Skip advert
Advertisement

Audi Sport partnership with Sauber confirmed for 2026 Formula 1 season

Audi will join the sport as an engine supplier from 2026, teaming up with Sauber following Alfa Romeo's exit

Audi Sport has confirmed it'll enter a strategic partnership with Sauber when it joins the F1 grid in 2026. Audi's involvement in F1 was arguably the worst kept secret in motorsport, so having already confirmed that it'll join Formula 1 as a powertrain supplier from 2026 earlier in the summer, confirmation of its tie-up with Sauber was the last piece of the puzzle.

Advertisement - Article continues below

As part of the deal, Sauber will be responsible for the development and manufacturing of the racing car at its Swiss headquarters, as well as the planning and execution of race operations. “Audi is the best partner for the Sauber Group,” says Finn Rausing, Chairman of Sauber Holding. “It is clear that both companies share the same values and vision. We are looking forward to achieving our common goals with a strong and successful partnership.”

Audi's decision to go single seater racing and ditch its LMDh World Endurance Championship plans was down to the new Formula 1 technical regulations that come into force from the 2026 season. 

“In view of the major technological leaps that the series is making towards sustainability in 2026, we can speak of a new Formula 1. Formula 1 is transforming, and Audi wants to actively support this journey,” explains Oliver Hoffmann, board member for technical development at Audi AG. 

Earlier this year Formula 1 and the FIA ratified the 2026 engine regulations, which will see the electric motors produce in the region of 550bhp, nearly as much as the 1.6-litre turbo engines produce. The combustion engine will also have to run on carbon-neutral sustainable fuels, another key change that helped persuade Audi to invest in the sport. 

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

A new subsidiary has been created within Audi Sport to design, develop and build its F1 power unit at the team’s headquarters in Neuburg an der Donau. Although before work can begin there is the small matter of redeveloping the site to accommodate the infrastructure required by taking on such an undertaking. Audi’s new engine will be the first German built F1 engine for over a decade since BMW left the sport. Mercedes’s all conquering F1 power units are built in Brixworth, in Northamptonshire. 

Audi’s Formula 1 project will be headed by Adam Baker, who until recently worked at the FIA for three years as Safety Director. The manufacturer will announce which team it will supply by the end of the 2022 season, although with Alfa Romeo announcing it will end its agreement with Sauber at the end of the 2023 season, it doesn't take a genius to work out which team will carry the Audi branding. 

Audi’s announcement comes after years of speculation that it would enter F1 following its domination in sportscar racing, but its entry was vetoed by the late Ferdinand Piëch who had no time for the sport or those running it. But following his death in 2019 and the metronomic rise in F1’s global popularity off the back of the Netflix docu-soap Drive to Survive, the VW Group board has been pushing hard for one or more of its brands to join motorsport’s biggest race series. 

In contrast to Audi’s success in organising its participation in F1, Porsche’s planned entry into the sport has been completely derailed after negotiations with Red Bull broke down over the summer. Porsche is still optimistic about entering F1 in 2026, but its available pathways are quickly disappearing. Still, the VW Group has one confirmed entry, and with the significant investment Audi Sport is ready to pump into the team could Sauber back at the pointy end of the F1 field, only this time with an Audi badge on the nosecone. 

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Porsche 911 GT3 R & Porsche 911 GT3 Cup – driving Stuttgart's track-only racers back-to-back
Porsche 911 GT3 R & Porsche 911 GT3 Cup
Features

Porsche 911 GT3 R & Porsche 911 GT3 Cup – driving Stuttgart's track-only racers back-to-back

What’s more exciting than a 911 GT3? A racing one. Or two of them. This year Porsche’s 911 GT3 R will tackle Le Mans, and its GT3 Cup car will race on…
9 Mar 2024
McLaren confirms Le Mans return for 2024
McLaren 720S GT3
News

McLaren confirms Le Mans return for 2024

McLaren Automotive has confirmed it will compete in the World Endurance Championship and Le Mans in 2024 with the 720S GT3
28 Nov 2023
Ginetta’s V8-powered G56 GT4 Evo makes racing more comfortable
Ginetta G56 GT4 Evo
News

Ginetta’s V8-powered G56 GT4 Evo makes racing more comfortable

The G56 GT4 has been given a comprehensive overhaul for 2024, bringing a host of usability and longevity improvements to the GT racer
20 Nov 2023
The Ferrari 296 Challenge racer drops hybrid power, retains V6
Ferrari 296 Challenge
News

The Ferrari 296 Challenge racer drops hybrid power, retains V6

The 2024 Ferrari Challenge race series has introduced its ninth-generation machine, based on the 296 GTB
6 Nov 2023
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Volkswagen Up GTI Fast Fleet test – 12 months with the sub-ton pocket rocket
Volkswagen Up GTI
Long term tests

Volkswagen Up GTI Fast Fleet test – 12 months with the sub-ton pocket rocket

With its infectious appetite for fun, and the ability to do it on a shoestring, the Up GTI delivered smiles per pound like few others
26 Apr 2024
The MG Cyberster has gone on sale, and it costs £54,995
MG Cyberster – front
News

The MG Cyberster has gone on sale, and it costs £54,995

Two-seats, scissor doors and up to 496bhp – the MG Cyberster has finally landed, with prices starting from £54,995
25 Apr 2024
UK speeding fines 2024 – what are the latest penalties for drivers?
Speeding fines header
Advice

UK speeding fines 2024 – what are the latest penalties for drivers?

Here's everything you need to know about speeding fines in the UK and other possible motoring-related offences
18 Apr 2024