Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Recommended for you

Kimi Antonelli 'lucky to have wisdom of Bono and Toto Wolff' after Canada sprint, says Martin Brundle

Formula 1
Canadian GP
Kimi Antonelli 'lucky to have wisdom of Bono and Toto Wolff' after Canada sprint, says Martin Brundle

BMW emerges as Detroit IMSA favourite despite Porsche BoP weight hit

IMSA
Detroit
BMW emerges as Detroit IMSA favourite despite Porsche BoP weight hit

Researchers name 98-million year old wasp species after Oscar Piastri

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Researchers name 98-million year old wasp species after Oscar Piastri

Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen's 2021 "scar tissue" will never fully go away, says Naomi Schiff

Formula 1
Canadian GP
Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen's 2021 "scar tissue" will never fully go away, says Naomi Schiff

Coca-Cola 600 does mega ratings for Amazon Prime, NASCAR

NASCAR Cup
Nashville
Coca-Cola 600 does mega ratings for Amazon Prime, NASCAR

Kimi Antonelli compared to Lewis Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel after stunning 2026 F1 start

Formula 1
Canadian GP
Kimi Antonelli compared to Lewis Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel after stunning 2026 F1 start

Marc Marquez was left 'frozen' watching Alex's Barcelona MotoGP crash

MotoGP
Italian GP
Marc Marquez was left 'frozen' watching Alex's Barcelona MotoGP crash

2026 Indy 500 viewership numbers released

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
2026 Indy 500 viewership numbers released

Wolff says current junior racing costs are "absurd"

Toto Wolff believes motorsport needs to be made "much more affordable" for youngsters after Lewis Hamilton said Formula 1 has become a "billionaire boys' club".

Toto Wolff, Team Principal and CEO, Mercedes AMG

Hamilton was raised on a council estate in Stevenage, with his father holding down multiple jobs to fund his early karting career that helped pave the way for his success in F1.

The seven-time F1 world champion said in an interview with Spanish publication AS that F1 "has become a billionaire boys' club", adding: "If I were to start over from a working-class family, it would be impossible for me to be here today because the other boys would have a lot more money.

"We have to work to change that and make this an accessible sport, for the rich and for people with more humble origins."

Read Also:

Three drivers on the F1 grid - Lance Stroll, Nicholas Latifi and Nikita Mazepin - are the sons of billionaires, while the majority of active racers have required support from manufacturers or sponsors to make it to the top level due to the costs involved.

Mercedes F1 chief Wolff said that while every driver had their own story, he agreed with Hamilton that more had to be done to reduce costs in grassroots racing.

"What makes the sport so attractive is that it provides narrative for good soap [opera] outside of the racing too," Wolff said.

"Drivers have always come from different backgrounds, and I think there is not always, everyone has his story, and things to cope.

"I doubt that kids from a more privileged background have it easy all the time. They are fighting their own demons.

"What I think we can do is make sure that grassroots racing becomes more affordable, so kids that haven't got any financial background can actually be successful in the junior formulas.

"All the big Formula 1 teams [need to be] able to identify those kids, rather than making it so expensive that a good go-karting season costs 250,000, an F4 season 500,000, and an F3 season 1 million.

"That is totally absurd, [and] needs to stop, because we want to have access. I think we need to give access to kids that are interested in go-karting, the opportunity to race for much more affordable budgets."

Previous article Dutch GP targeting 105k capacity crowd for September F1 race
Next article Bottas has "negative" photo on desktop to "show them what I can do"

Top Comments

Latest news