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

Rookie Dennis Hauger and overcoming the uncomfortable feeling ahead of first Indy 500

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
Rookie Dennis Hauger and overcoming the uncomfortable feeling ahead of first Indy 500

NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2027 unveiled

NASCAR Cup
All-Star Race
NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2027 unveiled

Dale Earnhardt Jr. has a largely throwback All Star Race idea

NASCAR Cup
All-Star Race
Dale Earnhardt Jr. has a largely throwback All Star Race idea

Kevin Harvick on Natalie Decker: "I don't like to see a mockery made out of what our sport is"

NASCAR Truck
Charlotte
Kevin Harvick on Natalie Decker: "I don't like to see a mockery made out of what our sport is"

The milk of choice for every 2026 Indy 500 driver

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
The milk of choice for every 2026 Indy 500 driver

Enter the simulation - How GM tech accelerated Cadillac's F1 entry

Formula 1
Canadian GP
Enter the simulation - How GM tech accelerated Cadillac's F1 entry

NASCAR on Prime trackside coverage to feature several Cup Series legends

NASCAR Cup
Charlotte
NASCAR on Prime trackside coverage to feature several Cup Series legends

WNBA star Caitlin Clark to serve as Grand Marshal for the Indy 500

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
WNBA star Caitlin Clark to serve as Grand Marshal for the Indy 500

Ferrari: First F1 2026 test will focus on mileage and not "pure performance"

There will be three separate pre-season tests for the 2026 F1 season due to the huge regulation changes

Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari

Ferrari boss Fred Vasseur reckons “pure performance” is quite irrelevant at the first pre-season test for the 2026 Formula 1 season due to the regulation change coming in.

The 2026 campaign will introduce changes to both the power unit and chassis, as cars will become lighter and smaller and there’ll be more emphasis on electrical power. 

With a huge regulation switch for the upcoming year, there will be three separate pre-season tests: Barcelona (26-30 January), Bahrain (11-13 February) and Bahrain again (18-20 February).

Barcelona is even a private test to give teams the opportunity to adapt to the new rules without the beady eye of the public, ahead of the season-opening Australian Grand Prix on 6-8 March. 

“We are not used to nine test days,” said Vasseur. “The last four or five seasons, we did three. It's an advantage, but it's also a completely different programme.

“It means that the first target in this kind of season is to get the reliability. First we need to get mileage. It's also what we want to avoid compared to 2025, is that when we were lost at the beginning of the season with the disqualification, we lost mileage, we lost reference, and then you are running after this. 

Frederic Vasseur, Ferrari

Frederic Vasseur, Ferrari

Photo by: James Sutton / Formula 1 / Formula Motorsport Ltd via Getty Images

“It's a long process. It means that the first focus in Barcelona will be to get mileage with the car, to understand the reliability of the car, where we have to improve and what we have to react to because if you understand something in Bahrain, you won't have time to react for Australia.

“Barcelona will be, for sure, to get mileage, more than pure performance.”

The Ferrari team principal even thinks that everybody will arrive at the first test “with not a mule car, but let’s say a spec A” that should look very different to the one which hits the Melbourne track. 

Read Also:

It is such development which Vasseur therefore thinks will define the upcoming regulation era, as Ferrari bids for its first title since the 2008 constructors’ championship. 

“Next year it won't be about the first picture of the season, it won't be all about the classification of Australia, it will be a lot about development and capacity of quick development,” said Vasseur, whose team finished fourth in the 2025 standings.

“That season won't be over in Australia for sure, it doesn't matter if we are P1 or P10, but it will be a long way until the end, it will be a long way for everybody.”

Additional reporting by Stuart Codling

Previous article How team bosses, drivers, Motorsport and fans ranked the top 10 F1 drivers from 2025
Next article What F1 2026's new terminology and technology all means

Top Comments

Latest news