Formula 1 and the FIA have confirmed that the 2026 Concorde Governance Agreement has been signed by both parties and all 11 Formula 1 teams. This follows March’s announcement that the 2026 Commercial Concorde Agreement had already been signed by the teams and Formula 1, completing the set of key agreements for the new cycle.
Together these instruments constitute the ninth Concorde Agreement, setting the regulatory, commercial and governance framework for the FIA Formula 1 World Championship through 2030. The deal aligns the main stakeholders—Formula 1 as Commercial Rights Holder, the FIA as governing body, and the teams—on the structures that will support the next five years, including the new era of power unit and car regulations that begins in 2026.
The Concorde Agreement underscores a shared commitment to grow and develop the sport. It enables the FIA to increase investment in race regulation, race direction, stewarding and technical expertise to benefit the Championship, while providing a stable framework that supports technological innovation and compelling on-track action for fans, broadcasters and commercial partners.
Combined with recent record viewership growth, an expanding race calendar and rising engagement from younger audiences, the sport enters its next chapter with strong momentum and a clear roadmap to 2030.
Formula 1 President and CEO Stefano Domenicali said the agreement positions the sport to continue global growth and thanked the FIA and the teams for their collaboration and determination. FIA President Mohammed Ben Sulayem said the ninth Concorde Agreement secures the Championship’s long-term future, supports the modernisation of regulatory, technological and operational capabilities, and recognises the vital contribution of race directors, officials and volunteers at every event.