Ferrari Focuses on 2026 F1 Engine Development After Challenging 2025 Season
After a disappointing 2025 Formula 1 campaign, Ferrari and Lewis Hamilton are placing their hopes on the 2026 F1 regulations as the potential pathway back to championship contention. The Scuderia, historically one of the most successful teams in Formula 1, entered the 2025 season with high expectations, only to face setbacks that have delayed their pursuit of another drivers’ and constructors’ title. Currently, Ferrari’s wait for a drivers’ championship extends to 18 years, while the team title has remained out of reach for 17.
McLaren is on the verge of securing the 2025 Constructors’ Championship, needing to outscore Ferrari by just nine points at the upcoming Azerbaijan Grand Prix in Baku. The Woking-based team holds a 337-point advantage over Ferrari, with 346 points still available across the remaining races, putting significant pressure on the Maranello outfit to respond.
Last year, Ferrari came extremely close to challenging McLaren, finishing just 14 points behind in the 2024 Constructors’ standings. However, this season the gap has widened. Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris lead McLaren’s charge with 324 and 293 points, respectively, as they compete for the drivers’ championship, while Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton currently sit fifth and sixth in the standings on 163 and 117 points.
Ferrari in a Race Against Time to Perfect 2026 F1 Engine
Ferrari remains the only one of Formula 1’s top four teams yet to secure a Grand Prix victory in 2025. The team’s few highlights have been Hamilton’s Sprint race win in China and Leclerc’s pole position at the Hungarian Grand Prix. With limited on-track success, Ferrari’s focus has increasingly shifted toward preparing for the 2026 season.
Reports from Formula1.it indicate that Ferrari is engaged in a “race against time” to enhance the reliability of its 2026 F1 engine, as concerns have emerged over its performance under the new regulations. Initially, the team experimented with a steel cylinder head, but this approach was abandoned due to reliability issues. The steel components could not withstand the extreme temperatures and pressures within the combustion chamber, prompting Ferrari to return to a more conventional, additive-treated aluminum design.
This change, while improving durability, has delayed the engine development timeline, adding pressure on Ferrari to finalize testing. Alongside reliability concerns, there are growing worries that the 2026 power unit may fall short in power output compared to Mercedes’ engine program, potentially impacting Hamilton and Leclerc’s competitiveness and risking grid penalties if failures occur.
The extended bench-testing process required for the 2026 power unit has put Ferrari on the back foot in preparation for homologation. The team has yet to complete full testing on the engine, a factor that is also affecting the production schedule for customer teams. Haas and the upcoming Cadillac F1 team, which will replace Sauber as a Ferrari-powered outfit, depend on timely delivery of engines, while Ferrari also needs to secure its own units for the 2026 season. Cadillac’s engines are planned to become factory GM units by 2029, making this initial partnership particularly critical.
Production Timeline and Strategic Planning for 2026
Under F1 regulations, engine manufacturers must submit their power unit homologation dossiers before March 1 of the season in which the unit will first be used. Only one submission is allowed for the unit to be homologated through 2030, with approvals potentially taking up to 14 days. While Ferrari could theoretically wait until mid-February to finalize the 2026 engine, internal sources suggest the team intends to begin production at the start of 2026 to maintain schedule security and avoid last-minute setbacks.
Recent reports from Maranello indicate that Ferrari has faced challenges during early bench tests, especially following the departures of key engineers Wolf Zimmermann and Lars Schmidt to Audi. Initial 2026 engine testing produced underwhelming results, leaving the team with work to do before achieving a fully functional and reliable power unit. Ferrari is yet to complete full-scale bench testing of the engine, a step that will be crucial to ensuring competitiveness in the 2026 F1 season.
With the 2025 season providing limited opportunities for success and McLaren maintaining a dominant lead, Ferrari’s immediate priority has shifted decisively toward securing a robust and reliable engine for 2026. The team’s ability to overcome these technical challenges, deliver engines for customer teams, and optimize performance under the new F1 regulations will be pivotal for both Hamilton’s campaign and Ferrari’s long-term return to title contention.
Sep 18, 2025
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