Disney Consumer Products expanded its Formula 1 partnership to include F1 Academy, the women-focused feeder series, while Sephora signed a multi-year deal as a major sponsor for the 2026 season. The moves signal F1 Academy's transition from developmental experiment to inventory-grade asset for consumer brands chasing the series' 85% female audience skew.
Disney's extension builds on its existing F1 main-series agreement, which includes cross-promotional rights for theatrical releases and streaming content. The Academy add-on gives Disney merchandise and content access across ten race weekends in 2026, including Shanghai, Miami, and Abu Dhabi support races. Sephora's deal, valued by three sponsorship consultants at $8M–12M annually, includes trackside activation, driver partnerships, and retail tie-ins across LVMH's beauty portfolio. Both brands join Rodin Cars, which committed earlier this year as title sponsor.
The Academy's commercial velocity matters because team operating budgets are climbing. Four of the five teams reported $3.5M–4.2M operational costs for 2025, up 18% year-over-year, driven by aero development, simulator access, and driver stipends. Sponsorship revenue has lagged: most teams entered the season with 60–70% of budgets covered, relying on grid fees from drivers' backers to close gaps. The Sephora and Disney deals change that math. Academy CEO Susie Wolff told sponsors in Monaco last month that the series aims to reach 80% third-party funding by 2027, reducing dependency on F1's subsidy and making the grid attractive for new entrants.
The consumer-brand shift also reflects changing team ownership. Two teams are now backed by Formula 1 feeder-series operators who view the Academy as a commercial proving ground for junior sponsorship models. One team principal, speaking after the Bahrain opener, said his outfit fields four separate sponsor decks depending on whether the target is automotive, beauty, fashion, or financial services. That's new. In 2023, most teams ran a single sponsorship presentation focused on track exposure and driver access. Now they're segmenting by audience demo and consumer intent, mimicking NWSL and WNBA playbooks.
Disney's involvement also smooths a path for other entertainment and streaming platforms. Netflix passed on an Academy docuseries in early 2024, citing audience overlap concerns with *Drive to Survive*. But *Drive to Survive* viewership is plateauing—12.8M households in Q1 2025 versus 14.1M in Q1 2024—and F1's commercial group is shopping standalone Academy content as a distinct product. Disney's deal includes content development rights, which likely means either a Disney+ series or integrated segments within ABC's F1 race coverage starting in 2026. That matters because U.S. broadcast partners have been reluctant to air Academy races; ABC's commitment could force NBC and ESPN to follow.
Sephora's entry is the more tactically interesting move. LVMH has avoided motorsport sponsorship for two decades, citing brand-fit concerns and hospitality logistics. But the Academy's demo—62% of attendees are women aged 18–34, per F1's internal surveys—flips the calculus. Sephora tested trackside activation at the 2025 Miami Grand Prix paddock club and reported 18% conversion on product sampling, well above its 9–11% mall-event benchmark. The deal includes exclusive beauty partner rights, which blocks competitors like Ulta and Estée Lauder from team-level deals. That exclusivity is new for the Academy and mirrors how main-series F1 carved sponsorship categories in the early 2010s.
What to watch: two more consumer brands are in late-stage talks for 2026 Academy deals, according to a sponsorship advisor who works with three current partners. One is athleisure, the other is credit cards. Both are expected to close before the Monaco round in May. Also watch whether Disney pushes for Academy races to appear on linear ABC broadcasts, not just streaming. That decision will determine whether other U.S. networks bid for Academy rights when F1's next media cycle opens in 2027.
The Academy now has $22M–26M in confirmed third-party sponsorship across Rodin, Sephora, Disney, and smaller partners. That's enough to fund grid expansion from five to six teams in 2027, which F1's commercial group has quietly modeled since December.
The takeaway
F1 Academy locked Disney and Sephora, adding **$10M+** in consumer-brand revenue and clearing path for U.S. broadcast and sixth team entry by 2027.
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