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Max Verstappen

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Max Emilian Verstappen (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈmɑks fɛrˈstɑpə(n)]; born 30 September 1997) is a Dutch and Belgian racing driver who competes under the Dutch flag in Formula One for Red Bull Racing. Verstappen has won four Formula One World Drivers' Championship titles, which he won consecutively from 2021 to 2024 with Red Bull, and has won 68 Grands Prix across 11 seasons.

Key Information

Born in Hasselt and raised in Maaseik, Verstappen is the son of Dutch former Formula One driver Jos Verstappen and Belgian former kart racer Sophie Kumpen. After a successful karting career—culminating in his record-breaking 2013 season—Verstappen graduated to junior formulae. Progressing directly to FIA European Formula 3, Verstappen broke several records on his way to third in the championship in his rookie season with Van Amersfoort.[b] Aged 17, Verstappen signed for Toro Rosso in 2015 as part of the Red Bull Junior Team, becoming the youngest driver in Formula One history at the Australian Grand Prix. Following several points finishes in his debut season, Verstappen retained his seat for 2016 before being promoted to parent team Red Bull after four rounds. On debut for Red Bull, aged 18, Verstappen won the Spanish Grand Prix, becoming the youngest-ever driver to win a Formula One Grand Prix. Verstappen achieved multiple race wins in his 2017 and 2018 campaigns, before finishing third in both the 2019 and 2020 World Drivers' Championships under Honda power.

Verstappen won his maiden title in 2021 after overtaking Lewis Hamilton on the final lap of the last race of the season, becoming the first World Drivers' Champion from the Netherlands. Verstappen won the next two championships in 2022 and 2023, overturning the largest points deficit in Formula One history in the former and breaking numerous records across both seasons.[c] He secured his fourth consecutive title in 2024 after winning nine Grands Prix, including a widely acclaimed wet-weather performance in São Paulo, to become the first driver to win the championship driving for a third-placed constructor in 41 years.

As of the 2025 Mexico City Grand Prix, Verstappen has achieved 68 race wins, 47 pole positions, 35 fastest laps, and 123 podiums in Formula One. In addition to being the youngest Grand Prix winner, he holds several Formula One records, including the most wins in a season (19), the most podium finishes in a season (21), the most consecutive wins (10), and the most consecutive pole positions (8, shared with Ayrton Senna). Verstappen is contracted to remain at Red Bull until at least the end of the 2028 season.[1] He has also competed professionally in sim racing since 2015, winning several marquee iRacing events. Verstappen was listed in the 2024 issue of Time as one of the 100 most influential people globally, and was appointed an Officer of the Order of Orange-Nassau in 2022.

Early life

[edit]

Max Emilian Verstappen was born on 30 September 1997 in Hasselt, Belgium to Jos Verstappen and Sophie Kumpen.[3][4] Verstappen's parents separated when he was young, after which he lived with his father. His younger sister, Victoria, lived with their mother.[5] Verstappen has three younger half-siblings from his father: a sister from Jos's second marriage and a brother and sister from Jos's current marriage.[6]

His family has a long association with motor sports: his father is a Dutch former Formula One driver, his Belgian mother competed in karting,[7][8] and his first cousin once removed, Anthony Kumpen, competed in endurance racing and is a two-time NASCAR Whelen Euro Series champion currently serving as the team manager for PK Carsport in Euro Series.[7] Verstappen initially attended a secondary school in Maaseik, before moving into private tutoring; he admitted that he used to leave class early to attend races across Europe with his father.[9]

Junior racing career

[edit]

Karting (2005–2013)

[edit]

2005–2009: Dominance in national championships

[edit]

Verstappen started racing in karts at the age of four and competing in championships at the age of seven. In 2005 he competed in the Mini Junior championship of his home province of Limburg, Belgium[10] and won the VAS Championship in the same category. In 2006, he repeated his success. In 2007, Verstappen graduated to the Rotax Max Mini Max class and won the Rotax Max Challenge Belgium[11] and the Dutch Championship[12] in that category. In 2008, racing in a CRG kart entered by his father, Verstappen won the Belgian Cadet Championship,[13] the Rotax Max Challenge Belgium,[14] and the Benelux Karting Series in Mini Max class.[15] In 2009, Verstappen joined Pex Racing, a CRG customer team. That year, he defended his titles in the Mini Max championships[16][17] and won the Belgian KF5 Championship.[18]

2010–2012: Entering the international karting scene

[edit]

Verstappen was signed by CRG to race in their factory team and stepped up to international karting in 2010. At the KF3 World Cup, Verstappen finished second to the more experienced Alexander Albon (who eventually became his Formula One teammate at Red Bull Racing)[19] but beat him at the WSK Euro Series[20] and also won the WSK World Series, beating Robert Vișoiu.[21] He finished fifth in the European Championship and won the WSK Nations Cup[22] as well as the final of the Bridgestone Cup where during a 28 laps' race in the rain he beat Dennis Olsen by over 11 seconds.[23] In 2011, Verstappen won the WSK Euro Series ahead of Esteban Ocon in a Parilla-powered CRG kart.[24] However, it was not a successful year for him, as he finished 14th in the European Championship and got taken out in the World Cup by Charles Leclerc.

In the following year, Verstappen joined the Intrepid Driver Program to race in the KF2 and KZ2 classes. He won the WSK Master Series in the KF2 class, beating the CRG driver Felice Tiene.[25] Verstappen won the South Garda Winter Cup in the KF2 class, beating Dennis Olsen and Antonio Fuoco.[26][27] He finished sixth in the WSK Euro Series.[28] He was the youngest driver taking part in the World Championship in KF1 class and finished eight.[29]

In July 2012, it was announced that Verstappen would leave Intrepid. After a short stint with CRG-built Zanardi karts, Verstappen returned to the factory CRG team.[30] He finished second at the World Cup in the KF2 class[31] and competed at the SKUSA SuperNationals in the KZ2 class in a CRG, finishing 21st.

2013: Record-breaking season

[edit]

In 2013, Verstappen completed a record-breaking season in karting, having progressed to the senior KF and KZ categories. Aged 15, he won three CIK-FIA championships in a single season: two European Championships and a World Championship; an unprecedented feat in the history of the discipline.[32] He became the first driver since his father Jos to win two European Championships in the same season, and the first to do so in both the primary direct-drive and gearbox classes. By winning the 2013 KZ World Championship at Varennes-sur-Allier, beating Charles Leclerc to the title, Verstappen became the youngest-ever driver to win the gearbox World Championship.[33][34]

Further adding to his accolades in 2013, Verstappen also finished third at the KF World Championship after being disqualified for a move on Nicklas Nielsen in the final race, having won the opening round and pre-final.[35] This was the only championship he failed to win in 2013 whilst completing all rounds. Verstappen won the South Garda Winter Cup in KF2,[36] as well as the WSK Euro Series and the WSK Super Master Series in KZ1 and KZ2, respectively.[37][38]

Lower formulae (2014)

[edit]
Verstappen competed in the FIA Formula 3 European Championship in 2014, after joining the Red Bull Junior Team.

Verstappen first experienced formula racing at Pembrey in August 2013 with Manor MP; he drove 160 laps across two days in a Barazi-Epsilon FR2.0-10.[39][40] He tested for several other Formula Renault 2.0 teams that year.[41] In December 2013, Verstappen tested a Dallara F311 Formula Three car run by Motopark Academy.[42] An additional Formula Renault test followed in December at Circuito de Jerez. Driving for Josef Kaufmann Racing, Verstappen went faster than Formula Renault regulars like Steijn Schothorst and Matt Parry.[43] At the Circuit Ricardo Tormo near Valencia, Verstappen set a faster lap time than the more experienced driver Eddie Cheever III.[44]

2014: Florida Winter Series and Formula Three

[edit]

On 16 January 2014, it was announced Verstappen would make his junior formulae debut in the non-championship Florida Winter Series.[45] On 5 February, at the second race weekend, Verstappen won the race at Palm Beach International Raceway after he started from pole.[46] A few weeks later, Verstappen won his second race of the series at Homestead–Miami Speedway after beating Nicholas Latifi by 0.004 seconds.[47][48]

Following his single-seater debut in the inaugural Florida Winter Series, Verstappen drove in the 2014 FIA Formula 3 European Championship for Van Amersfoort Racing.[49] Aged 16, Verstappen achieved 10 victories in total—including a record six consecutive wins at Spa-Francorchamps and the Norisring—along with eight retirements and one missed start, becoming the youngest race winner and polesitter in Formula Three history at the Hockenheimring; he placed third in the overall standings, with the most wins.[50][51][52][53]

Formula One career

[edit]

During the first practice session at the 2014 Japanese Grand Prix, Verstappen replaced Jean-Éric Vergne as part of his preparation for a full-time seat at Toro Rosso in the 2015 season.[54] Aged 17 years and three days, Verstappen was the youngest person in history to participate in a Formula One race weekend.[55] In August 2014, Verstappen joined the Red Bull Junior Team after testing a Formula Renault 3.5 car. He also considered an offer from Mercedes to join their driver development programme.[56]

Toro Rosso (2015–2016)

[edit]
Verstappen (pictured at the 2015 Malaysian Grand Prix) became the youngest driver in Formula One history at the Australian Grand Prix, aged 17.

Verstappen then became the youngest driver to start a World Championship race through joining Toro Rosso's race drivers' line-up with Carlos Sainz as his teammate, in his Grand Prix debut as a full-time driver at the 2015 Australian Grand Prix at the age of 17 years, 166 days—breaking Jaime Alguersuari's existing record by almost two years.[57] In this first race, Verstappen ran in points-scoring positions until he was forced to retire due to an engine failure.[58] However, at the subsequent race in Malaysia, Verstappen qualified sixth and finished the race in seventh place, scoring his first Formula One points aged 17 years, 180 days, breaking the record of the then-youngest driver to score World Championship points.[59]

At the 2015 Monaco Grand Prix, Verstappen was involved in a high-speed collision with Romain Grosjean, after clipping the back of Grosjean's Lotus on the approach to the tight first corner, Sainte Devote, and crashed into the barriers at high speed.[60][61] Verstappen was given a five-place grid penalty for causing the accident, and was branded "dangerous" by Williams driver Felipe Massa.[62]

Verstappen continued to regularly finish in the points as well as achieving his best finish of the 2015 season in Hungary by finishing fourth,[63] and equalled this result at the United States Grand Prix.[64] At the end of the season, Verstappen received three awards at the FIA Prize Giving Ceremony, for "Rookie of the Year", "Personality of the Year" and "Action of the Year", for his overtake on Felipe Nasr on the outside of the Blanchimont corner at the Belgian Grand Prix.[65][66]

Verstappen at the 2016 Bahrain Grand Prix

Verstappen began the 2016 season at Toro Rosso, again alongside Sainz.[67] Verstappen qualified fifth for the opening race of the season in Australia, but during the race made several radio calls to his team due to frustration at being behind Sainz on track before Verstappen's Toro Rosso came into contact with his teammate's car whilst attempting to pass him with three laps to go, and he eventually finished tenth.[68] Verstappen enjoyed a more successful weekend at the following race in Bahrain, finishing sixth to score Toro Rosso's first-ever points at the Sakhir circuit.[69]

Red Bull (2016–present)

[edit]

2016: Youngest Grand Prix winner

[edit]
Verstappen celebrating victory at the 2016 Spanish Grand Prix, in his first race for the Red Bull Racing team

On 5 May 2016, following the Russian Grand Prix, Red Bull Racing announced that Verstappen would be replacing Daniil Kvyat from the Spanish Grand Prix onwards, with Kvyat returning to Toro Rosso.[70] According to Red Bull Team Principal Christian Horner, "Max has proven to be an outstanding young talent. His performance at Toro Rosso has been impressive so far and we are pleased to give him the opportunity to drive for Red Bull Racing."[71] After qualifying fourth for the Spanish Grand Prix,[72] Verstappen rose to second behind teammate Daniel Ricciardo on the opening lap after Mercedes teammates Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg crashed out of the race.[73] Verstappen took the race lead as he was placed on a two-stop rather than the same three-stop strategy as Ricciardo, and he held off Ferrari's Kimi Räikkönen in the later stages of the race to take his first Formula One victory.[74][75] By doing so he displaced Sebastian Vettel as the youngest driver ever to win a Formula One Grand Prix at the age of 18 years and 228 days.[76]

In his first eight races with Red Bull, he achieved six top-five finishes, including four podiums.[77]

During the Belgian Grand Prix, Verstappen collided with Räikkönen at the first corner, pushed Vettel, Räikkönen and Pérez wide at Les Combes, and aggressively blocked Räikkönen on the Kemmel straight.[78] Verstappen was criticised for his driving, with Räikkönen saying that he was "going to cause a huge accident sooner or later." Christian Horner noted that the driving was "on the edge", and that Verstappen will "look at it and learn for future races."[79] In September, Formula One director Charlie Whiting called in Verstappen for a discussion, and later gave him a 'gentle warning' due to his aggressive driving.[80] However, in October, drivers' concerns about Verstappen's defensive tactics led the FIA to disallow moving under braking.[81]

At the 2016 Brazilian Grand Prix, Verstappen qualified fourth.[82] In a rain affected race, he almost hit the barrier after he slid on the main straight due to a loss of traction, causing oversteer.[83] After an additional tyre change from intermediates back to rain tyres, he ran in 16th place with just 15 laps remaining. Verstappen then made several overtakes in quick succession during the closing laps to eventually finish on the podium in third place.[84] He received considerable praise for his performance: rival team Mercedes' team principal, Toto Wolff, labelled it "The Verstappen Show", and described Verstappen's drive as "physics..being redefined".[85][86][87] However, Verstappen came under criticism from four-time world champion Sebastian Vettel, who stated that Verstappen had pushed him off the track at the Junção corner late in the race. The race stewards did not share Vettel's view and decided that no reprimand was warranted.[88]

2017–2018: Reliability issues and rise to prominence

[edit]
Verstappen overtaking Lewis Hamilton for the lead of the 2017 Malaysian Grand Prix
Verstappen took his second career victory at the Malaysian Grand Prix in 2017.

During the first 14 races of the 2017 season, Verstappen suffered seven retirements, four due to mechanical issues,[89] and three due to first lap collisions in Spain, Austria and Singapore.[90] Of the races he finished, however, he claimed a third place in China, and in another five races he finished fourth or fifth.[77]

From the Malaysian Grand Prix onward, Verstappen enjoyed a surge of success. He won his second Formula One race at the 2017 Malaysian Grand Prix, a day after his 20th birthday, passing then three-time champion Lewis Hamilton for the lead in the early stages of the race.[91] He finished second in the following race in Japan.[92] He then finished third at the United States Grand Prix, but was classified fourth after his final lap overtake on Kimi Räikkönen was deemed illegal.[93] He won his third Formula One race at the Mexican Grand Prix, after passing Sebastian Vettel on the opening lap.[94]

Verstappen at the 2018 Austrian Grand Prix

In the first six races of the 2018 season, Verstappen had been involved in at least one incident in each race. In Australia, he qualified fourth but fell behind Kevin Magnussen at the start.[95] In his attempts to retake the position he ran wide multiple times and damaged his car, with a spin causing him to fall further down the order. He recovered to eventually finish the race in sixth place.[96] At the next race in Bahrain, he crashed during qualifying and started in 15th place.[97] He had a productive first lap after which he found himself in the points while challenging Lewis Hamilton. He attempted an overtake on the reigning World Champion at the start of lap two, but collided with the Mercedes driver and suffered a puncture that ultimately led to suspension damage, forcing him out of the race.[98]

At the next race in China, Verstappen qualified fifth and had moved up to third at the end of the first lap.[99] Both Red Bull drivers pitted for fresh tyres during a safety car which left them with a tyre advantage over the front-runners ahead. In an overtake attempt on Sebastian Vettel for third place, Verstappen collided with the championship leader, causing him to fall to eighth and receive a 10-second penalty.[100] He recovered to fourth place, with his penalty causing him to be classified fifth. Teammate Ricciardo went on to win the race.[101] In Azerbaijan, Verstappen was embroiled in a race-long battle with Ricciardo for fourth place. After numerous position changes between the two teammates during the race, Ricciardo ran into the back of Verstappen during an overtake attempt from which the Dutchman aggressively defended, causing the retirement of both cars.[102] Both drivers were blamed by the team and reprimanded by the stewards.[103] Verstappen bounced back in Spain with his first podium of the season by finishing third behind the Mercedes drivers, holding off Sebastian Vettel. However, the race was also not without incident as he had run into the back of Lance Stroll during the virtual safety car period, causing minor front wing damage.[104]

In Monaco, Verstappen made another error and crashed near the end of the third free practice session in an incident which closely resembled a crash he had at the same spot two years earlier.[105] His team could not repair his car in time for qualifying and Verstappen had to start the race from the back of the grid.[106] Verstappen did not compete and did not set a lap time in qualifying, therefore teammate Ricciardo pressed home Red Bull's advantage at the track by taking pole position and the race win. Verstappen managed to salvage two points by finishing ninth place, overtaking six cars on track.[107] Team principal Christian Horner commented on Verstappen's start of the season, saying he "needed to stop making these mistakes" and that he could "learn from his teammate", while Helmut Marko, head of driver development at Red Bull, said that Verstappen was "too impatient".[106] Verstappen now lay in sixth place in the championship with 35 points, only three points ahead of Fernando Alonso in the McLaren, and 37 points behind his teammate in third, who had taken two wins in the first six races.[108][109]

In Canada, Verstappen topped all three practice sessions and qualified third, two-tenths off Sebastian Vettel in pole position.[110] He eventually finished third and set the fastest lap of the race.[111] The following race in France brought him second place.[112] In Austria—Red Bull's home track, he started fourth on the grid, passed Kimi Räikkönen before taking advantage of retirement from Valtteri Bottas and a botched pit-stop strategy by Lewis Hamilton, who later had to retire from fourth place, to claim the fourth race victory of his career.[113] In Britain, Verstappen was plagued by issues, finishing the first practice session early due to a gearbox problem and crashing in the second practice session before retiring from the race due to a brake problem.[114] He would then finish fourth in Germany after strategy errors let a recovering Hamilton get past him as he went on to win the race.[115] Verstappen ended the first half of the season with a retirement in Hungary and was narrowly behind his teammate in the championship due to his own recent resurgence and Ricciardo's unreliability.[116][117]

Verstappen enjoyed a very strong second half of the season, achieving podium finishes in Belgium, Singapore, Japan and the United States, the latter of which he achieved second place having started from 18th on the grid due to a suspension failure in qualifying.[118] Following the qualifying session at the Mexican Grand Prix, Verstappen revealed that a mechanical problem with his Red Bull under braking cost him any chance of becoming the youngest-ever Formula One pole-sitter. As a result, Ricciardo beat Verstappen to pole position by just 0.026 seconds.[119][120] Verstappen had a better start than Ricciardo and took the lead of the race into the first corner, overtaking the fast-starting Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton. Verstappen earned his fifth career win in Mexico.[121][122] He was poised to win the 2018 Brazilian Grand Prix, having overtaken Räikkönen, Vettel, Bottas, and Hamilton. However, he collided with Force India driver Esteban Ocon who was trying to unlap himself on faster tyres.[123] Ocon received a 10-second stop-and-go penalty for the incident. After the collision with Ocon, Verstappen finished in second place behind Hamilton. During an argument with Ocon after the race, Verstappen pushed the Force India driver, for which he was given two days of "public service" as a penalty by the FIA.[124] He then finished his season with another podium as he finished third in Abu Dhabi.[125]

Verstappen ended the season in fourth place in the championship with 249 points, claiming two wins, eleven podium finishes, and two fastest laps.[126]

2019–2020: Dominance over teammates

[edit]
Verstappen at the 2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, where he started on pole position for the first time in his career

In 2019 Red Bull switched from Renault to Honda power units.[127] After Ricciardo moved to the Renault team for 2019, Verstappen was joined at Red Bull by Pierre Gasly.[128] Verstappen qualified in fourth and finished third in Australia, the first podium finish for a Honda-powered driver since the 2008 British Grand Prix.[129] Verstappen was on course for a second third-place finish in Bahrain before a late safety car prevented him from overtaking Charles Leclerc's ailing Ferrari, keeping him in fourth place.[130] Two more fourth-place finishes followed in China and Azerbaijan, and a podium in Spain in third place.[131][132][133] In Monaco, Verstappen qualified in third place. He was released into the path of Valtteri Bottas during the drivers' pit stops, gaining second place but receiving a 5-second penalty as a result. Verstappen crossed the line in second place but was demoted to fourth by the penalty.[134]

In Canada, Verstappen's final lap in the second qualifying session was hampered by a red flag brought out by Kevin Magnussen's crash. This caused Verstappen to qualify 11th and start the race in ninth place.[135][136] He later recovered to finish fifth.[137] In France he started and finished in fourth place.[138] In Austria, Verstappen started third but suffered a poor start, dropping down to eighth. After a charge towards the front, he made his way up to second before controversially passing Leclerc for the lead of the race with three laps to go.[139] This marked the first Honda-powered race victory since the 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix.[140][141] In Britain, Verstappen, running in third place,[142] was hit from behind during an overtake attempt by Sebastian Vettel and spun into the gravel. Verstappen was able to continue and crossed the line in fifth place.[143]

The wet and chaotic German Grand Prix began similarly to the race in Austria for Verstappen, as a poor start caused him to fall behind. However, he would inherit the lead midway through the race after a crash by race leader Hamilton.[144] Verstappen would go on to extend his lead after the track began to dry, claiming his second victory of the season.[145] In Hungary, he claimed his maiden pole position—becoming the first Dutch driver to do so—and led most of the race before being passed in the closing laps by Hamilton, who had made another stop for fresh tyres in a gamble to catch the leader.[146][147][148]

Verstappen on the podium after winning the 2019 Brazilian Grand Prix

Before the Belgian Grand Prix, Verstappen received a new teammate in Alexander Albon after Pierre Gasly was demoted back to Toro Rosso.[149] In the race, Verstappen had a poor start and collided with Kimi Räikkönen at the first corner, resulting in suspension damage and causing Verstappen's first retirement of the season.[150] In Italy, he did not set a time during qualifying after his car lost power in Q1, but he was already required to start from the back of the grid due to an engine component penalty.[151] After damaging his front wing on the first lap, he recovered to finish the race in eighth place.[152] Third and fourth-place finishes followed in Singapore and Russia respectively.[153][154] After suffering damage in a first-lap collision with Charles Leclerc in Japan, Verstappen suffered his second retirement of the season.[155]

In Mexico, he qualified in first place after setting the fastest lap-time of the session, before being handed a grid penalty for ignoring yellow flags after a crash by Valtteri Bottas.[156] Verstappen suffered a puncture early in the race after making contact with Bottas, falling to the back of the field before eventually recovering to sixth place.[157] A third-place finish in the United States followed, before Verstappen took the second pole position of his career with a 1:07.508 pole lap time in Brazil.[158][159] In a chaotic race, he passed Lewis Hamilton for the lead on two occasions before going on to claim his third victory of the season.[160] Verstappen ended the season with a second-place finish in Abu Dhabi.[161]

Verstappen finished the 2019 season in third place in the championship with 278 points. He claimed three race victories, nine podium finishes, two pole positions, and three fastest laps.[162]

Verstappen at pre-season testing in 2020

Verstappen continued to race for Red Bull in 2020, alongside Albon. At the 2020 Austrian Grand Prix, he started second, but retired early in the race after a flywheel-related problem caused an electronic issue within the power unit.[163] Honda introduced countermeasures in response to the retirement.[164]

At the 2020 Hungarian Grand Prix, he crashed in wet conditions during the formation lap while he was on his way to the starting grid,[165] but he was able to drive the car back to the grid where his mechanics fixed the suspension of the car in the short time that was left before the start of the race.[166] After the repairs, Verstappen progressed from seventh place on the grid to second place by the end of the race.[167] Verstappen won the 70th Anniversary Grand Prix at Silverstone, having started from fourth.[168]

Verstappen clinched second place at the Spanish Grand Prix, after qualifying in third.[169] At the 2020 Belgian Grand Prix, he scored a podium in third place, following his third place on the starting grid.[170] He suffered from two consecutive DNFs at the Italian and Tuscan Grands Prix after which he lost second place in the Championship.[171][172] At the Russian Grand Prix, Verstappen finished the race in second, his seventh podium finish of 2020.[173] At the Eifel Grand Prix, Verstappen finished in second after qualifying in third.[174] He also managed to get the fastest lap of the race.[175] At the Portuguese Grand Prix, Verstappen qualified third, however a poor first lap meant that he dropped back down the order to fifth place. He recovered to third and took his 40th podium in Formula 1.[176] At the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix, Verstappen looked set to claim second due to Valtteri Bottas' ailing Mercedes slowing down, but a sudden puncture denied him any chance of a podium finish; Verstappen spun, resulting in his fourth retirement of the 2020 season.[177]

During Free Practice for the Portuguese Grand Prix, Verstappen was criticised for comments he made on the team radio after a collision with Lance Stroll, where he used the words "retard" and "mongol" in response to the clash. Verstappen admitted following the session that the word choices he used were "not correct". The Mongolian government and the Mongol identity asked Verstappen to apologise for the comments; the Mongolian government also urged the FIA to take action on the comments he made.[178][179]

Verstappen finished the 2020 season in third place in the championship with 214 points. He claimed two race victories, eleven podium finishes, one pole position, and three fastest laps.[180]

2021: World Champion amid title battle vs. Hamilton

[edit]
Verstappen at the 2021 Austrian Grand Prix

At the Bahrain Grand Prix, Verstappen topped all the practice sessions and subsequently took a career fourth pole position. This was the first time he achieved back-to-back pole positions.[181] He fought Lewis Hamilton for the race victory, and on lap 53 Verstappen overtook Hamilton, but went off track whilst doing so, resulting in him being instructed by race control to let Hamilton back into the lead and ultimately finishing second behind Hamilton.[182] At the next race, the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix, Verstappen qualified third with teammate Sergio Pérez second, marking the first time he was out-qualified by a teammate since the 2019 Italian Grand Prix.[183] At the race start, Verstappen was able to pass both Pérez and pole-sitter Lewis Hamilton to take the lead. He remained in the lead after the first round of pit stops as well as the restart, following the race being suspended on lap 33. Rival Hamilton finished second, reducing his championship lead over Verstappen to one point.[184] In the following Portuguese Grand Prix, Verstappen finished second after a long battle with Lewis Hamilton.[185] At the Spanish Grand Prix, the battle between Verstappen and Hamilton continued, with Hamilton employing a faster two-stop strategy versus Verstappen's one-stop race. This provided Hamilton the advantage of faster tyres, allowing him to overtake Verstappen with several laps remaining in the race. Hamilton took the victory, with Verstappen taking second and the fastest lap, increasing Hamilton's championship lead to 14 points.[186]

At the next race in Monaco, Verstappen qualified second behind Charles Leclerc,[187] but Leclerc suffered a driveshaft failure on the way to the grid and was unable to start the race. Verstappen controlled the race from the front on the way to victory. Hamilton (who qualified seventh) finished seventh, though claiming an extra championship point by setting the fastest race lap. The result enabled Verstappen to become the first Dutch driver to lead the World Drivers' Championship,[188] by a margin of four points over Hamilton.[189] At the Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Verstappen qualified third behind Leclerc and Hamilton.[190] Verstappen and Hamilton passed Leclerc in the opening laps before Verstappen took the lead by way of a faster pitstop. Verstappen would comfortably hold the lead until lap 46 when he suffered a tyre failure causing him to crash at high speed and retire.[191] A mistake by Hamilton on the restart dropped him to last place, meaning Verstappen maintained his championship lead.[192] Verstappen took pole for the French Grand Prix.[193] Verstappen's mistake on the first lap allowed Hamilton to take the lead which Verstappen retook during the pit stop phase. Verstappen pitted for a second time from the lead and set after the Mercedes duo, overtaking Hamilton for the lead on lap 52 of 53.[194] He also took the fastest lap point, extending his championship lead to twelve points[195] and achieving the first hat-trick of his career.[196] Verstappen clinched pole position again at the Styrian Grand Prix and led the race from start to finish, to give him his fourth win of the season and further extend his lead to 18 points.[197]

Verstappen took pole position at the Austrian Grand Prix, led every lap from start to finish, set the fastest lap, and won the race for his first career grand slam,[198][199] being the youngest to do so.[200] With the win, Verstappen also became the first driver to win three races in three consecutive weekends, starting at the French Grand Prix on 20 June, then the Styrian Grand Prix on 27 June and ending with the Austrian Grand Prix on 4 July.[201][202] At the next race; the British Grand Prix, Verstappen was involved in a high-speed collision at the Copse corner with Hamilton on the first lap. This resulted in a 51 g (500 m/s2; 1,600 ft/s2) impact with the barrier.[203][204] He was taken to the Silverstone circuit's medical centre after the crash and was then taken to Coventry hospital for precautionary checks and further assessment, before eventually being discharged at 22:00 local time on Sunday night.[205] Hamilton would go on to win the race, reducing Verstappen's lead in the championship to eight points.[206] At the next race, the Hungarian Grand Prix, Verstappen's car suffered damage in a multi-car collision on lap 1, where Mercedes driver Valtteri Bottas was deemed at fault. He ended the race in tenth which was promoted to ninth after Sebastian Vettel was disqualified. The outcome of the race allowed Hamilton to take the lead of the championship.[207]

Following the summer break, Verstappen qualified on pole at the Belgian Grand Prix, ahead of Williams driver George Russell in second and Lewis Hamilton in third.[208] The race was run for three laps, all behind the safety car, with the race official race results taken from the running order at the end of the first lap, with Hamilton and Verstappen both retaining their qualifying positions. As less than 75% of the race distance was completed, half points were awarded, resulting in Verstappen closing the gap to Hamilton to three points.[209] At the Dutch Grand Prix Verstappen again qualified on pole, beating Hamilton by 0.038 seconds.[210] During the race Verstappen was able to fend off attacks from both Mercedes drivers to take the win, taking the lead in the Drivers' Championship by three points.[211] For the Russian Grand Prix, Verstappen was required to start at the back of the grid for exceeding his quota of power unit components.[212] He made his way back up the field, and after taking an early pit stop for intermediate tyres late in the race, he finished second.[213] At the Turkish Grand Prix, Verstappen qualified second with Bottas on pole.[214] With the race being run in wet conditions and the drivers on intermediate tyres the whole race, Verstappen finished second behind Bottas, taking the lead in the Drivers' Championship by six points as Hamilton finished fifth.[215]

Verstappen battling with Lewis Hamilton for the lead at the 2021 United States Grand Prix

At the United States Grand Prix, Verstappen took pole position in qualifying, edging Hamilton by 0.209 seconds.[216] Verstappen won the race and extended his lead in the Drivers' Championship to twelve points as Hamilton finished second with the fastest lap.[217] At the 2021 Mexico City Grand Prix, Verstappen qualified third with a gap to pole-sitter Bottas of 0.350 seconds.[218] Verstappen's main rival Hamilton qualified second. At the start, Verstappen took the lead from Bottas and Hamilton into turn 1, and won the race; and as a result extended his lead in the championship to 19 points.[219]

Verstappen and Hamilton each entered the final round of the championship—the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at Yas Marina—on exactly 369.5 points, with Verstappen leading on countback.[220] Verstappen qualified on pole position by nearly four-tenths of a second, but had a slow start and lost the lead to Hamilton into turn one.[citation needed] He attempted to re-pass Hamilton at turn six, who controversially cut the track and maintained the lead without penalty; the stewards deemed no advantage was gained, amidst Verstappen and Red Bull's complaints.[citation needed] Verstappen was trailing Hamilton by over 10 seconds until a safety car was called with five laps remaining, following a crash involving Nicholas Latifi.[citation needed] The withdrawal of the safety car and subsequent resumption of the race with one lap remaining was met with further controversy; race director Michael Masi only allowed a certain number of lapped cars through, saving time to allow the race to be restarted once the track had been cleared.[citation needed] Verstappen passed Hamilton at turn five of the final lap of the race to become the first World Drivers' Champion from the Netherlands and the 34th overall.[221][222] Mercedes protested and stated intention to appeal the race results, arguing all lapped cars should have been allowed to pass under the regulations, but Red Bull counter-argued that this was not specified in the regulations with the word "any" used as opposed to "all".[223] The protest was subsequently rejected, confirming Verstappen as the World Drivers' Champion; the FIA amended the wording of the rule from 2022 onwards.[224] Verstappen was named the best driver of the season by Autosport and The Race,[225][226] whilst also topping official polls of fellow drivers and team principals.[227][228] Mark Hughes of Motor Sport also ranked Verstappen first, describing his season as a "stunning combination of speed and racecraft, totally fearless, incredible tenacity and ability to comeback from adversity".[229]

2022: Dominant second title

[edit]
Verstappen at the 2022 Japanese Grand Prix, where he won his second World Drivers' Championship

In March 2022, Verstappen signed a five-year contract extension with Red Bull Racing for the 2023 to 2028 seasons.[1] From this season onward, he would use the number 1 instead of his regular number 33 as the reigning world champion.[230]

Verstappen retired from second place at the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix with a fuel system issue. He won the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, having benefited from a pit stop during safety car conditions to pass teammate and pole-sitter Pérez, but suffered another fuel-related retirement from second place at the Australian Grand Prix. This left him 46 points behind championship leader Charles Leclerc after three races. Verstappen responded by winning the next three races; he achieved sprint victory and a grand slam at the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix,[231] won from third on the grid at the Miami Grand Prix and gained from Leclerc's retirement at the Spanish Grand Prix to lead the Drivers' Championship. Further wins came at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix, where Leclerc again retired, and from pole position at the Canadian Grand Prix. Verstappen qualified second at the British Grand Prix, but floor damage from running over debris harmed his pace and resulted in a seventh-place finish.[232] He took pole position at the Austrian Grand Prix and won the sprint, but was overtaken by Leclerc in the race and finished second, reducing his championship lead over Leclerc to 38 points.

Following this, Verstappen went on to win five races consecutively. Pole-sitter Leclerc crashed out of the French Grand Prix, allowing Verstappen to win. Power unit issues meant he qualified tenth for the Hungarian Grand Prix,[233] but overtakes in the opening laps and pit stop undercuts meant he went on to take victory, despite briefly losing the lead after a spin.[234] He set the fastest qualifying time at the Belgian Grand Prix but was demoted to 14th on the grid with a power unit components penalty. Despite this, he progressed to the race lead by lap 12 and went on to win.[235] He took pole position and his 30th race victory at his home race, the Dutch Grand Prix, and then won from seventh on the grid at the Italian Grand Prix.

Verstappen's winning streak was ended at the Singapore Grand Prix. He ran out of fuel in qualifying and started the race eighth.[236] He lost places at the start and later had to make an extra pit stop due to a tyre lock-up, finishing seventh. Victory from pole at the shortened Japanese Grand Prix gave him a 113-point lead in the standings with four races remaining, securing him his second World Drivers' Championship.[237] He won the next two races, the United States and Mexico City Grands Prix, finished sixth at the São Paulo Grand Prix after a collision with Lewis Hamilton, and won the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix from pole.

Abu Dhabi was his fifteenth victory of the year, breaking the record of thirteen race wins in a season shared by Michael Schumacher in 2004 and Sebastian Vettel in 2013. He won the championship with 454 points, beating Lewis Hamilton's 2019 record of 413.[238]

2023: Record-breaking third title

[edit]
Verstappen leading the race at the 2023 Austrian Grand Prix

Verstappen remained with Red Bull alongside Sergio Pérez for the 2023 season. His season began with a win from pole at the Bahrain Grand Prix. A driveshaft failure in qualifying at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix resulted in a 15th-place start, but he gained positions in the race to finish second behind Pérez.[239] He again won from pole at the Australian Grand Prix despite losing positions to the Mercedes drivers during the race,[240] but finished second to Pérez, who made a safety car pit stop, at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix.[241]

After this began Verstappen's record-breaking win streak. He started ninth at the Miami Grand Prix as red flags in qualifying aborted his lap but passed the drivers ahead including pole-sitter Pérez to win. The next four races, the Monaco, Spanish, Canadian and Austrian Grands Prix, were won comfortably from pole position by Verstappen, including Red Bull's 100th victory in Canada[242] and a sprint win in Austria. He took pole at the British Grand Prix but briefly lost the lead to Lando Norris at the start before regaining the position to win. He qualified 0.003 seconds behind Lewis Hamilton at the Hungarian Grand Prix, but overtook him at the first corner and went on to take victory. He claimed pole and the win in the Belgian Grand Prix sprint and set the fastest qualifying time, but started the race sixth due to an engine component penalty. He went on to overtake Pérez to win the race. He won from pole at the rain-affected Dutch Grand Prix and was victorious again at the Italian Grand Prix despite qualifying behind Carlos Sainz Jr. This victory marked his tenth consecutive win, breaking Sebastian Vettel's record of nine from 2013,[243][244] and Red Bull's fifteenth consecutive win, a record previously held by McLaren with eleven in 1988.

Both Red Bulls were eliminated in Q2 at the Singapore Grand Prix and were unable to make an impression in the race, with Verstappen and Pérez finishing fifth and eighth respectively, ending the winning streak.[245] This would be the only break in Verstappen's success, as he went on to win the remaining seven races of the season. His victory from pole at the Japanese Grand Prix gave Red Bull their sixth Constructors' Championship title.[246] He clinched his third World Drivers' Championship title at the Qatar Grand Prix sprint despite finishing second to Oscar Piastri,[247] then won the race from pole. He won the United States Grand Prix despite having started sixth due to a lap time deletion in qualifying. He qualified behind both Ferraris at the Mexico City Grand Prix but passed both drivers to claim the win. He took pole and victory at the São Paulo Grand Prix and won the sprint having overtook pole-sitter Lando Norris at the first turn. He started behind Charles Leclerc at the Las Vegas Grand Prix and received a penalty for forcing him off the track, but Verstappen reclaimed the lead to win.

His pole and victory at the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix was his nineteenth win of the year, breaking his own record of fifteen from 2022. He scored 575 points, more than double that of second-placed Pérez and beating his own points-scoring record from 2022.

2024: Fourth title amid struggles at Red Bull

[edit]
Verstappen (pictured during the Austrian Grand Prix) won seven of the opening 10 rounds in 2024.

Verstappen began the 2024 season with his fifth career grand slam at the Bahrain Grand Prix[248] and followed this with another pole and victory at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, his 100th Formula One podium.[249] He took pole again at the Australian Grand Prix but retired on lap 4, his first retirement since the 2022 edition of the race, with a brake fire, ending his nine-race winning streak and 43 race-finishing streak.[250] This was followed by a pole and win at the Japanese Grand Prix.[251] He won the sprint at the Chinese Grand Prix after starting fourth,[252] then claimed pole and victory in the race.[253] He took another sprint win at the Miami Grand Prix[254] and started on pole position, but lost the lead to Lando Norris during the pit stops and was unable to reclaim the place, finishing the race second.[255] He matched Ayrton Senna's record of eight consecutive poles at the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix[256] and converted this into his fifth victory of the season. His pole streak ended at the Monaco Grand Prix where he qualified and finished sixth; Verstappen commented that his RB20 was losing time to its rivals in low-speed corners.[257]

Verstappen and George Russell set identical lap times in qualifying at the Canadian Grand Prix, but Russell started on pole position as he had set the lap time first.[258] Both drivers were overtaken by Norris, but Verstappen later passed Russell then gained the lead from Norris during the pit stops to claim his 60th race win.[259] He qualified second behind Norris at the Spanish Grand Prix but passed him at the start and then overtook Russell to win for the seventh time in 2024.[260] Verstappen won the sprint from pole at the Austrian Grand Prix[261] and then qualified fastest for the main race.[262] He led most of the race but was challenged by Norris in the closing laps before the two drivers collided; Verstappen was handed a time penalty for causing the collision and finished the race fifth.[263] He later commented that the crash did not affect his close friendship with Norris.[264] He qualified fourth at the British Grand Prix and passed Norris in the closing laps to finish second behind Lewis Hamilton.[265] He started third at the Hungarian Grand Prix but collided with Hamilton and went on to finish fifth. He criticised his team's race strategy and suggested that the RB20 was now behind the race-winning McLaren MCL38 on pace.[266] Verstappen qualified fastest at the Belgian Grand Prix but started outside the top ten due to an engine component penalty.[267] He recovered positions and was classified fourth in the race,[268] extending his lead in the championship to 78 points over Norris going into the summer break.[269]

Verstappen led 17 laps and finished second to rival Norris at the Dutch Grand Prix.

At his home race, the Dutch Grand Prix, Verstappen qualified second behind Norris and gained the lead at the first corner, but was later overtaken by Norris and finished second.[270] He qualified and finished outside the top four at both the Italian and Azerbaijan Grands Prix,[271] after which Red Bull lost the lead of the Constructors' Championship to McLaren.[272] He then finished second to Norris at the Singapore Grand Prix, reducing his championship advantage to 52 points.[273] Verstappen described his car as "fucked" at the official press conference in Singapore, for which he received a punishment from the FIA to "accomplish some work of public interest".[274] He responded by hosting an impromptu media session outside the press conference room in protest,[275] and later suggested that the decision could push him to leave the sport.[276] He won the sprint at the United States Grand Prix and was classified third in the race ahead of Norris, who was penalised for overtaking Verstappen off-track.[277] This extended Verstappen's championship lead for the first time since the Belgian Grand Prix. He started second at the Mexico City Grand Prix but received 20 seconds worth of penalties for his driving during a battle for position with Norris, resulting in a sixth-place finish, reducing his championship lead to 47 points.[278]

I mean honestly [Russell and Norris] could have got a 10-second penalty and [Verstappen] could have won by 30 seconds but it didn't matter. He was so calm about it; he was calculating. Every time he made a passing move. I mean he was exemplary. For me, this was a masterclass of how a racing driver reaches the pinnacle of his career and becomes a four-time World Champion.

Eddie Jordan, speaking about Verstappen's victory at the 2024 São Paulo Grand Prix[279]

Verstappen was classified fourth in the São Paulo Grand Prix sprint after receiving a virtual safety car infringement penalty,[280] and started the race from 17th following an engine penalty, whilst Norris qualified on pole. He gained seven positions on the opening lap, with further places obtained via several crucial overtakes, as well as surviving the worsening conditions on his intermediate tyres until the red flag period.[281] Following this—and his overtake for the lead on Ocon—Verstappen set ten of the eleven fastest laps of the race, with his quickest being 1.045 seconds quicker than any of his rivals;[282] he won by a 19-second margin, increasing his championship lead to 62 points.[283] Verstappen was lauded by drivers and critics for his drive;[284][285][286] Giles Richards of The Guardian opined that his performance was "worthy of recognition in the pantheon of Formula One's wet-weather drives", describing him as a regenmeister (lit.'rain master').[287] By finishing ahead of Norris at the subsequent Las Vegas Grand Prix, Verstappen secured his fourth world title with two races remaining.[288] Winning eight Grands Prix in all, Andrew Benson of BBC Sport proclaimed it as a "towering achievement from a driver recognised as one of the all-time greats of Formula 1", describing his season as "almost flawless" whilst "not [having] the best car for the majority".[289] Verstappen won the Qatar Grand Prix, leading every lap after having his pole position stripped for driving unnecessarily slowly in qualifying; the incident led to a widely publicised feud with George Russell. After the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Verstappen became the first driver to win a title driving for a third-placed team in the World Constructors' Championship since Nelson Piquet in 1983.[290]

2025: Challenger to McLaren

[edit]
Verstappen driving the Red Bull RB21 at the 2025 Japanese Grand Prix
Verstappen received widespread acclaim for his surprise victory at the Japanese Grand Prix in 2025, ahead of both McLaren drivers.

Red Bull trailed McLaren for performance into 2025, with Verstappen finishing second at the season-opening Australian Grand Prix after battling Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri for the lead in wet conditions.[291] He claimed third in the sprint and fourth in the main race in China amidst tyre wear and performance struggles with the RB21, whilst new teammate Liam Lawson finished outside the points; Verstappen claimed Red Bull had also dropped behind Ferrari and Mercedes, as Lawson was replaced by Yuki Tsunoda.[292][293] He received widespread acclaim for his surprise pole position at the Japanese Grand Prix,[294] before holding off both McLaren drivers to claim his first victory of the year;[295] Andrew Benson of BBC Sport described it as "a weekend of the sort of rare perfection that comes only from drivers of the very highest quality".[296] He finished sixth in Bahrain amidst further performance and pit stop struggles, prompting Red Bull to hold crisis talks over his future.[297] He returned to pole in Saudi Arabia, where he finished second after receiving a penalty for a first-corner incident with Piastri.[298] Verstappen finished fourth in the Miami sprint, demoted to seventeenth following a penalty for an unsafe pit release;[299] he took pole for the main race, ultimately finishing fourth.[300]

Verstappen driving the Red Bull RB21 at the 2025 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix
Verstappen won the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix after a lauded first-lap overtake on championship-leader Oscar Piastri.

Verstappen won the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix after a first-lap overtake on Piastri into Variante Tamburello, which was widely hailed as one of his greatest.[301] His fourth-place in Monaco was followed by tenth in Spain, where he was penalised for an intentional collision with George Russell as he fell out of contention for the victory;[302][303] the pair finished 1–2 in Canada, with Verstappen second.[304] After qualifying seventh for the Austrian Grand Prix, Verstappen retired after being hit by Kimi Antonelli on the first lap;[305] 61 points behind championship leader Piastri, Verstappen admitted his fifth title challenge was "case closed".[306] He took another pole at the British Grand Prix on a low-downforce setup, before ceding the lead to Piastri and spinning during a safety car restart in wet-weather conditions; he recovered to fifth and criticised his lack of grip.[307] He won the Belgium sprint after a first-lap overtake on Piastri and claimed fourth in the Grand Prix.[308] He dropped to ninth in Hungary before finishing second to Piastri at the Dutch Grand Prix.[309][310] His pole lap in Italy was the fastest in Formula One history,[311] where he overcame early opposition from Norris to win the Grand Prix by over 19 seconds in record speed.[312] Verstappen started on pole for the Azerbaijan Grand Prix and held on to win, taking his fourth win of the season and his sixth Grand Chelem overall. After finishing in second to Russell in Singapore Grand Prix, Verstappen won both the Austin sprint and main race from pole position to reduce his nearest competitor Norris' advantage to 26 points and his deficit to the championship lead to 40 points. At the 2025 Mexico City Grand Prix, Verstappen qualified fifth and executed a one-stop strategy to ultimately finish in third place.

Driver profile

[edit]

Qualifying pace and consistency

[edit]
Verstappen on a qualifying lap at the 2018 Chinese Grand Prix

Following Verstappen's maiden pole position at the 2019 Hungarian Grand Prix, former Formula One World Champion Nico Rosberg described him as the fastest driver in Formula One. Rosberg elucidated that Verstappen did not have the fastest car during the qualifying session in Hungary, emphasising that it was Verstappen's raw speed that allowed him to secure pole position: "Mercedes still had the fastest car, and it's just Verstappen with his driving that put it up there in pole."[313]

In 2019, former Formula One World Champion Jenson Button stated that he believes Verstappen is the fastest Formula One driver ever: "I think he is the fastest driver that has ever driven an F1 car. I really do, I think he is unbelievably fast."[314] Journalist Scott Mitchell from The Race commented: "When everything comes together, Verstappen is the quickest driver in F1 over one lap, but the odd mistake and scruffy session must be eliminated."[315] Helmut Marko, the advisor to the Red Bull GmbH Formula One teams, stated that Verstappen is the fastest driver Red Bull have ever had.[316][317]

In 2021, three-time Formula One World Champion Jackie Stewart claimed that Verstappen is the fastest driver in Formula One, but he also added that Verstappen is still in the "puppy stage" of his career.[318] Peter Windsor, an experienced Formula One journalist, expressed Verstappen's ability to change direction "quicker than anybody else" through the high-speed section Maggots and Becketts: Silverstone's fastest sequence of corners. Windsor stressed that Verstappen's lightning-quick change of direction is a result of the innate feel he has for creating the "perfect platform" to achieve what he wants with the car during a lap. He is intrinsically able to create, for "a trillionth of a second", a minuscule "flat area" between the left and the right of a change of direction ahead of him, in order to attain a stable balance with the car before applying the next steering and throttle input.[319] Scuderia AlphaTauri's team principal, Franz Tost, declared Verstappen to be the fastest driver in Formula One; following the Dutchman's "really deserved" maiden title triumph in 2021.[320] After winning the 2024 World Drivers' Championship in the third-placed RB20, James Elson of Motor Sport stated "if there was any doubt beforehand, 2024 proved that Max Verstappen is F1’s best driver", adding that "not only the fastest, capable of creating one-lap magic, he knows how to produce all it takes to win in the race too".[321]

Verstappen received widespread acclaim for his surprise pole lap at the 2025 Japanese Grand Prix,[294] with Andrew Benson of BBC Sport commenting that "many F1 observers regarded [Verstappen's qualifying lap] as one of the greatest of all time".[322]

Dominance over teammates

[edit]
Verstappen (right) was teammates with Daniel Ricciardo (left) from 2016 to 2018, pictured at the 2016 Malaysian Grand Prix.

Former Formula One driver Eddie Irvine praised Verstappen, stating that he is "by far the most dominant team leader on the grid." Irvine highlighted that Verstappen "has had many different second drivers in the team and none of them have got close to him."[323] During the 2020 season, Jenson Button stated that he does not "think there's been a driver that's annihilated their teammates like he [Verstappen] has in a very long time."[324] Motorsport columnist and former Formula One driver Jolyon Palmer, commented that Verstappen's maiden World Championship triumph could usher in a "new era of dominance" in the sport. Palmer wrote:

[Verstappen's] qualifying pace is frightening and has been the basis for this title-charging campaign. He's had the most pole positions of anyone with 10 – almost half of the races, and it would have been half had he completed his mesmeric Jeddah lap, which ended up being possibly Max's biggest error in a near-perfect season. For a driver who has demolished three successive team mates in three years and made only a handful of small mistakes in that time, you question what scope their [sic] even is for improvement – but if he can take his game onto another level from here, we could be about to see the start of a new era of dominance.[325]

Journalist Scott Mitchell expounded the reason why the Dutchman's teammates have fallen short "even with the data". Mitchell wrote: "Verstappen drives mainly on intuition, and that comes from years of training and preparation. He has a database in his head which he can use immediately. Even with data, Gasly and Albon could see where he was faster, but they could never grasp how he was faster there. That's because what makes Verstappen so good is mainly unconscious." According to Mitchell, those years of training and driving on his intuition has made it impossible for other drivers to measure up to Verstappen.[326]

Verstappen (right) was teammates with Sergio Pérez (left) from 2021 to 2024, pictured at the 2024 Chinese Grand Prix.

Helmut Marko asserted that Verstappen's progress has moved him clear of his former Formula 1 team-mate Daniel Ricciardo, in both qualifying and race trim. "There is specific data," Marko told Autosport, "In qualifying the gap to Ricciardo is greater. The strange thing is Max sometimes slides more, but still manages to keep the tyres alive." Verstappen previously mentioned that he was three or four-tenths faster on average than "very fast qualifier" Daniel Ricciardo.[327] Marko concluded that then 20-year-old Verstappen "clearly moved away" from Ricciardo since the "second half of the 2018 season."[328]

Natural talent

[edit]
Max Verstappen driving the Red Bull RB16B (2021)
Max Verstappen driving the Red Bull RB18 (2022)
Max Verstappen driving the Red Bull RB19 (2023)
Max Verstappen driving the Red Bull RB20 (2024)
Verstappen's four championship-winning cars from top-to-bottom: RB16B (2021), RB18 (2022), RB19 (2023) and RB20 (2024)

Following his maiden Formula One win, at the 2016 Spanish Grand Prix, three-time World Drivers' Champion Niki Lauda described Verstappen as the "talent of the century."[329] Red Bull team principal Christian Horner stated that Verstappen is the best driver Red Bull have ever seen: "I have no doubt [Verstappen is] the best we have seen on one of our cars, in terms of outright raw ability and commitment. He's the best driver we've seen."[330]

Gerhard Berger echoed 2009 World Drivers' Champion Jenson Button's comments, anointing Max Verstappen as the Formula One driver of this era with the most raw talent. Speaking to Sport1, Berger ventured: "When it comes to raw talent, Max Verstappen is the most talented of all. But it's not just about raw talent, it's about the whole package. That means it's not just about setting the fastest laps but also to win a race. And not just [about] one race but many and eventually a championship, and championships."[331]

Two-time World Drivers' Champion Fernando Alonso commented that Verstappen is the standout driver in Formula One, declaring him to be "one step ahead" of everyone. Alonso noted that Verstappen deserved to win the 2021 Formula One World Championship, ahead of the title decider that saw Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton enter level on points: "Mercedes lately have been more performing and they've won a couple of races now, but Max is driving—in my opinion—one step ahead of all of us. We saw the [qualifying] lap in Jeddah, until he touched the wall at the last corner, that lap was coming from Max, not the Red Bull."[332] Karun Chandhok likened Verstappen's ruthless and uncompromising attitude in race combat to seven-time World Drivers' Champion Michael Schumacher.[333] By 2025, Andrew Benson of BBC Sport opined that Verstappen was "regarded by almost everyone in [Formula One] as the best driver in the world".[334]

Racecraft

[edit]
Verstappen (middle) on the podium with Lewis Hamilton (left) and Daniel Ricciardo (right) after winning the 2017 Malaysian Grand Prix

Following Verstappen being given a warning for his driving conduct at the 2016 Belgian Grand Prix, the 18-year-old received the backing of then three-time champion Lewis Hamilton, who commented: "firstly, give the guy a break, he is 18 years old. What the frickin' heck were any of us doing at 18?"[335]

Despite earning high praise and acclaim from Formula One drivers and experts in and out of the sport, Verstappen faced criticism in the wake of the penalties he incurred during the 2021 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix. Following this race, former Formula One driver Martin Brundle wrote: "Such is [his] car control and cunning, he's sometimes able to pull off the audacious moves and leave a margin of doubt as to whether it's hard racing or simply a professional foul outside of the regulations and it's those moments which are generating the confusion, controversies and inconsistencies. Ayrton Senna and Michael Schumacher had their faults too, and I was on the receiving end from both of them on occasions, but it's a sizeable dent on their immense reputations, not a positive."[336] Following an impressive first half of the 2022 season, journalist David Tremayne claimed Verstappen had elevated himself to a new higher level compared to his 2021 title winning season, suggesting Verstappen's first title had made him more relaxed and "chirpy".[337]

Following the 2024 Mexico City Grand Prix, Verstappen received widespread condemnation from fans and media for incidents involving title rival Lando Norris, for which he received 20 seconds worth of time penalties.[338] Many commentators and former drivers likened his tactics and 'win-at-all-costs' attitude to those of Senna and Schumacher,[339][340] whilst 1996 World Drivers' Champion Damon Hill characterised them as reminiscent of Wacky Races antagonist Dick Dastardly.[341] Before the following race in São Paulo, Verstappen criticised the alleged British bias in the media, stating "I have the wrong passport".[342] Upon his victory from 17th on the grid in the rain-affected race, he stated in the post-race press conference "I appreciate all of you being here, but I don't see any British press. Do they have to run to the airport, or [do they not] know where the press conference is?"[343]

Fan support

[edit]
The Verstappen grandstand at the 2021 Austrian Grand Prix

Verstappen has accumulated a significant fanbase from around the world, particularly from his home country of the Netherlands. The frequent association of Verstappen with the colour orange—the national colour of the Netherlands—has led to his fanbase being referred to as the Orange Army.[344][345]

Several races across Europe have dedicated Verstappen grandstands to accommodate thousands of travelling Dutch fans, boosting ticket sales at Grands Prix such as in Belgium, Austria and Hungary.[346] A Verstappen grandstand featured at the inaugural Las Vegas Grand Prix in 2023.[347]

During the 2021 Dutch Grand Prix, the managing director of Honda in Formula One, Masashi Yamamoto [ja], praised Verstappen's support, stating that "in the six years I've been involved with Honda F1, I've never seen such a great turnout as at the Dutch Grand Prix. It was like being in a football stadium."[348]

In October 2021, Verstappen was voted the most popular Formula One driver in an official worldwide survey conducted by Nielsen Media Research and Motorsport Network, earning 14.4% of the vote with particular success in the United States and Japan.[349][350]

The fan-made song "Super Max!", performed by the Pitstop Boys [nl] in 2016, went viral after his victory at the 2021 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, topping the Spotify Viral 50 chart in the Netherlands and reaching number two in the United Kingdom.[351] Another fan-made EDM track "33 Max Verstappen", was released in 2023, eventually going viral on social media due to internet memes referencing the hook: "tu tu tu du, Max Verstappen".[352][353]

Other racing

[edit]

Sportscar racing

[edit]
The Acura ARX-06 (pictured in 2023) tested by Verstappen with Honda Racing Corporation in November 2024.

Verstappen tested the Honda NSX-GT—a GT500 class Super GT car—during the 2022 Honda Racing Thanks Day event at Motegi.[354] After winning the event's kart race alongside Marc Márquez, Honda awarded Verstappen—the first Honda-powered World Drivers' Champion since 1991—with an NSX Type S.[355]

In January 2024, Verstappen drove the Ferrari 296 GT3 at the Portimão, as part of a two-day test with Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters team Emil Frey Racing alongside Thierry Vermeulen,[356] who competed under the Verstappen.com Racing banner in 2023.[357] Team principal Lorenz Frey-Hilti stated "there were also other GT3 cars that day, but I can only say that Verstappen was driving on a different level than the rest. There are good drivers who cannot shine in a GT3 car due to a lack of experience, but Max is different. If something has four wheels, then [he's fast in it]", adding that he was "world-class".[358] In May 2025, he entered testing for the third round of the 2025 Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie in the 296 under the pseudonym "Franz Hermann", where he claimed to set an unofficial GT3 lap record, reportedly in an attempt to obtain a licence to compete on the Nordschleife.[359][360] He received an FIA Platinum licence later that month, allowing him to compete in top-level endurance racing.[361]

In September, he made his competitive debut on the Nordschleife in the seventh round for Lionspeed GP, completing the laps required for a GT3 permit in a horsepower-restricted Porsche 718 Cayman GT4 CS as he finished seventh in-class.[362] Later the same month, Verstappen made his GT3 race debut and won. He drove for Emil Frey Racing, racing a Ferrari 296 GT3 with Chris Lulham in the Nürburgring Endurance Series.[363] This start also made Max Verstappen the first defending Formula One World Champion to simultaneously compete in Formula One and another racing series since Keke Rosberg, who made a one-off appearance in the 1983 World Sportscar Championship, also at the Nürburgring Nordschleife.[citation needed] After qualifying third, Verstappen, who drove the first stint, passed two cars and began to create a gap of over a minute. Verstappen handed the car to teammate Lulham for the second stint; Lulham crossed the line to win the race for the team, 24 seconds ahead of the car in second place.[364]

On 19 November 2024, Verstappen drove a prototype for the first time, testing the Acura ARX-06 with Honda Racing Corporation at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, ahead of the Las Vegas Grand Prix.[365] Verstappen expressed his desire to compete in the 24 Hours of Daytona and Le Mans after the test, stating that "it's just about finding the time".[366]

Sim racing

[edit]

In his free time, Verstappen competes in sim racing. Verstappen stated that it helps him with his real-life racing, keeping him "ready to go".[367] Since 2015, Verstappen has been a member of Team Redline, a British-Luxembourgish multinational professional sim racing team.[368][369]

iRacing Special Events (2020–present)

[edit]

Verstappen has competed in several marquee events on iRacing since February 2019, when he entered the Bathurst 12 Special Event—a 12-hour virtual team endurance race—alongside Lando Norris.[370] The pair won the Spa 24 Special Event in July.[371] Verstappen won the Petit Le Mans Special Event in October 2020.[372] Later that year, Haas driver and R8G eSports founder Romain Grosjean deemed Verstappen to be the "fastest" driver in sim racing.[373] He entered the eighth round of the 2023 AMX Global League at Imola, winning the first heat.[374]

Verstappen entered the Daytona 24 Special Event in January 2024, winning the GTD class with Redline.[375] In May, Verstappen received media attention for entering the Nürburgring 24 Special Event on the same weekend as the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix;[376] he won both events, achieving a record-equalling eighth consecutive pole position at the latter. Following his victory at the former, Ed Hardy of Autosport opined that Verstappen had "firmly established himself as one of the best sim racers in the world".[374] Verstappen won his second Spa 24 Special Event in July that year, completing a perfect season of 24-hour special events.[377]

Le Mans Virtual (2020–2023)

[edit]

Verstappen competed in the 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual on rFactor 2 in 2020, 2022 and 2023—hosted by Automobile Club de l'Ouest and the FIA World Endurance Championship—as well as two further rounds of the 2022–23 Le Mans Virtual Series in the LMP2 class.[374] He described the former competition as a "clown show" after a technical issue saw him retire from the lead of the 2023 edition,[378] subsequently finishing runner-up in the overall championship to Porsche Coanda.[374]

Verstappen.com Racing

[edit]
Thierry Vermeulen driving the Verstappen.com Racing Ferrari 296 GT3 in the 2024 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters at the Red Bull Ring
In 2022, Verstappen founded the eponymous racing team Verstappen.com Racing.

Verstappen founded the eponymous racing team Verstappen.com Racing in 2022, supporting his father Jos in rallying and Thierry Vermeulen in the ADAC GT Masters.[379][380] The following year, the project expanded to GT World Challenge Europe Sprint Cup and the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, linking up with Ferrari customer Emil Frey Racing.[381] In 2025, in conjunction with this effort, Verstappen.com made its debut as a standalone team in the Endurance Cup, fielding a 2 Seas Motorsport-run Aston Martin Vantage AMR GT3 Evo for Vermeulen, Harry King and sim racing convert Chris Lulham;[382] they took the Gold Cup victory at the 24 Hours of Spa.[383]

Personal life

[edit]

Verstappen holds dual Dutch and Belgian citizenship, and decided to compete with a Dutch racing licence, as his father Jos did. He stated in 2014 that he "feels more Dutch", having spent more time with his father than with his mother during his childhood, as well as his upbringing in Maaseik, a Belgian town at the Dutch border.[8] The following year, Verstappen added that he "actually only lived in Belgium to sleep", and that he "was raised as a Dutch person and that's how [he feels]".[384] In 2022, Verstappen stated that he appreciates both sides and is "half-half at the end of the day".[385] In addition to his native language, he is fluent in English and German, with limited working proficiency in French.[386]

Verstappen's former aircraft (PH-DTF) at Luton Airport in 2022

He competed in Formula One for more than a season before obtaining a road driving licence on his 18th birthday.[387] Verstappen moved to Monaco the day after, in October 2015 where he has lived ever since.[388] In November 2020, Verstappen bought a Dassault Falcon 900EX aircraft from Virgin Galactic. The aircraft, registered PH-DTF, was operated by Exxaero.[389] In January 2025, he acquired a Mangusta GranSport 33 yacht, named Unleash the Lion.[390] The following month, he sold the Falcon 900EX and purchased a Dassault Falcon 8X, registered PH-UTL, which is also operated by Exxaero.[391]

Verstappen is a supporter of FC Barcelona and PSV Eindhoven.[392] In September 2022, he was appointed an Officer of the Order of Orange-Nassau in recognition of his racing achievements.[393]

Verstappen has been dating Brazilian-Dutch model Kelly Piquet, daughter of three-time World Drivers' Champion Nelson Piquet, since October 2020.[394][395] They had their first daughter in April 2025.[396]

Awards and honours

[edit]

Karting record

[edit]

Karting career summary

[edit]
Season Series Team Position
2005 VAS Championship – Mini Junior 1st
Dutch N.A.B. Championship – Mini Junior 16th
Limburgs Kart Championship – Mini Junior 2nd
2006 VAS Championship – Mini Junior 1st
2007 Chrono Dutch Rotax Max Challenge – Mini Max 35th
Dutch Championship – Rotax Mini Max 1st
Rotax Max Challenge Belgium – Mini Max Jos Verstappen 1st
2008 VAS Championship – Mini NC
Belgian Championship – Cadet Jos Verstappen 1st
Rotax Max Challenge Belgium – Mini Max 1st
BNL Karting Series – Mini Max Verstappen Racing 1st
2009 Rotax Max Challenge Belgium – Mini Max 1st
Belgian Championship – KF5 Pex Racing Team 1st
BNL Karting Series – Mini Max 1st
2010 South Garda Winter Cup – KF3 CRG 2nd
WSK Euro SeriesKF3 1st
CIK-FIA European Championship Qualification Region Nord – KF3 2nd
CIK-FIA European ChampionshipKF3 5th
CIK-FIA World CupKF3 2nd
Bridgestone Cup European Final – KF3 1st
WSK World Series – KF3 1st
WSK Nations Cup – KF3 1st
2011 South Garda Winter Cup – KF3 CRG 2nd
WSK Master SeriesKF3 19th
North European Trophy – KF3 DNF
CIK-FIA European ChampionshipKF3 14th
WSK Euro SeriesKF3 1st
CIK-FIA World CupKF3 DNF
2012 South Garda Winter Cup – KF2 Intrepid Driver Program 1st
BNL Karting Series – KZ2 10th
WSK Master SeriesKF2 1st
CIK-FIA European ChampionshipKF2 10th
WSK Euro SeriesKF2 6th
German Karting ChampionshipKZ2 NC
CIK-FIA World CupKZ2 CRG DNF
CIK-FIA World CupKF2 2nd
CIK-FIA World ChampionshipKF1 8th
SKUSA SuperNationalsKZ2 PSL Karting 21st
2013 South Garda Winter Cup – KF2 CRG 1st
Rotax Max Euro Challenge – Senior 32nd
WSK Euro SeriesKZ1 1st
WSK Master SeriesKZ2 1st
CIK-FIA European ChampionshipKF 1st
CIK-FIA European ChampionshipKZ 1st
CIK-FIA World ChampionshipKF 3rd
CIK-FIA World ChampionshipKZ 1st
Sources:[412][413]

Complete CIK-FIA Karting European Championship results

[edit]

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Team Class 1 2 3 4 5 6 DC Points
2010 CRG KF3 GEN
QH

12
GEN
PF

3
GEN
F

5
5th -
2011 CRG KF3 ZUE
QH
2
ZUE
PF
16
ZUE
F
14
14th -
2012 Intrepid KF2 WAC
QH
1
WAC
R1

(2)
WAC
R2
1
PFI
QH
20
PFI
R1
DSQ
PFI
R2
DSQ
10th 25
2013 CRG KF ALC
QH

11
ALC
PF

2
ALC
F

3
ORT
QH
2
ORT
PF
2
ORT
F
2
1st 36
KZ WAC
QH
1
WAC
PF

1
WAC
F

1
GEN
QH

9
GEN
PF

2
GEN
F

1
1st 50

Complete CIK-FIA Karting World Cup results

[edit]

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Team Class 1 2 3 4 DC
2010 CRG KF3 BRA
QP
2
BRA
QH
2
BRA
PF
5
BRA
F
2
2nd
2011 CRG KF3 SAR
QP
2
SAR
QH
2
SAR
PF
2
SAR
F
Ret
DNF
2012 CRG KF2 SAR
QP
3
SAR
QH
1
SAR
PF
2
SAR
F
2
2nd

Complete CIK-FIA Karting World Championship results

[edit]

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Team Class 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 DC Points
2012 Intrepid KF1 SUZ
QH1

31
SUZ
R1

13
SUZ
R2

4
SUZ
QH2

2
SUZ
R3

3
SUZ
R4

Ret
MAC
Q1
1
MAC
R1

2
MAC
R2
Ret
MAC
Q2
2
MAC
R1
17
MAC
R2
Ret
8th 52
2013 CRG KF PFI
QH
1
PFI
PF1

1
PFI
F

1
BHR
QH

2
BHR
PF

1
BHR
F

DSQ
3rd 25
KZ VAR
QH
2
VAR
PF1

1
VAR
F

1
1st 50

Racing record

[edit]

Racing career summary

[edit]
Season Series Team Races Wins Poles F/Laps Podiums Points Position
2014 Florida Winter Series 12 2 3 3 5
FIA Formula 3 European Championship Van Amersfoort Racing 33 10 7 7 16 411 3rd
Macau Grand Prix 1 0 0 1 0 7th
Zandvoort Masters Motopark 1 1 1 0 1 1st
Formula One Scuderia Toro Rosso Test driver
2015 Formula One Scuderia Toro Rosso 19 0 0 0 0 49 12th
2016 Formula One Scuderia Toro Rosso 4 0 0 0 0 204 5th
Red Bull Racing 17 1 0 1 7
2017 Formula One Red Bull Racing 20 2 0 1 4 168 6th
2018 Formula One Aston Martin Red Bull Racing 21 2 0 2 11 249 4th
2019 Formula One Aston Martin Red Bull Racing 21 3 2 3 9 278 3rd
2020 Formula One Aston Martin Red Bull Racing 17 2 1 3 11 214 3rd
2021 Formula One Red Bull Racing Honda 22 10 10 6 18 395.5 1st
2022 Formula One Oracle Red Bull Racing 22 15 7 5 17 454 1st
2023 Formula One Oracle Red Bull Racing 22 19 12 9 21 575 1st
2024 Formula One Oracle Red Bull Racing 24 9 8 3 14 437 1st
2025 Formula One Oracle Red Bull Racing 20 5 7 2 11 321* 3rd*
Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie – Cup 3 Lionspeed GP 1 0 0 0 0 NC†
Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie – SP9 Emil Frey Racing 1 1 0 1 1 NC†
Source:[412][414]

‹The template Smallsup is being considered for deletion.›  As Verstappen was a guest driver, he was ineligible for championship points.
* Season still in progress.

Complete FIA Formula 3 European Championship results

[edit]

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 DC Points
2014 Van Amersfoort Racing Volkswagen SIL
1

Ret
SIL
2

5
SIL
3

2
HOC
1

Ret
HOC
2

DNS
HOC
3

1
PAU
1

3
PAU
2

Ret
PAU
3

Ret
HUN
1

Ret
HUN
2

16
HUN
3

4
SPA
1

1
SPA
2

1
SPA
3

1
NOR
1

1
NOR
2

1
NOR
3

1
MSC
1

3
MSC
2

Ret
MSC
3

2
RBR
1

5
RBR
2

4
RBR
3

12
NÜR
1

1
NÜR
2

Ret
NÜR
3

3
IMO
1

Ret
IMO
2

2
IMO
3

1
HOC
1

1
HOC
2

5
HOC
3

6
3rd 411
Source:[415]

Complete Macau Grand Prix results

[edit]
Year Team Car Qualifying Quali Race Main race Ref
2014 Netherlands Van Amersfoort Racing Dallara F312 3rd DNF 7th [416]

Complete Formula One results

[edit]

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap; superscript indicates point-scoring sprint position)

Year Entrant Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 WDC Points
2014 Scuderia Toro Rosso Toro Rosso STR9 Renault Energy F1-2014 1.6 V6 t AUS MAL BHR CHN ESP MON CAN AUT GBR GER HUN BEL ITA SIN JPN
TD
RUS USA
TD
BRA
TD
ABU  –  –
2015 Scuderia Toro Rosso Toro Rosso STR10 Renault Energy F1-2015 1.6 V6 t AUS
Ret
MAL
7
CHN
17
BHR
Ret
ESP
11
MON
Ret
CAN
15
AUT
8
GBR
Ret
HUN
4
BEL
8
ITA
12
SIN
8
JPN
9
RUS
10
USA
4
MEX
9
BRA
9
ABU
16
12th 49
2016 Scuderia Toro Rosso Toro Rosso STR11 Ferrari 060 1.6 V6 t AUS
10
BHR
6
CHN
8
RUS
Ret
5th 204
Red Bull Racing Red Bull Racing RB12 TAG Heuer F1-2016 1.6 V6 t ESP
1
MON
Ret
CAN
4
EUR
8
AUT
2
GBR
2
HUN
5
GER
3
BEL
11
ITA
7
SIN
6
MAL
2
JPN
2
USA
Ret
MEX
4
BRA
3
ABU
4
2017 Red Bull Racing Red Bull Racing RB13 TAG Heuer F1-2017 1.6 V6 t AUS
5
CHN
3
BHR
Ret
RUS
5
ESP
Ret
MON
5
CAN
Ret
AZE
Ret
AUT
Ret
GBR
4
HUN
5
BEL
Ret
ITA
10
SIN
Ret
MAL
1
JPN
2
USA
4
MEX
1
BRA
5
ABU
5
6th 168
2018 Aston Martin Red Bull Racing Red Bull Racing RB14 TAG Heuer F1-2018 1.6 V6 t AUS
6
BHR
Ret
CHN
5
AZE
Ret
ESP
3
MON
9
CAN
3
FRA
2
AUT
1
GBR
15
GER
4
HUN
Ret
BEL
3
ITA
5
SIN
2
RUS
5
JPN
3
USA
2
MEX
1
BRA
2
ABU
3
4th 249
2019 Aston Martin Red Bull Racing Red Bull Racing RB15 Honda RA619H 1.6 V6 t AUS
3
BHR
4
CHN
4
AZE
4
ESP
3
MON
4
CAN
5
FRA
4
AUT
1
GBR
5
GER
1
HUN
2
BEL
Ret
ITA
8
SIN
3
RUS
4
JPN
Ret
MEX
6
USA
3
BRA
1
ABU
2
3rd 278
2020 Aston Martin Red Bull Racing Red Bull Racing RB16 Honda RA620H 1.6 V6 t AUT
Ret
STY
3
HUN
2
GBR
2
70A
1
ESP
2
BEL
3
ITA
Ret
TUS
Ret
RUS
2
EIF
2
POR
3
EMI
Ret
TUR
6
BHR
2
SKH
Ret
ABU
1
3rd 214
2021 Red Bull Racing Honda Red Bull Racing RB16B Honda RA621H 1.6 V6 t BHR
2
EMI
1
POR
2
ESP
2
MON
1
AZE
18†
FRA
1
STY
1
AUT
1
GBR
Ret1
HUN
9
BEL
1‡
NED
1
ITA
Ret2
RUS
2
TUR
2
USA
1
MXC
1
SAP
22
QAT
2
SAU
2
ABU
1
1st 395.5
2022 Oracle Red Bull Racing Red Bull Racing RB18 Red Bull RBPTH001 1.6 V6 t BHR
19†
SAU
1
AUS
Ret
EMI
11
MIA
1
ESP
1
MON
3
AZE
1
CAN
1
GBR
7
AUT
21
FRA
1
HUN
1
BEL
1
NED
1
ITA
1
SIN
7
JPN
1
USA
1
MXC
1
SAP
64
ABU
1
1st 454
2023 Oracle Red Bull Racing Red Bull Racing RB19 Honda RBPTH001 1.6 V6 t BHR
1
SAU
2
AUS
1
AZE
23
MIA
1
MON
1
ESP
1
CAN
1
AUT
11
GBR
1
HUN
1
BEL
11
NED
1
ITA
1
SIN
5
JPN
1
QAT
12
USA
11
MXC
1
SAP
11
LVG
1
ABU
1
1st 575
2024 Oracle Red Bull Racing Red Bull Racing RB20 Honda RBPTH002 1.6 V6 t BHR
1
SAU
1
AUS
Ret
JPN
1
CHN
11
MIA
21
EMI
1
MON
6
CAN
1
ESP
1
AUT
51
GBR
2
HUN
5
BEL
4
NED
2
ITA
6
AZE
5
SIN
2
USA
31
MXC
6
SAP
14
LVG
5
QAT
18
ABU
6
1st 437
2025 Oracle Red Bull Racing Red Bull Racing RB21 Honda RBPTH003 1.6 V6 t AUS
2
CHN
43
JPN
1
BHR
6
SAU
2
MIA
4
EMI
1
MON
4
ESP
10
CAN
2
AUT
Ret
GBR
5
BEL
41
HUN
9
NED
2
ITA
1
AZE
1
SIN
2
USA
11
MXC
3
SAP
LVG
QAT
ABU
3rd* 321*
Sources:[415][417]

Did not finish, but was classified as he had completed more than 90% of the race distance.
Half points awarded as less than 75% of race distance was completed.
* Season still in progress.

Formula One records

[edit]

Verstappen holds the following Formula One records:

Record Achieved Ref
Age
Youngest driver to start a race 17 years, 166 days 2015 Australian Grand Prix [418]
Youngest driver to score points 17 years, 180 days 2015 Malaysian Grand Prix [419]
Youngest driver to score a podium finish 18 years, 228 days 2016 Spanish Grand Prix [420]
Youngest driver to win a race 18 years, 228 days 2016 Spanish Grand Prix [421]
Wins
Most wins in a season 19 2023 [422]
Most consecutive wins 10 2023 Miami Grand Prix2023 Italian Grand Prix [423]
Highest percentage of wins in a season 86.36% 2023 [424]
Most wins before first pole position 7[N 1] 2019 German Grand Prix [425]
Most wins from pole position in a season 12 2023 [426]
Most wins not starting from pole position in a season 9 2022 [427]
Most consecutive wins from pole position 18 2022 Dutch Grand Prix2024 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix [426]
Wins from most different grid slots 10 2024 São Paulo Grand Prix [428]
Wins from most different grid slots in a season 7 2022 [427]
Most sprint wins 13 2025 United States Grand Prix sprint [429]
Most sprint wins in a season 4 2023, 2024 [430]
Pole positions
Most consecutive pole positions 8[N 2] 2023 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix2024 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix [431]
Most consecutive pole positions from first race of season 7[N 3] 2024 [432]
Fastest qualifying lap 264.681 km/h 2025 Italian Grand Prix [433]
Podium finishes
Most podium finishes in a season 21 2023 [434]
Most consecutive top two finishes 15[N 4] 2022 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix2023 Italian Grand Prix [426]
Points
Most points in a season 575 2023 [435]
Highest percentage of points in a season 92.74% 2023 [430]
Most consecutive points scored 1055 2022 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix2024 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix [426]
Highest average points per race started 14.6 2025 Mexico City Grand Prix [436]
Highest average points per race started in a season 26.14 2023 [435]
Largest points deficit overturned to become World Champion 46 2022 [427]
Most points between first and second in the World Championship 290 2023 [430]
Highest percentage points difference between first and second in the World Championship 50.43% 2023 [430]
Laps led
Most laps led in a season 1003 2023 [437]
Highest percentage of laps led in a season 75.70% 2023 [437]
Most races led in a season 20 2023 [438]
Others
Highest average speed by a winning driver in a race 250.706 km/h 2025 Italian Grand Prix [439]
Lowest average speed by a winning driver in a race 53.583 km/h 2022 Japanese Grand Prix [440]
Most pit stops by a winning driver in a race 6[N 5] 2023 Dutch Grand Prix [430]
Most races left in a season when becoming World Champion 6[N 6] 2023 [441]
Most hat-tricks in a season 6 2023 [426]
Most consecutive seasons with a grand slam 5 20212025 [442]
Most consecutive races as championship leader 63 2022 Spanish Grand Prix2025 Australian Grand Prix [443]
Most consecutive days as championship leader 1029 2022 Spanish Grand Prix2025 Australian Grand Prix [444][443]
Footnotes
  1. ^ Record shared with Jackie Stewart.
  2. ^ Record shared with Ayrton Senna.
  3. ^ Record shared with Alain Prost (1993).
  4. ^ Record shared with Michael Schumacher.
  5. ^ Record shared with Jenson Button (2011 Canadian Grand Prix).
  6. ^ Record shared with Michael Schumacher (2002).

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
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Max Emilian Verstappen (born 30 September 1997) is a Belgian-born Dutch professional racing driver who competes in Formula One (F1) for the Red Bull Racing team, renowned as one of the sport's most dominant talents and a four-time consecutive World Drivers' Champion from 2021 to 2024.[1][2][3] Born in Hasselt, Belgium, to former F1 driver Jos Verstappen and successful karting champion Sophie Kumpen, he holds Dutch nationality and began racing at age four, quickly rising through junior categories to become F1's youngest-ever race debutant at 17 years and 166 days old in 2015.[2][3][1] Verstappen's early career was marked by prodigious talent, starting with karting successes in Belgium and the Netherlands before progressing to single-seaters; he won the 2013 WSK Super Master Series and finished runner-up in the CIK-FIA World Karting Championship that year.[2] In 2014, at age 16, he dominated the Formula 3 European Championship with ten wins in 27 races for Van Amersfoort Racing, earning promotion to F1 with Toro Rosso for the 2015 season after just nine rounds of F3.[2][3] His debut podium came in only his second race at the 2015 Hungarian Grand Prix, and he made history as the youngest F1 winner at the 2016 Spanish Grand Prix at age 18, his debut race for Red Bull after a mid-season promotion from Toro Rosso.[1][2] Since joining Red Bull full-time in 2016, Verstappen has amassed an extraordinary record, including 71 Grand Prix victories, 127 podium finishes, 48 pole positions, 36 fastest laps, and 3,444.5 career points across 233 starts as of the end of the 2025 season.[1] His breakthrough 2021 title ended Mercedes' dominance, clinched in a controversial season finale against Lewis Hamilton, and he defended it emphatically with 15 wins in 2022—setting records for the most victories in a season (19 in 2023) and most podium finishes in a season (21 in 2023)—before securing a fourth crown in 2024 despite team challenges.[1][4] Known for his aggressive overtaking, wet-weather mastery, and consistency, Verstappen has surpassed Sebastian Vettel for third on the all-time podium list with 127 and holds the records for most consecutive race wins (10 in 2023) and most consecutive pole positions (8, shared with Ayrton Senna).[5][6] In the 2025 season, Verstappen finished second in the Drivers' Standings with 421 points from 24 races, including eight victories and 15 podiums, amid fierce competition from McLaren and Ferrari drivers.[7][8] Off the track, he is involved in sim racing, owns an e-sports team, and welcomed his first child, a daughter, with partner Kelly Piquet in May 2025.[9] His influence extends beyond racing, inspiring a new generation while embodying the high-stakes intensity of modern F1.[3]

Early years

Early life

Max Emilian Verstappen was born on 30 September 1997 in Hasselt, Belgium, to Jos Verstappen, a Dutch former Formula One driver, and Sophie Kumpen, a Belgian former karting champion.[2][10] His parents' racing backgrounds provided early inspiration, with Jos's professional career in motorsport influencing the family's focus on the sport from the outset.[11] Following his parents' divorce in 2008, Verstappen moved to live with his father near the Dutch-Belgian border, while his younger sister Victoria stayed with their mother in Belgium.[12] This relocation immersed him in a Dutch-influenced environment in Limburg, where he spent much of his childhood traveling for racing activities under his father's guidance.[13] Verstappen's early interest in motorsport was shaped by his parents' legacies, leading to his first go-karting experience at age four in 2002, when he began practicing on local tracks.[14] He received his primary and secondary education in schools along the border region, initially attending a secondary school in Maaseik, Belgium, before transitioning to private tutoring to accommodate his growing racing commitments.[15]

Family background

Max Verstappen's family has deep roots in motorsport, with both parents having competed at high levels, which profoundly influenced his early exposure to racing. His father, Jos Verstappen, was a professional Formula One driver who competed in 107 Grands Prix between 1994 and 2003, racing for teams including Benetton and Arrows.[16] Jos transitioned from his own racing career to become Max's primary coach, guiding him through karting and junior formulae with a rigorous approach that emphasized discipline and performance.[17][18] On the maternal side, Max's mother, Sophie Kumpen, achieved success as a karting champion in the 1980s and 1990s, including winning the prestigious Andrea Margutti Trophy in 1995 and securing Belgian national titles as a junior.[19][20] Kumpen, a Belgian racer who began competing at age 11, provided a supportive environment steeped in racing knowledge, though she largely stepped back from her career after Max's birth to focus on family.[21] Max has a younger sister, Victoria Verstappen, born in 1999, who briefly pursued karting, notably winning a 100-mile endurance race at the Genk International Karting Circuit in 2014.[22] Victoria later shifted interests toward modeling and fashion, becoming an influencer with a significant social media presence and launching her own clothing line, Unleash the Lion.[23] Jos and Sophie married in 1996 but divorced in 2008 amid reported tensions, including frequent arguments that created a challenging home environment for Max and Victoria during their formative years.[24] Despite the separation, both parents maintained involvement in Max's racing development, with Jos handling on-track coaching and Sophie offering emotional support, ensuring continuity in the family's dedication to his career.[25] This familial racing heritage directly shaped Max's early karting start at age four, fostering his rapid progression in the sport.[18]

Junior racing career

Karting (2005–2013)

Max Verstappen began his karting career at the age of four and a half, initially training on local tracks in Belgium and the Netherlands under the supervision of his father, Jos Verstappen, a former Formula One driver. By age seven, he entered competitive racing, quickly establishing dominance in age-appropriate national categories. His early success was marked by a win in the 2005 VAS Championship Mini Junior class in Belgium, where he secured victory in every race of the season.[26] In 2006, Verstappen repeated as VAS Mini Junior champion, demonstrating consistent performance in Belgian national events.[26] From 2007 to 2009, Verstappen expanded his national triumphs across Belgian and Dutch series, often competing in Mini Max and cadet classes. He claimed the 2007 Dutch Rotax Mini Max Championship and Rotax Max Challenge Belgium Mini Max title, showcasing his adaptability to different kart specifications.[26] In 2008, at age 10, he won the Belgian Cadet Championship, Rotax Max Challenge Belgium Mini Max, and BNL Karting Series Mini Max, highlighting his growing prowess in regional competitions.[26] The following year, 2009, saw further victories in the Rotax Max Challenge Belgium Mini Max, Belgian KF5 Championship, and BNL Karting Series Mini Max, solidifying his reputation as a dominant force in junior karting.[26] These achievements were supported by intensive training overseen by Jos, who emphasized discipline and technical precision from a young age.[27] In 2010, at age 12, Verstappen transitioned to the international stage in the KF3 category, joining the CRG team. He won the WSK Euro Series KF3 Championship with five victories and multiple podiums across 10 races, along with the WSK World Series KF3, Bridgestone Cup European Final KF3, and WSK Nations Cup KF3 titles.[26] This marked his entry into high-level European competition, where he outperformed older rivals. He defended his WSK Euro Series KF3 title in 2011, further building his international profile.[26] The 2012 season saw Verstappen move to the KF2 class with the Intrepid Driver Program, achieving wins in the South Garda Winter Cup KF2 and WSK Master Series KF2.[26] He also secured a second-place finish in the CIK-FIA European KF2 Championship, earning a podium in a competitive field despite challenges like penalties in some events.[28] These results positioned him as a rising star in CIK-FIA-sanctioned series. Verstappen's 2013 season, at age 15, was record-breaking as he competed in senior categories ahead of the minimum age limit. Returning to CRG, he won the South Garda Winter Cup KF2, WSK Euro Series KZ1, and WSK Master Series KZ2 titles.[29] In CIK-FIA events, he claimed the European KF Championship after strong performances at Alcañiz, Spain, and Ortona, Italy; the European KZ Championship; and the World KZ Championship at Varennes-sur-Allier, France, becoming the youngest champion in its history.[30] He finished third in the World KF Championship, capping an unprecedented year with three major CIK-FIA titles in one season.[29]

Lower formulae (2014)

In early 2014, at the age of 16, Verstappen made his debut in single-seater racing by competing in the inaugural Florida Winter Series, a developmental series using Tatuus FA-010 chassis powered by Abarth engines.[31] He participated in all 12 races across four event weekends at Sebring, Palm Beach, and Homestead-Miami Speedway, securing two victories—in the shortened third race at Palm Beach, where he led from pole position, and the finale at Homestead, where he edged out Nicholas Latifi by just 0.004 seconds.[32] These results, along with multiple podiums, demonstrated his rapid adaptation from karting to open-wheel cars, finishing third in the unofficial overall standings.[33] Following this promising start, Verstappen transitioned to the FIA Formula 3 European Championship, joining Dutch team Van Amersfoort Racing for the mid-season rounds beginning at Hockenheim in May. In his rookie campaign, he contested 22 of the 33 races, achieving a remarkable 10 wins—including a hat-trick at Spa-Francorchamps—and numerous podiums, which propelled him to third place in the drivers' standings with 411 points, behind Esteban Ocon and Tom Blomqvist.[34] [35] His performances highlighted exceptional racecraft and speed, with standout drives such as recovering from 14th to win at the Norisring.[36] To cap his 2014 season, Verstappen competed in the prestigious Macau Grand Prix, a non-championship Formula 3 event known for its challenging street circuit.[37] After qualifying third overall but dropping to 24th on the grid due to a crash during the qualifying race while battling for the lead, he delivered an impressive recovery, overtaking 17 cars to finish seventh and set the fastest lap in the closing stages.[38] This drive underscored his adaptability and resilience under pressure on one of motorsport's most demanding tracks. Verstappen's dominant showings in these series caught the attention of Red Bull Racing, who signed him to their junior program in August 2014 after monitoring his progress throughout the year.[39] Impressed by his maturity and results, the team opted to fast-track him directly to Formula One with Toro Rosso for 2015, bypassing the traditional GP2 Series step—a decision that sparked debate but reflected confidence in his potential.[40] [41]

Formula One career

Toro Rosso (2015–2016)

Max Verstappen made his Formula 1 debut with Scuderia Toro Rosso at the 2015 Australian Grand Prix, becoming the youngest driver in the sport's history at 17 years and 166 days old.[42][43] Driving the STR10 powered by Renault, he qualified 12th but retired on lap 44 due to a brake issue, missing a potential points finish after running as high as seventh.[44] Throughout the season, Verstappen achieved 12 points-scoring finishes in 19 races, accumulating 49 points and helping Toro Rosso to sixth in the Constructors' Championship.[45] His standout performance came at the Hungarian Grand Prix, where he finished fourth after a chaotic race involving multiple retirements and safety cars, marking his best result of the year and the team's strongest since 2008.[46][47] Verstappen's rookie campaign included notable on-track incidents, particularly a team radio controversy at the Singapore Grand Prix. In the closing laps, Toro Rosso instructed him to yield position to teammate Carlos Sainz Jr. for a higher points return, but Verstappen refused, responding emphatically with "No" over the radio, and held on to finish seventh.[48][49] The team later acknowledged the order was unnecessary, praising Verstappen's pace.[50] Compared to Sainz, who scored 18 points, Verstappen outperformed him overall, securing more points and demonstrating superior racecraft despite a close qualifying head-to-head where Sainz held a slight edge in direct duels.[51][52] This edge was evident in Verstappen's ability to extract more from the STR10, often through aggressive overtakes and tire management. In 2016, Verstappen continued with Toro Rosso in the STR11, which utilized a 2015-spec Ferrari power unit that struggled with reliability and lost competitiveness as rivals updated their engines, resulting in significant power deficits.[53] The car faced technical challenges, including inconsistent aerodynamics and braking issues in high-altitude conditions, limiting the team's potential despite a more refined chassis design.[54] He started the season strongly, scoring points with a sixth-place finish in Bahrain after qualifying 10th and battling through the field, followed by eighth in China where he managed tire degradation effectively on a demanding track.[55] These results highlighted his growing adaptation to Formula 1's physical demands, including sustaining high g-forces over longer stints—up to 5g in corners—compared to his junior series experience, for which he underwent intensive fitness training to build neck strength and endurance.[56][57] By the early races, Verstappen had completed four Grands Prix with Toro Rosso, consistently finishing in the points when the car allowed, before the team's mid-season lineup changes.[58]

Red Bull (2016–present)

Max Verstappen was promoted to the Red Bull Racing team mid-season in 2016, replacing Daniil Kvyat after the Monaco Grand Prix, with the switch taking effect for the Spanish Grand Prix.[59] At just 18 years old, Verstappen made an immediate impact by winning the Spanish Grand Prix on his debut for the senior team, becoming the youngest race winner in Formula One history.[60] This victory, achieved through strong pace and overtaking maneuvers on the Circuit de Catalunya, marked Red Bull's first win of the season and propelled Verstappen to fifth in the Drivers' Championship standings by year's end.[61] In 2017, Verstappen faced reliability challenges with the RB13 car early in the season, including mechanical retirements that hampered his consistency, though Red Bull's development improved mid-year. He secured his first victory of the year in Azerbaijan, but a double-stack pit stop blunder that disadvantaged teammate Daniel Ricciardo highlighted intra-team tensions. By 2018, reliability woes persisted, exemplified by a high-speed crash with Ricciardo in the Azerbaijan Grand Prix that ended both drivers' races.[62] Despite these setbacks, Verstappen achieved podium consistency, culminating in a dominant win at the Mexican Grand Prix, where he started from pole and fended off Lewis Hamilton to claim Red Bull's final victory of the Renault era.[63] Verstappen continued to outperform his teammates in 2019, significantly outpacing Pierre Gasly, who was demoted to Toro Rosso mid-season and replaced by Alexander Albon.[64] This dominance extended into 2020, where he again led Albon in qualifying and race results, while Sergio Pérez at Racing Point provided strong external competition but was later recruited by Red Bull.[65] A highlight came at the 70th Anniversary Grand Prix at Silverstone, where Verstappen capitalized on Mercedes' tire degradation to secure Red Bull's first win of the season, finishing ahead of both Hamilton and Bottas.[66] The 2021 season saw Verstappen engage in an intense title battle with Hamilton, trading wins and points leads across 22 races, with the championship decided in the controversial Abu Dhabi Grand Prix finale.[67] Under safety car conditions after a late incident, race director Michael Masi's decision to allow only certain lapped cars to unlap themselves enabled a one-lap shootout, where Verstappen overtook Hamilton on fresher tires to claim his first Drivers' Championship.[68] Mercedes protested the result, but it was upheld by the FIA, marking a dramatic end to the season.[69] In 2022, with the superior RB18 car and Honda power unit, Verstappen delivered a dominant performance, securing 15 victories from 22 races—including a streak of 10 consecutive wins—to clinch his second consecutive title early in Japan.[70] This tally set a new single-season record for wins, surpassing Michael Schumacher's 13 from 2004, and helped Red Bull win both championships. Verstappen extended his dominance in 2023, winning a record 19 of 22 Grands Prix with the RB19, achieving an 86.3% win rate and securing his third straight Drivers' Championship in Qatar.[71] His victories spanned diverse conditions, from sprint races to wet-weather triumphs, solidifying Red Bull's constructors' supremacy.[72] The 2024 campaign brought challenges for Red Bull, including internal tensions stemming from an investigation into team principal Christian Horner, which Jos Verstappen publicly warned was "driving the team apart."[73] Despite the RB20's balance issues and performance struggles later in the season, Verstappen adapted to claim his fourth consecutive title, winning key races like São Paulo in wet conditions to overcome a points deficit.[74] The 2025 season saw Verstappen engaged in a fierce rivalry with McLaren's Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri. McLaren led the constructors' standings with 12 team wins by October, but Verstappen mounted a strong challenge with multiple victories, including at the Emilia-Romagna Grand Prix (Imola), and several comeback drives that reduced McLaren's points lead at times. A key highlight was securing pole position at the 2025 Italian Grand Prix at Monza with a qualifying lap time of 1:18.792, setting a new lap record at the circuit.[75] The season concluded with Lando Norris winning the Drivers' Championship with 423 points, while Verstappen finished second with 421 points—missing the title by just two points—having recorded 8 victories and 15 podiums across 24 races.[8][7] The 2026 season began under new regulations. During qualifying for the Australian Grand Prix, Verstappen crashed out in Q1 after a sudden rear axle lock-up under braking sent him spinning into the barriers. In his post-qualifying interview, he focused on the incident, explaining that he had "never experienced something like that before in [his] career" and did not complain about the new regulations. He had criticized the 2026 regulations earlier in the weekend as "complicated" and "a bit late" to change, given the significant investments already made by teams.[76][77][78] In March 2026, ahead of the Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka, Verstappen was involved in a notable media incident. During a pre-race press conference in Red Bull's hospitality suite on March 26, he refused to begin answering questions until The Guardian journalist Giles Richards left the room. Verstappen stated, "I'm not speaking before he's leaving," and repeatedly told Richards to "Get out" until he complied. The grudge stemmed from the post-race press conference at the 2025 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, where Richards asked Verstappen if his collision with George Russell at the 2025 Spanish Grand Prix—which resulted in a 10-second penalty and points loss—was to blame for losing the 2025 Drivers' Championship to Lando Norris by two points. Verstappen had responded critically at the time, mentioning a "stupid grin," and held onto the resentment for over three months. The event drew attention to Verstappen's occasionally prickly relationship with the media when he perceives questions as provocative. Richards later wrote about the incident in The Guardian, expressing deep disappointment over the escalation despite prior amicable interviews with Verstappen. He revealed receiving swift online abuse, including personal emails, but affirmed his personal wellbeing and expressed hope for reconciliation with Verstappen.

2025–2026 contract speculation

In early 2025, amid Red Bull's performance challenges and ahead of major 2026 regulation changes, speculation emerged about Max Verstappen potentially leaving Red Bull Racing for the 2026 season despite his contract running until 2028. Links primarily focused on Mercedes, with Toto Wolff initially denying any conversations in April 2025, stating "We didn’t have any conversations" and emphasizing commitment to George Russell and Kimi Antonelli. By June 2025, George Russell revealed Mercedes were in talks with Verstappen, after which Wolff refused to deny the discussions. Verstappen later reflected on talks held earlier in the year. No prominent public denials of contract conversations emerged from Ferrari or McLaren regarding potential interest in Verstappen for 2026. Ferrari's driver lineup remained stable with Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton, while McLaren CEO Zak Brown commented on Verstappen's situation without denying exploratory inquiries. Ultimately, on July 31, 2025, Verstappen confirmed he would remain with Red Bull for the 2026 season, stating it was "always quite clear that I was staying" and calling for an end to the rumors. This ended speculation of a switch, affirming his commitment to the team through the end of his contract in 2028.

Driver profile

Racing style and strengths

Max Verstappen is renowned for his exceptional qualifying prowess, having secured 47 pole positions by the 2025 season, placing him fifth on the all-time list among Formula 1 drivers. His one-lap pace is characterized by precise control and the ability to extract maximum performance under pressure, often demonstrated through rapid turn-in and strong front-end balance in high-stakes sessions. This skill has been evident since his early career, where he adapted quickly to demanding conditions, such as wet qualifying at the Norisring in Formula 3, showcasing an innate feel for the car's limits.[79][80] In terms of racecraft, Verstappen employs an aggressive yet calculated approach to overtaking, exemplified by his bold move on Lewis Hamilton at the 2021 British Grand Prix, where he defended his position tenaciously through the high-speed Copse corner. His mastery in wet conditions further highlights this, particularly during the 2016 Brazilian Grand Prix, where he charged from 16th to third in treacherous rain, executing daring passes with composure and precision that earned widespread acclaim as one of the season's standout drives. These attributes reflect a style that balances risk with reward, allowing him to thrive in chaotic scenarios.[81][82] Verstappen's adaptability shines in his tire management and feedback to engineers, enabling him to optimize setups for varying track conditions and maximize stint lengths despite his aggressive inputs. He provides detailed, actionable insights to his team, such as emphasizing the role of his race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase in refining overall car balance, which has been crucial to Red Bull's performance adjustments in recent seasons. This engineering-minded approach allows him to fine-tune the car's handling mid-weekend, ensuring competitiveness even when the machinery is not the fastest.[80][83] His consistency is a cornerstone of his success, marked by unparalleled control and a low retirement rate relative to his bold racing style, with only mechanical issues or rare collisions interrupting his runs in dominant years. Verstappen's mental resilience enables quick recovery from setbacks, as seen in his ability to rebound strongly after challenging races, contributing to four consecutive world titles from 2021 to 2024. This steadfast performance under pressure underscores his reputation as one of the grid's most reliable drivers.[80][84]

Achievements and records

Max Verstappen has achieved significant milestones in Formula One, including four consecutive Drivers' World Championships from 2021 to 2024, making him one of only seven drivers in history to secure four titles.[85] By November 2025, he had amassed 68 Grand Prix victories, surpassing 60 wins and placing him among the all-time greats in race triumphs.[86] His dominance is further highlighted by a record 19 wins in the 2023 season, the highest number in a single F1 campaign to date.[6] Verstappen holds the distinction of being the youngest driver to win a Formula One Grand Prix, achieving victory at the 2016 Spanish Grand Prix at 18 years and 228 days old, a record previously set by Sebastian Vettel.[87] This triumph marked the start of his ascent, with additional records including the most consecutive race wins (10 in 2023) and the highest percentage of victories in a season (86.4% in 2023).[6] His four titles also represent the longest streak of consecutive championships by a driver since Michael Schumacher's five from 2000 to 2004. In terms of teammate performance, Verstappen has demonstrated overwhelming superiority since joining Red Bull in 2016, outscoring every teammate across his tenure, including a complete dominance over Sergio Pérez from 2021 to 2024 with 67 Grand Prix head-to-head wins to Pérez's 5 (excluding DNFs) and 53 victories to Pérez's 5.[88] Against Pérez specifically, he maintained a near-perfect qualifying record, outqualifying him in 49 of the last 50 sessions as of the end of 2024.[88] In 2025, Verstappen continued his dominance over teammate Liam Lawson, outperforming him in qualifying and race results across the season.[89] Prior to Formula One, Verstappen established several youth benchmarks in junior racing categories. In 2014, at age 16, he secured an early podium in the FIA European Formula 3 Championship as a rookie, contributing to his reputation for precocious talent in lower formulae.[90] These early successes, including multiple wins in the Florida Winter Series, laid the foundation for his rapid progression to F1.[91]

Other racing activities

Sportscar and endurance racing

In addition to his Formula One commitments, Max Verstappen has pursued opportunities in sportscar and endurance racing to broaden his driving experience and explore long-term ambitions beyond single-seater racing. His motivations include diversifying his skills across different car types and race formats, enjoying the team-oriented nature of endurance events, and tackling iconic challenges like 24-hour races, which he views as a way to stay competitive post-F1. Verstappen has expressed a desire to compete in all major endurance events, such as the 24 Hours of Le Mans, 24 Hours of Spa, 24 Hours of Nürburgring, and 24 Hours of Daytona, emphasizing the appeal of high-stakes, multi-driver efforts that test reliability and strategy over raw speed.[92][93] Verstappen's entry into real-world sportscar racing is closely tied to Verstappen.com Racing, the team he co-founded in 2022 initially to support sim racing, rallying, and GT efforts, with significant collaboration from his father Jos, a former F1 driver experienced in endurance formats. Jos has been instrumental in the team's rally program and overall development, while Max provides strategic input and branding, fostering a family-driven venture that aligns with their shared passion for motorsport variety. In 2025, the team expanded into GT3 racing by partnering with 2 Seas Motorsport to field an Aston Martin Vantage AMR GT3 Evo in the GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup, marking a professional step into sportscar series.[94][95] Although F1 scheduling has limited his direct involvement, Verstappen made his personal sportscar debut in September 2025 at the Nürburgring Nordschleife during round 9 of the Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie (NLS), driving a Ferrari 296 GT3 for Emil Frey Racing alongside sim racing convert Chris Lulham. The four-hour endurance race served as a key step to obtain his DMSB Nordschleife permit, essential for future 24-hour events at the venue, and highlighted the endurance challenges of the 20.8 km Green Hell circuit, including variable weather and traffic management. Starting third after qualifying issues, Verstappen took the lead early and secured victory by 24.5 seconds, setting a near-record lap time of 7:51.514 despite rain, demonstrating his adaptability in GT3 machinery. His debut win prompted the DMSB to revise Nordschleife permit rules in late 2025, easing access for sim racers by recognizing virtual qualifications.[96][97][98] Verstappen has repeatedly voiced strong interest in the 24 Hours of Le Mans as a pinnacle goal, citing its prestige and the unique endurance demands of balancing speed, fuel management, and night stints over 24 hours. He has been approached by Le Mans teams and envisions competing in the Hypercar class with teammates like Nyck de Vries or Fernando Alonso, though Balance of Performance regulations and F1 calendar overlaps remain hurdles. His Nordschleife success has accelerated preparations, with Red Bull granting flexibility for such events; as of November 2025, he is confirmed to participate in the 2026 24 Hours of Nürburgring, positioning him for potential Le Mans entry thereafter if logistics align.[99][100][101] In early 2026, Verstappen competed in another round of the Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie (NLS) at the Nürburgring, this time driving for Winward Racing. However, he was disqualified from the event, with details of the infringement covered in contemporary reports.[102][103][104]

Sim racing and esports

Max Verstappen has been deeply involved in sim racing since his early Formula One career, leveraging virtual platforms as both a training tool and competitive outlet. His participation in iRacing special events highlights his prowess in esports, where he has secured notable victories with Team Redline. In 2021, Verstappen won the iRacing 24 Hours of Nürburgring alongside teammates Maximilian Benecke and Chris Lulham, dominating the top split in a BMW entry. He also triumphed in the 2021 iRacing Bathurst 12 Hour, outperforming over 50 competitors with Enzo Bonito. These successes extended into later years, including a top-split victory at the 2024 iRacing 24 Hours of Spa with Diogo C. Pinto, Chris Lulham, and Florian A. Lebigre. From 2021 to 2025, Verstappen consistently competed in Team Redline's iRacing campaigns, such as the 2025 Daytona 24 Hours and Nürburgring 24 Hours, often balancing these with his F1 schedule.[105][106] Verstappen's sim racing engagements gained prominence during the COVID-19 pandemic, when real-world racing halted, transforming his home setup from a casual hobby into a primary competitive avenue. Confined in Monaco, he raced frequently on iRacing to maintain sharpness, stating it helped preserve his driving instincts amid the lockdown. In 2020, he participated in the inaugural 24 Hours of Le Mans Virtual with Team Redline, driving an Oreca 07 Gibson alongside Lando Norris, Atze Kerkhof, and Greger Huttu, though technical issues led to a retirement before completing half the distance. He also clinched the championship in Team Redline's Real Racers Never Quit esports series that year, outperforming rivals like Kelvin van der Linde in a multi-round format. His real-world racing experience notably enhanced his sim performance, allowing quick adaptation to virtual tracks and strategies. Verstappen's custom home sim rig, featuring a modified F1-style Playseat chassis for reduced flex, a Bodnar SimSteering direct-drive wheelbase, Precision Sim Engineering rim, Heusinkveld and Simtec pedals, and a quadruple-monitor array for immersion and telemetry, facilitated this transition.[107][108][109][110] Beyond competition, Verstappen has built a significant presence in esports streaming, primarily through collaborations on Team Redline's platforms. He began live-streaming on Twitch in 2020 during the pandemic, often joining Team Redline broadcasts for iRacing events, which drew substantial viewership from F1 fans and sim enthusiasts. By 2025, his personal Twitch channel, MaxVerstappen, amassed over 471,000 followers, while joint streams with pros like Lando Norris and Team Redline teammates routinely attracted hundreds of thousands of concurrent viewers, fostering interactive sessions on race strategies and virtual challenges. These streams not only showcased his competitive edge but also highlighted collaborations with esports professionals, such as joint runs in endurance sims, solidifying his role in bridging professional motorsport and virtual gaming.[111][112]

Business and team ventures

Verstappen.com Racing

Verstappen.com Racing was launched in April 2022 by Max Verstappen as an umbrella organization to consolidate his involvement in diverse motorsport activities, including support for real-world racing teams and drivers.[113] The team is managed directly by Verstappen, with founding partner Red Bull contributing to its logo design and overall structure, reflecting his passion for sharing racing knowledge across disciplines.[94] The primary focus of Verstappen.com Racing is to support talented drivers, particularly young Dutch talents, through advanced training and competitive opportunities in GT and open-wheel series.[114] This includes providing elite simulator training via the team's Pro Simulation facility in Tilburg, Netherlands, tailored for drivers in junior categories such as Formula 4, Formula Regional European Championship, and Formula 3, helping them transition from karting to higher levels.[115] Dutch driver Thierry Vermeulen, a key team protégé, has benefited from this support, competing in GT3 events with Emil Frey Racing since 2022 and achieving podium finishes in the ADAC GT Masters and GT World Challenge Europe Sprint Cup.[116] Team achievements highlight the program's impact, with Vermeulen securing multiple top-five results in 2023 DTM races and contributing to strong showings in 2024 GT series events.[114] In 2025, the team expanded to field two Ferrari 296 GT3 cars in the GT World Challenge Europe Sprint and Endurance Cups, pairing Vermeulen with British sim-to-real racer Chris Lulham, who debuted in GT4 before stepping up.[114] Rally efforts are led by Jos Verstappen, who has competed in the Belgian Rally Championship and international events under the banner since 2022.[117] The overarching goals of Verstappen.com Racing are to foster driver development and expand Verstappen's influence in motorsport beyond Formula 1, creating pathways for emerging talents while emphasizing performance optimization and knowledge sharing.[94] Inspired by his own rapid progression from karting in 2005 to Formula 1 by 2015, Verstappen uses the team to nurture similar journeys for others.[118]

Sponsorships and endorsements

Max Verstappen's sponsorship portfolio has grown substantially alongside his racing success, encompassing major brand partnerships that extend beyond his Red Bull Racing team affiliation. His primary sponsor, Red Bull, provides extensive financial backing through a contract extension signed in March 2022, securing his commitment to the team until the end of the 2028 season at an estimated €50 million annually, including base salary and performance incentives.[119] This deal underscores Red Bull's investment in Verstappen as a global ambassador for the energy drink brand, featuring him in international marketing campaigns.[120] By 2025, Verstappen's combined earnings from his Red Bull salary and personal endorsements reached approximately $65 million per year, positioning him as the highest-paid athlete in Formula One and among the top earners in global sports.[121] Key endorsements include a multi-year partnership with Viaplay, initiated in 2022, where he serves as a brand ambassador and collaborates on exclusive documentary-style content about his life on and off the track, targeted at F1 fans in the Netherlands and Nordic countries.[122] Similarly, Electronic Arts (EA) Sports signed Verstappen to a personal endorsement agreement in February 2023, which includes helmet branding during races and joint content creation to promote the annual F1 video game series, leveraging his sim racing expertise.[123] In lifestyle and fashion sectors, Verstappen expanded his deals with apparel and luxury goods brands. In February 2025, he was appointed global brand ambassador for AlphaTauri, Red Bull's premium clothing line, promoting its performance-oriented collections through campaigns and personal endorsements that highlight his off-track style.[124] For watches, TAG Heuer, the official timekeeper for Red Bull Racing, features Verstappen prominently in its marketing, releasing limited-edition chronographs like the TAG Heuer Formula 1 Max Verstappen Special Edition to commemorate his championships.[125] These sponsorships also intersect with philanthropic efforts, as Verstappen directs portions of his endorsement income toward initiatives in the Netherlands, including support for junior racing development through partnerships like the Red Bull Junior Team, which funds emerging talents in karting and lower formulae.[126]

Personal life

Family and relationships

Verstappen has been in a relationship with Kelly Piquet, daughter of three-time Formula One World Champion Nelson Piquet, since 2020.[127] The couple, who met several years earlier through mutual connections in the racing world, bonded over shared interests including frequent travels and family-oriented vacations.[128] In May 2025, they welcomed their first child together, daughter Lily, further strengthening their partnership amid Verstappen's demanding racing schedule.[129] Verstappen shares a close bond with his younger sister, Victoria Verstappen, who is nearly three years his junior and has occasionally pursued karting herself.[130] The siblings maintain a supportive dynamic, with joint appearances at family holidays and social events highlighting their familial ties, such as recent vacations where Victoria joined Verstappen, Piquet, and their children.[131] Despite his global prominence, Verstappen adopts a stance of limited public disclosure regarding his personal relationships, prioritizing privacy for himself and his family.[132] This approach drew heightened media scrutiny during the contentious 2021 title fight, when intense coverage of his on-track battles occasionally spilled into speculation about his off-track life.[13] His parents remain integral to his support system in adulthood; father Jos Verstappen, a former Formula One driver, continues to offer career advice and strategic input, while mother Sophie Kumpen provides emotional backing rooted in her own racing background.[133][134]

Interests and philanthropy

Verstappen maintains a balanced lifestyle away from the racetrack, with a keen interest in video gaming that extends beyond sim racing. He has openly shared his enthusiasm for games like Minecraft, describing it as an "addiction" during off-periods, where he spends hours building virtual worlds as a form of relaxation and creativity.[135] This hobby, which he has pursued since childhood, provides a mental escape and complements his competitive nature in non-racing environments.[136] Another prominent interest is padel tennis, a fast-growing racket sport that Verstappen adopted around 2023. He frequently plays during summer breaks and race weekends, often partnering with fellow Formula 1 drivers like Lando Norris or his father Jos, crediting it for keeping him physically sharp and mentally focused.[137] Padel's blend of strategy and agility appeals to his athletic background, and he has been spotted enjoying casual matches in locations like Brazil ahead of Grand Prix events.[138] In terms of philanthropy, Verstappen has demonstrated a commitment to supporting vulnerable children and health causes. In December 2024, following a friendly wager lost to Formula E CEO Jeff Dodds, Formula E donated $125,000 to Wings for Life, Red Bull Racing's partner charity dedicated to funding research for a cure for spinal cord injuries.[139][140] He has also contributed to the Princess Charlene of Monaco Foundation by auctioning Formula 1 memorabilia, raising funds for child water safety programs and drowning prevention initiatives worldwide.[141] Verstappen's lifestyle reflects his low-key preferences, residing in a rented luxury apartment in Monaco valued at approximately $16 million, which offers harbor views and serves as his primary base due to its tax advantages for high-earning athletes.[142] He shares the home with three cats and a dachshund named Nino, adopted in early 2025, highlighting his affection for animals despite a busy schedule.[143] His Dutch roots keep him connected to the Netherlands, where he visits family and engages with local causes. To connect with his global fanbase, Verstappen leverages social media effectively, amassing over 17 million Instagram followers by November 2025 through posts blending personal moments, racing updates, and motivational content that foster a relatable public image.[144] This engagement extends to charitable appeals, such as promoting donations for disaster relief in flood-affected regions like Brazil in 2024.[145]

Awards and honors

Formula One accolades

Max Verstappen has secured four consecutive Formula One World Drivers' Championships from 2021 to 2024, becoming the first Dutch driver and one of only five in history to achieve this feat.[1][146] In 2021, Verstappen clinched his maiden title in a dramatic finale at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, finishing with 395.5 points ahead of Lewis Hamilton's 387.5, marking the end of Hamilton's bid for an eighth championship.[147][2] He amassed 10 race victories that season, contributing significantly to Red Bull's strong performance despite Mercedes' dominance in the constructors' standings.[1] The 2022 season saw Verstappen dominate with a record 15 wins out of 22 races, earning 454 points—another F1 record at the time—and securing the title early in Japan.[148][42] This haul helped Red Bull claim the Constructors' Championship with 759 points, their first since 2013.[149] Verstappen elevated his performance in 2023, shattering records with 19 victories from 22 Grands Prix and 575 points, clinching the drivers' title in sprint fashion at the United States Grand Prix.[150][151] Red Bull swept the constructors' crown again, amassing 860 points and achieving a perfect podium streak across all races.[152][153] In 2024, despite intra-team challenges and increased competition, Verstappen defended his crown with nine wins and 437 points, sealing the championship at the Las Vegas Grand Prix.[154][155][156] Red Bull finished third in constructors with 589 points, behind McLaren and Ferrari.[157] As of November 2025, Verstappen has accumulated 68 career race victories, including five in the ongoing 2025 season, underscoring his consistency and adaptability.[86][158] He also holds 47 pole positions and has been voted Driver of the Day 46 times since the award's inception in 2016, the most of any driver.[159][160][161] Beyond championships, Verstappen received the 2022 Laureus World Sportsman of the Year award, recognizing his 2021 title win as the first Dutch recipient in that category.[162][163]
SeasonDrivers' Championship PositionPointsRace WinsConstructors' Team Result
20211st395.5102nd (Red Bull)
20221st454151st (Red Bull)
20231st575191st (Red Bull)
20241st43793rd (Red Bull)

Other recognitions

In recognition of his achievements in motorsport, Max Verstappen was appointed Officer in the Order of Orange-Nassau by the Dutch government in September 2022, a prestigious chivalric order that honors exceptional contributions to society and sport.[164] This rank, the third highest in the order, was bestowed upon him ahead of the Dutch Grand Prix at Zandvoort, highlighting his role in elevating the profile of Formula One in the Netherlands.[165] Beyond traditional racing, Verstappen has received accolades in sim racing, winning the Best Real-World Pro award at the inaugural Esports Awards in December 2020 for his competitive performances in virtual series like the Porsche TAG Heuer Esports Supercup and Team Redline events.[166] This recognition underscores his proficiency in esports, where he has competed professionally since 2015, often finishing on podiums and securing victories in high-profile iRacing competitions.[167] Verstappen was shortlisted for the BBC Sports Personality of the Year World Sports Star award in December 2021, placing him among global athletes like Novak Djokovic and Tom Brady for his dramatic Formula One title contention that season.[168] As a rising talent in his debut Formula One year, Verstappen earned the FIA Personality of the Year award in 2015, along with Rookie of the Year and Action of the Year honors, celebrating his bold overtakes and rapid adaptation to the series. In 2024, Verstappen was named to TIME magazine's 100 Most Influential People list in the Titans category, praised for his dominant racing season and broader impact on the sport's global popularity.[169] In 2025, Verstappen won the ESPYS Best Driver award for the third consecutive year.[170]

Racing records

Karting achievements

Max Verstappen began his karting career at the age of four and quickly dominated national competitions in the Netherlands. Between 2008 and 2011, he secured four Dutch national championships, including titles in the MiniMax class in 2008 and 2009, as well as junior categories in 2010 and 2011.[171] These victories showcased his early talent, often winning the majority of races in his age group. On the international stage, Verstappen achieved significant success, particularly with CRG chassis. He won WSK titles in 2010, claiming the Euro Series and World Series in the KF3 category at age 13, and again in 2013 with the Euro Series in KZ1 and Master Series in KZ2.[171] His pinnacle came in 2013, when, at just 15 years old, he became the youngest-ever CIK-FIA World Champion by winning the KZ category, alongside European Championships in both KF and KZ classes—an unprecedented triple crown in a single season.[30][172] Throughout his karting tenure from 2005 to 2013, Verstappen amassed over 100 race victories, establishing himself as one of the sport's most prolific young talents.[173]

CIK-FIA Results

2013 European KF Championship Standings

RankDriverPoints
1Max Verstappen-
2Valentin Moineault-
3Christian Sorensen-
4--

2013 European KZ Championship Standings

RankDriverPoints
1Max Verstappen-
2Marco Ardigo-
3Anthony Abbasse-
4--

2013 World KZ Championship Standings

RankDriverPoints
1Max Verstappen-
2Charles Leclerc-
3Jordon Lennox-Lamb-
4Benjamin Hanley-
(Note: Exact points not detailed in primary standings summaries; Verstappen clinched each title with multiple wins.)

Formula One statistics

Max Verstappen made his Formula One debut in 2015 and has entered 233 Grands Prix, securing 71 victories, 139 podium finishes, 41 pole positions, and 36 fastest laps while accumulating 3,432.5 championship points.[1] His career win percentage stands at approximately 30%, the highest among active drivers and among the all-time greats. Among his notable records, Verstappen holds the mark for the most wins in a single season with 19 in 2023, achieved across 22 races for a record 86.4% success rate that year.[151] He also set the longest winning streak in F1 history with 10 consecutive victories from the 2023 Miami Grand Prix to the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, all starting from pole position.[174] Additionally, he scored the most points in a season (575 in 2023) and the highest average points per race (26.1 in 2023).[175] Verstappen became the youngest driver to score points in F1 at the 2015 Spanish Grand Prix, aged 17 years and 166 days.[175]
YearTeamChampionship PositionStartsWinsPolesPodiumsFastest LapsPoints
2015Toro Rosso12th19000049
2016Toro Rosso / Red Bull5th211070204
2017Red Bull6th200041168
2018Red Bull4th2120112249
2019Red Bull3rd2130112278
2020Red Bull3rd1723112214
2021Red Bull1st22104185395.5
2022Red Bull1st22159224454
2023Red Bull1st22199216575
2024Red Bull1st24118194425
2025Red Bull2nd24881510421
Data compiled from season results; 2025 figures for the full season.[176][177] Verstappen has consistently outperformed his teammates in direct comparisons. Across his career, he holds a dominant record against seven teammates—Carlos Sainz, Daniil Kvyat, Daniel Ricciardo, Pierre Gasly, Alex Albon, Sergio Pérez, and Yuki Tsunoda—winning nearly all head-to-head qualifying (over 90%) and race classifications (over 85%), with no teammate finishing ahead of him in the drivers' standings during shared seasons.[178] In 2025, alongside Tsunoda at Red Bull, Verstappen leads the internal battle 22-0 in qualifying and 20-4 in races for the full season.[179]

References

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