Skip to main content

Recommended for you

Nurburgring 24 Hours: Max Verstappen to start debut from fourth

NLS
Nurburgring 24 Hours: Max Verstappen to start debut from fourth

The Lotus 72 was "an extension of my body," Emerson Fittipaldi reveals

Formula 1
Canadian GP
The Lotus 72 was "an extension of my body," Emerson Fittipaldi reveals

George Russell reveals how viral 'T-pose' was accidentally created

Formula 1
Canadian GP
George Russell reveals how viral 'T-pose' was accidentally created

Exclusive: RLL President praises Mick Schumacher as "very serious about his craft"

IndyCar
Exclusive: RLL President praises Mick Schumacher as "very serious about his craft"

Former FIA aero chief officially joins Alpine in senior F1 role

Formula 1
Former FIA aero chief officially joins Alpine in senior F1 role

James Vowles explains why Williams cannot immediately fix FW48 weight issue

Formula 1
Canadian GP
James Vowles explains why Williams cannot immediately fix FW48 weight issue

Jenson Button opens up on mental toll of a Formula 1 career

Formula 1
Canadian GP
Jenson Button opens up on mental toll of a Formula 1 career

Remembering a lost Italian F1 hero 40 years on

Feature
Formula 1
Feature
Remembering a lost Italian F1 hero 40 years on

Arvid Lindblad warned by Racing Bulls that F1 debut will be “difficult”

Lindblad is set for a “big challenge” as he makes his F1 debut in 2026, but insists he’s “used to being thrown in the deep end”

Arvid Lindblad, Campos Racing

Arvid Lindblad, Campos Racing

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

The Power Shift

The Power Shift explores the forces reshaping motorsports: new rules, new stars, new teams, new technology, and a new generation of fans redefining the future of racing.

Arvid Lindblad is bracing for a tough Formula 1 debut in 2026, following advice from Racing Bulls team bosses Alan Permane and Peter Bayer.

Snapped up by Red Bull in his successful karting days back in January 2021, Lindblad has since ascended the single-seater pyramid swiftly, though he won just one championship: Formula Regional Oceania, formerly known as the Toyota Racing Series, last year.

A sole Formula 2 campaign, in which he took three victories in 23 races on his way to sixth in the championship, was enough to convince Red Bull to give him a chance at Racing Bulls alongside Liam Lawson – at the expense of Yuki Tsunoda, who has lost his place on the grid altogether after struggling to match Max Verstappen throughout 2025.

Read Also:

Lindblad will be the only rookie in the field as F1 moves to brand-new technical regulations on both the chassis and engine sides, and the 18-year-old Briton has been warned by Permane and Bayer that being competitive from the get-go would be a tall order.

“The advice [from them has been that] things are going to be difficult,” Lindblad told Formula1.com in Abu Dhabi. “I shouldn't be naive. I'm very aware of the fact that it will be a big challenge. It will be a really big step up.

“There's a lot of work I have to do over the next coming months prior to Barcelona,” he added, with pre-season testing getting under way at the Catalan track from 26-30 January.

“But even then, during all the tests, during the first part of the season, there's going to be a lot of things for me to be learning up to speed on. Even also on the team side, there will be that as well, because it's going to be so much that is new. We're all going to have to learn and develop together.

“It's just about being open-minded. It's nothing I already don't know, that I need to just work hard and keep focused on myself.”

Arvid Lindblad, Campos Racing

Arvid Lindblad, Campos Racing

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

What makes Lindblad confident is his trajectory in junior formulae, where he spent just three and a half years, taking fourth in F3 and sixth in F2 as a rookie.

He was the best debutant in the former, though he was beaten by fellow freshmen Leonardo Fornaroli, Luke Browning and Alex Dunne in F2 – but among those three, only Dunne had a similar level of (in)experience in single-seaters.

Read Also:

“I've come through the ranks pretty quickly,” Lindblad pointed out.

“I've just been in each category one year, so every year I'm used to being thrown in the deep end. For sure on that side it will help [adapt to F1] because I'm used to being in this situation.

“But on the other hand, I haven't done Formula 1 yet so I don't know what's coming. We need to see and I need to be open-minded and work hard, because this step will be the biggest one I've dealt with so far.”

Previous article Sergio Perez: 'If I was faster than Max Verstappen, it was a problem' at Red Bull
Next article Zhou Guanyu reveals mental toll of F1 reserve driver role as he eyes full-time return

Top Comments

Latest news