Unilever parceled F1 exposure across two teams instead of one this quarter, putting Dirt Is Good detergent on McLaren Racing livery and sending separate brands—Global and Aquame—to Aston Martin. The deals arrive as Formula 1's annual sponsorship intake approaches $3 billion, a figure that would mark 22% growth since Liberty Media's 2017 acquisition normalized at $2.46 billion in 2022. No disclosed values, but paddock sources peg multi-brand CPG packages at $12-18 million annually when Academy rights ride along.
McLaren's Dirt Is Good patch sits mid-sidepod, the real estate that ran Splunk last season before that $28 billion Cisco acquisition closed and the logo disappeared. Aston Martin's arrangement bundles household brands under Unilever's portfolio umbrella—think Dove, Persil adjacencies—but stops short of co-branded livery. Both contracts include activation rights for F1 Academy, the all-female junior series entering its third season with 15 races across the 2025 calendar. Unilever ran similar Academy plays with Alpine in 2023, testing whether laundry detergent buyers track junior open-wheel results. The answer, evidently, was yes enough to double down.
The structure—two teams, separate brands—reflects how CPG giants now approach F1's fragmented audience. A single team partnership delivers 350-400 million TV impressions per season, split across 24 races and seven continents. Two mid-grid teams, even without title sponsorship, push that figure past 700 million while keeping per-team spend below the $25 million threshold that triggers board scrutiny at Unilever's scale. McLaren finished P2 in 2024 constructors' with 666 points; Aston Martin took P5 with 94 points. The exposure delta matters less than the demographic one: McLaren skews younger, Aston Martin pulls luxury adjacent. Dirt Is Good sells to parents. Global sells to everyone. The math works.
Academy inclusion is the tell. F1 Academy's 2025 grid features 15 drivers across five teams, with races packaged as support events at grands prix in Jeddah, Miami, Silverstone. Broadcast minutes remain thin—45-60 minutes per race weekend on F1TV, no linear guarantee—but social impressions run 4-6 million per event, weighted toward women aged 18-34, a demo Unilever's legacy TV buys no longer reach cleanly. The brand calculus: skip the $80 million title sponsorship, split budget across two teams, layer in Academy, capture the audience shift for 15-20% of the cost.
Watch whether Unilever consolidates or expands in 2026 when F1's new power unit regulations reset the grid. McLaren's contract language typically includes performance clauses that adjust spend if the team falls outside the top three; Aston Martin's $650 million Aramco title deal runs through 2026, meaning sidepod inventory could tighten if Saudi interest extends. Academy's third season will clarify whether junior series rights carry standalone value or remain a packaging sweetener. Unilever's procurement team meets in Q3 2025 to plan 2026-2028 sports spend; F1 allocation historically gets reviewed then.
The $3 billion sponsorship figure, if it lands, would place F1 within 8% of the NFL's per-team average when adjusted for franchise count. Ten teams, 24 races, 700 million cumulative viewers. The paddock no longer sells speed. It sells reach, segmented six ways, available in bulk.
The takeaway
Unilever's dual-team F1 play signals CPG's shift from hero sponsorships to portfolio buys with Academy demo layers at sub-$20M per contract.
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