swan-song this August as organizers attribute its departure from the calendar to financial challenges to its private funding model and limits on government support.
Altered Race Formats
Of the 24 Grand Prix weekends, there will also be six F1 Sprint races: Shanghai; Miami; Montreal; Singapore; Silverstone, Great Britain; and Zandvoort, the Netherlands.
As opposed to previous years when Sprint races were loaded at the end of the season, the Sprint events this season will be more evenly spread out across the calendar. The idea is to maximize the competition’s value, fan engagement and weekend action, with a further four Sprint races being added to the F1 calendar from 2027 onward.
In regular races, the race start procedure has been modified after testing. From now on, a five-second blue light warning will be visible on the grid panels before the standard lights. The pre-start warning to the race start procedure will allow drivers to build turbo boost before the standard five red-light sequence, and has been introduced to manage new hybrid engine requirements.
An expanded grid has also resulted in a shift from the traditional qualifying format for regular races and Sprint races. For the previous nine years, five cars were eliminated in both Q1 and Q2, but six drivers will now have to be knocked out in each of the qualifying stages to determine the final starting positions.
Rules and Regulations Updates for Cars
In keeping with F1’s enhanced sustainability strategy, cars will now be smaller, lighter and more environmentally friendly.
As per the latest regulations affecting cars, the wheelbase must be shortened by 200mm and the car width is being reduced to make them more agile. The minimum weight limit has been reduced from 800kg to 768kg too.
From an environmental perspective, power unit regulation has changed so that car engines will now have a more even 50:50 balance between the internal combustion engine and electric power, compared to the previous 80:20 split. They will also using fully sustainable fuels, reflecting F1’s push to reduce its carbon emissions while also maximizing performance and innovation at the elite level of motorsport.
To make races even faster, car aerodynamics are being simplified by removing beam wings and tracks will have a flatter design to increase opportunities to overtake. This goes alongside a new Overtake Mode for 2026, which enables cars to harvest more electrical power for a whole lap if they are within a second of the cars that they are pursuing in front, making it more conducive to overtake.
Cost / Budget Caps
Formula One teams operate under a cost cap in order to control their spending levels, avoid spiralling debts and encourage a more level playing field between teams with modest budgets and those with considerably larger ones.
The cap, which was first introduced after the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2021, determines and limits how much a team can spend over the course of a calendar year. Any expenditure related to the car is included within the cost cap, such as car parts, team personnel, garage equipment, spares and transport costs.
For 2026, the previous cost cap limit of $135 million has been increased to $215 million, or £170 million or €199 million when adjusted according to the sport’s Financial Regulations. Due to the expanded race calendar in recent years, up from 21 Grands Prix to 24, teams were given an additional $5.4 million to spend on the building and development of their cars.
The increase in the cost cap accounts for changes in car development costs which were previously exempt but are now included.
Teams that exceed the cost cap by less than 5% are defined as “minor overspends” but those who exceed it by more than that risk much heavier penalties. These include potential points deductions, race disqualifications, fines, limits on wind tunnel testing and even outright exclusion from the F1 championship.
New Racers
British teenager Arvid Lindblad is the only rookie on the F1 grid this year, as he takes his place alongside Kiwi team partner Liam Lawson at Racing Bulls. Now 18, Lindblad has a Swedish father and a mother of Indian descent, and became the youngest-ever Formula 2 winner last year at the age of 17 years and 243 days.
He effectively replaces Frenchman Isack Hadjar, who has been promoted to Red Bull from its sister Racing Bulls team. Hadjar will now partner with four-time world champion Max Verstappen and succeeds Yuki Tsunoda, who will be the reserve driver for both teams in the 2026 season.
Following last year’s chaotic off-season when there were 10 driver changes or new faces on the 2025 grid compared to the 2024 lineup, this year has been considerably more sedate. This may not be all too surprising given the new rules and regulations, including the overhaul of new power units and active aerodynamics, as teams instead appear to be prioritizing experienced, stable driver lineups.
New Teams
Cadillac is the new kid on the block, joining the F1 grid as its 11th team and becoming the first new entrant in the event in a decade. Sergio Perez and Valtteri Bottas come to the team from Red Bull Racing and Mercedes, respectively, while Team Principal Graeme Lowdon has pedigree in the sport, having previously been CEO of the Virgin and Marussia F1 teams.
Backed by General Motors and partnered with Andretti, the American-owned team secured final approval to compete in Formula One a year ago. The team is using Ferrari power units for the next two years before it plans to launch its own GM-developed power unit by 2028, by which time it aims to be a long-term contender to win driver’s and constructor’s world championship titles.
Audi Revolut F1 team is another fresh name in the paddock after Audi took over from Sauber (previously Stake F1 Team Kick Sauber or Kick Sauber) as the factory team. Germany’s Nico Hülkenberg and Brazil’s Gabriel Bortoleto have been retained as drivers for Audi’s inaugural F1 season, while the project will be spearheaded by former Ferrari Team Principal Mattia Binotto (head) and former Red Bull Sporting Director Jonathan Wheatley (team principal).
Audi acquired Sauber and its Swiss facilities, ahead of the implementation of new power unit and chassis regulations this year. The team aims to combine its own power unit development with a proven chassis team and become a competitive outfit with immediate effect.
Geopolitical Tensions
The geopolitical tension in the Middle East, which has accelerated due to missile attacks from the United States and Israel and Iran’s retaliatory strikes in Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Israel, Kuwait, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Cyprus and the Strait of Hormuz, is also having a knock-on effect on sports.
Iran’s participation in this summer’s Men’s FIFA World Cup is already in doubt, and Formula One’s calendar is also facing mounting questions.
Team personnel, drivers and media professionals have been disrupted in their travels to Australia for the opening Grand Prix weekend, given that the United Arab Emirates and Qatar in particular are key connecting hubs between continents. Despite the disruption, Australian Grand Prix race organizers have reaffirmed their confidence that the curtain-opener to the season will not be affected,
However, Formula One is scheduled to return to the Middle East for consecutive weekends, with the races in Bahrain (April 12) and Saudi Arabia (April 19) facing an uncertain period about whether they will go ahead or be postponed until a later date.
Posted in: Action Sports, Hosts & Suppliers, Latest News, Main Feature, Motorsports, Recently Awarded, Sites & Venues, Sponsors & Media, Sports Organizations, Sports Venues