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David Coulthard and Naomi Schiff have highlighted the huge financial barriers facing aspiring F1 drivers

David Coulthard on the grid  during the Sprint

David Coulthard on the grid during the Sprint

Photo by: Dom Gibbons / LAT Images via Getty Images

Former Formula 1 driver David Coulthard has shed light on the financial realities of joining the F1 grid in 2026, estimating an eye-watering £8million price tag to fund a junior career.

Speaking on the Up To Speed podcast alongside former W Series driver and Sky Sports F1 pundit Naomi Schiff, the 13-time grand prix winner broke down the financial ladder that junior drivers face today.

"If you're lucky, then it's about 8 million pounds to fund through karting to be in a position of being ready for Formula 1," Coulthard said.

Following the conventional route most drivers take from karting to Formula 4, through Formula 3 and Formula 2 before hopefully securing an F1 contract, Coulthard explained how expensive each stage currently is, drawing information from his experience with his son, Dayton, rising through the ranks.

"So, I can't tell you what the breakdown is and how many years in karting that is, but let's assume 8 until 15, something like that. Then into F4, probably one or two years in F4, then you're into F3 at a million and a half, then you're into F2 at two and a bit million.

"So, very quickly, it ramps up. I know in my own personal journey with my son Dayton, you're hundreds of thousands in karting, you're getting into more than that by the time you get into cars. And he's only in his second season of GB4.

"So, it is an expensive sport, and therefore, some great talents will never make it beyond karting because they don't have the funding. But I guess you could argue that some great footballers don't end up playing for the team they want to because they don't get scouted, and maybe they lose heart, or they miss an opportunity, or they get injured or whatever it happens to be."

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Photo by: Artur Widak / NurPhoto via Getty Images

Schiff added: "When you say those numbers, it just blows my mind. No matter which way you slice it, motorsport will forever be an expensive sport, right? Someone's got to pay for the rubber, someone's got to pay for the fuel, someone's got to pay for those brilliant minds, right? You go to a lawyer, you pay top dollar for that hour. Same thing goes for engineers.

"But it's wild to me that in karting, you'd be spending as much money as some people are spending in this day and age. Why do we have a cost cap at the pinnacle of the sport and we don't have a cost cap in the grassroots? Because I remember when I was karting, my dad was spending every penny he had left over to send me racing.

"We were by no means well off. I think we were what we would call middle class. But the other drivers would have a softer chassis, but they would change their chassis every race, or they would be overhauling their engines after every race weekend, and they'd have 13 of them lined up in their trucks. 

"Where do we draw the line on how far drivers can go with that? Because at the end of the day, it becomes more about money and less about talent. And I know we can't get fully away from that, but maybe there's a way that that can be limited to weed out some talented drivers that just don't have the same access as richer drivers.

"It's sad to me that today on the grid, these are incredible drivers, but the majority of them are sons of millionaires and billionaires, and the others are all sons of ex-F1 racers. There are a few, like Esteban Ocon and Pierre Gasly, Lewis, of course, Fernando, who come from a different generation, who have had a different path up.

"But it's not like football, where you can just put a pair of boots on and go kick a ball. I remember when I was racing in the W Series, a day of testing and in a similar kind of car was 15 grand for a day of testing. Therefore, I never went testing, and therefore I was sh**e.

"It's like you're rocking up to a gun wall with a spoon. You can't compete when that's the way things are managed. But it is what it is. But I think that there's still a way to optimise it."

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