Sephora, the LVMH-owned beauty retailer with 2,700 stores across 35 markets, signed a multi-year partnership with F1 Academy for the 2026 season, the series announced Tuesday. Financial terms were not disclosed. The deal marks the first retail cosmetics brand to anchor the all-female championship, which enters its third season with 15 drivers across 5 teams and a calendar spanning 7 rounds.
The partnership arrives as F1 Academy formalizes its team structure. All 10 Formula 1 constructors reaffirmed their commitment to the feeder series on the same day, extending a multi-year pact that keeps Red Bull, Mercedes, McLaren, Ferrari, and six others fielding entries through at least 2027. The timing is not accidental. F1 Academy needed a brand with retail distribution and a demographic skew—80% of Sephora's customer base is female, 60% under 35—that aligns with Liberty Media's stated goal of converting casual viewership into trackside attendance and merchandise buyers.
The economics work differently here than in Formula 1 proper. Title sponsors in Formula 2 and Formula 3 typically commit $6M-$12M annually for branding across team kits, trackside signage, and broadcast integration. F1 Academy's shorter calendar and smaller broadcast footprint—races air on F1TV and select regional networks, not Sky Sports' main feed—suggest Sephora's outlay sits in the $8M-$15M range over multiple years, likely with activation budgets separate. What Sephora buys is not eyeballs-per-dollar but demographic precision: female motorsport fans who already purchase premium beauty products and travel to race weekends in Monaco, Miami, and Austin.
The brand's leverage extends beyond the racetrack. Sephora operates 90 stores in the Middle East, where F1 Academy held rounds in Qatar and Saudi Arabia in 2025. The series expands to 7 rounds in 2026, with Miami and Silverstone confirmed. Retail activation—pop-up beauty lounges in paddock hospitality, co-branded driver kits, product placement in team garages—becomes a natural extension. The playbook mirrors what Aramco did with its $40M-per-year F1 title sponsorship: use the sport's global calendar to open doors in markets where the brand already has infrastructure but needs cultural resonance.
What matters for team operators and sponsors watching this space is the signal it sends about F1 Academy's commercial maturity. The series launched in 2023 with a $3M operating budget, mostly underwritten by Formula 1 itself. By 2025, it had signed partnerships with Puma, Lenovo, and DHL, all brands with existing F1 relationships looking to extend into adjacent properties. Sephora is different. The company has no prior motorsport ties, no activation history in paddock environments, and no obligation to Liberty Media's broader portfolio. Its entry suggests F1 Academy can now sell on its own merits—viewership data, hospitality access, and a fanbase that skews 70% female and carries household income north of $100,000.
The commercial calendar accelerates from here. F1 Academy will announce its 2026 driver lineup in late February, with at least 3 seats still open across the 5 teams. Chassis supplier Tatuus delivers updated F4-spec cars in March, and teams begin testing in April at Bahrain. Sponsors evaluating activation packages have until mid-March to lock terms before the season opener in Miami on May 2-3. The Sephora deal also tees up secondary partnerships—expect announcements around apparel (someone will kit the drivers), hospitality (paddock club operators are already circling), and content production (the series needs a Drive to Survive equivalent, and Netflix is paying attention).
Meanwhile, the F1 teams' renewed commitment carries financial weight. Each constructor contributes an estimated $500,000-$750,000 annually to field an F1 Academy entry, covering car lease fees, logistics, and personnel. That's not sponsorship; it's operating expense. The fact that all 10 teams extended their deals suggests Liberty Media offered something in return—likely preferential terms on 2026 cost-cap adjustments or priority access to Academy graduates for simulator and reserve driver roles. Ferrari has already promoted one Academy driver, Maya Weug, to its development program. Red Bull, McLaren, and Mercedes are evaluating at least 2 others for 2027.
Sephora's deal closes the loop. F1 Academy now has a retail anchor, a stable team structure, and a commercial model that doesn't rely on Formula 1's subsidy. The next test is whether the series can convert paddock presence into broadcast ratings. Current viewership sits at 1.2M unique viewers across F1TV and regional partners, a number that needs to double before major networks—ESPN, Sky, Canal+—consider dedicated coverage. Sephora's activation budget will help. So will the fact that the brand's target customer is already watching.
What to watch: driver announcements before February 28, when teams must submit final rosters to the FIA. Sephora's activation strategy will show in paddock builds at Miami and Monaco, where the brand's retail density is highest. And at least 2 more sponsors will enter before the season opener—one in technology (speculation centers on a smartphone brand), one in apparel (Puma's contract expires in 2026). The series also needs a broadcast partner willing to carry races live outside F1TV; discussions with ESPN and DAZN are ongoing, with decisions expected by mid-April.
The structural question remains timing. F1 Academy runs 7 weekends, but only 4 align with Grand Prix events. The standalone rounds—currently held at Misano and Zandvoort—draw smaller crowds and lower broadcast numbers, which limits sponsor ROI. If the series moves to a full 10-race calendar in 2027, all co-located with F1, Sephora's per-race exposure triples. That decision sits with Liberty Media, which is weighing Academy expansion against calendar congestion in Formula 2 and Formula 3. The answer will determine whether Sephora's deal becomes the template or the ceiling.