Sephora has signed a multi-year partnership with F1 Academy as the series enters its third season, becoming the first major beauty retailer to commit significant capital to an official Formula 1 pathway programme. The deal, announced alongside confirmation that all ten F1 teams have renewed their support through at least 2026, positions the LVMH-owned chain as a category sponsor across the all-female championship's seven-round calendar.
The timing tracks with F1 Academy's pivot from development series to commercial platform. The championship launched in 2023 with five teams and modest trackside presence. By 2026, it will feature ten teams aligned one-to-one with F1 constructors, race on F1 support bills, and carry enough broadcast inventory to justify beauty advertising at motorsport CPMs. Sephora's entry validates that shift. Beauty brands rarely buy into racing unless the audience composition justifies premium skincare price points—F1 Academy's reported 40% female television viewership in key European markets crosses that threshold.
The partnership structure matters for three constituencies. First, F1 Academy itself now has a non-endemic anchor sponsor with global retail distribution, reducing reliance on automotive and energy categories that already saturate the main F1 calendar. Second, Sephora gains exclusive beauty category rights during a window when women's sports sponsorship still trades at a discount to comparable male properties, despite rising engagement metrics. Third, the ten F1 teams—Mercedes, Red Bull, Ferrari, McLaren, Aston Martin, Alpine, Williams, Haas, Visa Cash App RB, and Stake Kick Sauber—retain their individual F1 Academy team partnerships while benefiting from increased commercial validation of the platform they collectively fund.
Worth noting: this is Sephora's first major motorsport commitment, but LVMH's broader sports portfolio includes TAG Heuer's long-running F1 timing partnership and multiple fashion houses with paddock activation. The parent company understands hospitality economics at racing events. Sephora's deal likely includes on-site presence at circuits with high-net-worth attendance—Monaco, Singapore, Abu Dhabi—where sampling premium product to families spending €15,000-plus on race weekend packages delivers measurable conversion.
The deal also arrives as F1 itself courts female viewership more aggressively. The sport's Drive to Survive effect skewed younger and more gender-balanced than traditional motorsport audiences, creating a commercial imperative to build out women's racing infrastructure before competitors do. F1 Academy sits inside that strategy, distinct from W Series, which collapsed in 2023 after failing to secure sustainable commercial backing. F1 Academy's governance structure—funded by F1 teams, sanctioned by the FIA, integrated into Grand Prix weekends—avoids the standalone economics that killed W Series.
Sponsor categories entering women's racing now are making a liquidity bet: that activation costs rise as the audience stabilizes and broadcast packages mature. Sephora locks in positioning before that happens. The beauty retailer operates 2,700 stores across 35 countries, with significant presence in markets where F1 races—France, Italy, UAE, Singapore. Store-level activation around race weekends becomes viable at that scale.
What to watch: Sephora's specific activation assets will clarify within sixty days as teams finalize 2026 liveries and F1 Academy releases its commercial guidelines. Alpine and Aston Martin, both with aggressive lifestyle brand strategies, are candidates for co-branded retail programming. The next sponsor announcement—whether another non-endemic category follows Sephora's lead—will signal whether F1 Academy can command diversified commercial interest or remains dependent on automotive adjacencies.
The ten F1 teams committed through 2026. Sephora committed for multiple years. The budget gap that killed W Series hasn't appeared. The beauty category is in; the question is who follows.