F1 2024 season wrap-up: Winners, losers, and a look ahead to 2025

After Red Bull cleared the field with F1 Drivers’ and Constructors’ World Championships in 2023, the big question at the start of the 2024 F1 schedule was whether any other team could challenge Red Bull driver Max Verstappen.

After Verstappen won seven of the first ten races of the 24-race Grand Prix calendar, the chances of any other team or driver taking the honors for 2024 didn’t look good. But that’s not how it worked out.

2024 F1 winners and losers

McLaren F1 drivers Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris with McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown.
Courtesy of McLaren Racing

The Drivers

Max Verstappen did indeed win his fourth consecutive Drivers’ World Championship in 2024, but he was seriously challenged this year by McLaren driver Lando Norris. The Drivers’ title was decided at the Las Vegas Grand Prix when it became mathematically impossible for any other driver to beat Verstappen in championship points,

Verstappen’s winning streak faltered after the tenth race of the season, the Spanish Grand Prix, on June 23. Six other drivers, two each from McLaren, Ferrari, and Mercedes, came in first in 15 of this year’s Grand Prix. Notably, Verstappen’s Red Bull teammate, Sergio Perez, was the only driver in the top four teams who did not win a Grand Prix this season.

The table below tells much of the 2024 F1 season story, directly for drivers and indirectly for the top four teams. In addition to their finishing position in individual Grand Prix, drivers can also earn Championship points in Sprint races and for recording the fastest lap during a race (if they also finish in the top ten positions).

Driver position

Driver

Team

Grand Prix wins

2nd place finishes

3rd place finishes

Drivers’ Championship  points

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull

9

4

1

437

2

Lando Norris

McLaren

4

6

3

374

3

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

3

3

7

356

4

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

2

4

2

292

5

Carlos Sainz

Ferrari

2

2

5

290

6

George Russell

Mercedes

2

0

2

245

7

Lewis Hamilton

Mercedes

2

1

2

223

8

Sergio Perez

Red Bull

0

3

1

152

The Teams

Red Bull did not repeat its 2022 and 2023 Constructors’ Championship victories. McLaren won the Constructors’ title, benefitting from strong finishes from both Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri. Ferrari was in second place at the season’s end, Red Bull was third, and Mercedes finished fourth.

The table below lists the Constructors’ World Championship points for all ten F1 teams.

2024 Constructor Standings

Team

Points

1

McLaren

666

2

Ferrari

652

3

Red Bull

589

4

Mercedes

468

5

Aston Martin

94

6

Alpine

65

7

Haas

58

8

RB Honda

46

9

Williams

17

10

Kick Sauber

4

Changes for F1 between seasons

Competition between Red Bull F1 driver Max Verstappen and McLaren driver Lando Norris is a major focus of the USGP.
Competition between Red Bull F1 driver Max Verstappen and McLaren driver Lando Norris is a major focus of the USGP.


Much of the news after the conclusion of the 2024 season concerned driver changes. Several teams are also changing ownership and their names in at least one case. RB Honda will be called Racing Bulls for the 2025 season.

The following is the F1 team’s driver roster for 2025. The teams are listed in their 2024 finishing position, and the drivers, when applicable, are listed in order of their 2024 points total.

Team

Driver 1

Driver 2 

McLaren

Lando Norris

Oscar Piastri

Ferrari

Charles Leclerc

Lewis Hamilton

Red Bull

Max Verstappen

Liam Lawson

Mercedes

George Russell

Kimi Antonelli

Aston Martin

Fernando Alonso

Lance Stroll

Alpine

Pierre Gasly

Jack Doohan

Haas

Estaban Ocon

Oliver Bearman

Racing Bulls

Yuki Tsunoda

Isack Hadjar

Williams

Carlos Sainz

Alex Albon

Kick Sauber

Nico Hulkenberg

Gabriel Bortoleto

F1 outlook for 2025

The McLaren Racing team celebrate winning the 2024 F1 World Constructors' Championship.
The McLaren Racing team celebrate winning the 2024 F1 World Constructors' Championship.


Every team will update its cars for 2025, a process that happens yearly and multiple times during the season for most teams. Several teams will introduce their new cars early in 2025. However, the FIA F1 Technical Rules and Regulations require much more significant changes in the 2026 cars, the development of which officially starts January 1, 2025.

The competition in F1 will be lively among two groups of teams. McLaren, Ferrari, Red Bull, and Ferrari will continue to duke it out for the top starting and finishing positions in all 24 scheduled Grand Prix and six Sprint races on 2025.

In 2024, there was heated competition among the middle range of F1 teams. Aston Marting, Alpine, Hass, Racing Bulls, and Williams were all fighting to improve their positioning, which will continue in 2025. Kick Sauber is transitioning to an Audi works team (meaning an Audi factory team) in 2026, so it will be interesting to see how the team makes the most of 2025.

F1 in 2026

In 2026 the next generation F1 cars will have smaller tires, engines that run on biofuel and get a higher proportion of their power from electricity. DRS rules, the energy reclamation systems, and active aerodynamics will change.

There will likely be an additional team in 2026, as an F1 General Motors/Cadillac team has received conditional support from the FIA and F1. The new team will use Ferrari engines until it takes over with its engines by or before 2030. F1’s popularity is still growing fast, and additional countries are proposing to host the Grand Prix, which is lucrative for locations both during and after the events.

The 2026 F1 calendar is already set, but 2026 is still unpublished. The complex logistics of moving Formula 1 teams around the globe, including the cars, equipment, and large numbers of personnel, are challenging. F1 plans to cluster Grand Prix races on the same continent so teams don’t have to fly back and forth unnecessarily. The travel consolidation effort will help meet F1’s sustainability goals and lessen the strain on the drivers and teams.

The post F1 2024 season wrap-up: Winners, losers, and a look ahead to 2025 appeared first on The Manual.