Disney Consumer Products signed a multi-year extension with Formula 1 that adds F1 Academy to its existing merchandise and licensing footprint. The deal covers apparel, collectibles, and lifestyle goods tied to the all-female single-seater championship, which launched in 2023 and fields five teams across seven rounds. Terms were not disclosed. F1 declined to specify whether Disney secured category exclusivity or how royalty floors compare to the main-series arrangement struck in 2022.
F1 Academy fills 15 seats each season and feeds drivers into F2 and F3. The series visits circuits during Grand Prix weekends, pulling the same paddock hospitality and broadcast infrastructure. Disney's consumer-products group now handles hard goods for both the premier category and the junior ladder—a vertical integration play that mirrors what Nike did with European football academies in the early 2000s. The difference: Disney is licensing, not manufacturing. It farms production to third parties and collects points on wholesale.
The extension matters because F1 Academy demographics skew younger and more female than the main grid, which is 93% male by headcount and 34 years old on average among current drivers. Sponsors hunting Gen Z eyeballs have poured $42 million into the series since launch, per Motorsport Network estimates, and Disney's move suggests the licensing math works at sub-100,000 average viewership. The company already sells Lewis Hamilton dolls and Max Verstappen die-cast cars through its consumer-products arm; adding Academy drivers lets it test lower-priced SKUs ($18–$35 retail) aimed at younger collectors who are not yet buying $340 replica helmets.
Two other factors explain the timing. First, F1 Academy announced in December that it will expand to eight rounds in 2025, with stops in Miami, Monaco, and Austin alongside the main calendar. More races mean more retail windows. Second, Disney's theme-park division has been in quiet conversation with F1 about activation concepts for its Orlando and Anaheim properties, according to two people familiar with the talks. Adding Academy to the licensing portfolio gives Disney's Imagineering group a softer proof-of-concept before it commits capital to a full F1 Experience installation, which would require bespoke sim rigs and branded hospitality zones. Theme-park deals take 18 to 24 months to engineer; consumer products can launch in six.
Watch for Disney to announce an Academy apparel capsule before the Miami round in May, likely timed to the same week F1 unveils its 2025 race suits. The company has used that sequencing before—launch the youth line 72 hours after the marquee drop, capture the spillover demand. Separately, three people close to F1's commercial group say the series is in late-stage talks with a streaming platform about a docuseries following Academy drivers through the season, modeled on Netflix's *Drive to Survive* format. If that deal closes, Disney would hold licensing rights to any characters or teams featured, creating a merchandising tailwind before the first episode airs.
F1 Academy added 12,000 Instagram followers in the 48 hours after the Disney announcement, a 4.1% bump. The series currently sits at 307,000 followers, roughly 2% of the main F1 account. Disney's bet is that the gap narrows as the calendar expands and as female participation in motorsport rises; 18% of F1's fanbase is now under 25, per a 2024 Nielsen study, and 40% of that cohort is female. The Academy deal locks Disney into that funnel for at least three seasons, with options to extend if sell-through rates on junior-driver merchandise hit internal benchmarks. Those benchmarks were not disclosed, but two people familiar with similar licensing deals said F1 typically sets wholesale thresholds at $8 million annually for tier-two series.
Disney's consumer-products president, Josh Silverman, did not make himself available for comment. F1 issued a one-paragraph statement confirming the partnership but declined to discuss financial terms or retail strategy. The silence is standard; the company rarely discloses licensing economics unless a deal crosses $50 million in guaranteed minimums. What is less standard: Disney extending into a junior series before it has locked down a theme-park activation deal. That sequence—merchandise first, experiential second—suggests the company sees faster payback in hard goods than in installing a paddock club inside Epcot.
The Academy season begins in Jeddah on March 7, 2025, with Prema Racing and Rodin Carlin fielding two cars each. Disney's first licensed products are expected to ship 45 days later, pending final approvals from the FIA on team liveries and driver portraits.
The takeaway
Disney's Academy extension tests youth merchandising economics before committing park-activation capital—watch for a Miami apparel drop in May.
f1 academydisney consumer productslicensingmotorsport merchandisingfeeder seriesyouth demographics
Ready to move on this signal?
Open a Brand101 Brand Room — the standard in corporate identity. Or shop the full 70K catalog and virtually proof any product right now. Or talk to Celeste for the fast quote. Or route through the named-account desk.
200 brands. 8 months in hand. $0.003 per impression.
Five intelligence desks publishing on a fixed schedule — Sports Edge, Markets / M&A, Voyage, The Briefing, Ramen.
It's the morning reading list for the chiefs of staff and heritage CMOs who route the invoices. Branded merchandise stays in hand 8 months — not 0.8 seconds.
Celeste + Sora hold conversations · Cleo renders 20 videos per run · Vivienne distributes across LinkedIn / X / Bluesky / Substack · MCP catalog routes AI agents straight into quote flow.
The agency you'd hire runs on this stack — so you don't need to build it. Concierge coverage at machine speed, human approval before anything ships.
70,000 products. 200+ authorized brands. One press room.
Virginia Beach press room · short-run from 25 units to volume of 500K · virtual proof on every SKU · art archived for reorders.
No retail markup, no middleman, NDA-standard white-label. Net-30 corporate terms. Your house's identity, manufactured the way heritage brands manufacture theirs.