2026 Shock: McLaren Warns of an Unprecedented Workload

McLaren warns the 2026 F1 rules bring unprecedented change, with new cars, engines and tyres reshaping competitiveness, strategy and energy management.

Jan 22, 2026 - 14:21
2026 Shock: McLaren Warns of an Unprecedented Workload
2026 Shock: McLaren Warns of an Unprecedented Workload
McLaren team principal Andrea Stella says the world champions have faced an "unprecedented" amount of work to prepare for the new rules in Formula 1 this season.
 
Teams are facing what is widely regarded as the biggest regulation change in history, with new cars, engines, fuel and tyres.
 
Stella said: "There's been so much work behind the design, the realisation, the build of the 2026 cars that, for what I can remember is almost unprecedented, because never before has there been such a huge and simultaneous change of chassis, power unit and tyres.
 
"But even the sheer volume of redesigning that went through the last 20 months at McLaren has been probably the biggest design, or in general, dealing with a new car project that I was a part of.
 
"This all makes it extremely interesting to see how the cars will perform, how the competitiveness order will be somehow mixed up.
 
"We are champions, but we don't carry being champions into 2026. Everyone will start from the starting blocks - everyone will start from zero."
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Stella said McLaren would not be ready to run their new car on the first day of the first pre-season test in Spain next week because they wanted to give themselves as much time as possible to design their car, to maximise performance.
 
The test runs behind closed doors, with no access for independent media, from 26-30 January at Barcelona's Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, where teams are permitted to run on three of the five days.
 
The new Cadillac and Audi teams and Racing Bulls have already given their cars 'shakedown' tests, while Mercedes are due to run at Silverstone on Thursday. Others, including Aston Martin, are known to be following McLaren's route of not running until well into the Barcelona test.
 
"We plan to start testing either in day two or day three, so we will not be testing in day one," Stella said.
 
"We wanted to give ourselves as much time as possible for development, because every day of development, every day of design was adding a little bit of performance.
 
"If you are early on track you will have the reassurance of knowing what you need to know as soon as possible. But at the same time it means that you might have committed to the design and the realisation of the car relatively early, so you will have a compromise against development time and ultimate performance."
 
Racing may be 'weird'
Stella said the extent of the rule changes was such that F1 racing in 2026 "may look a little weird".
 
On-track running will be defined by energy management, because the electrical part of the hybrid engines now supplies about 50% of the total power output, but the amount of energy that can be recovered is limited.
 
So drivers will have to make choices about when to expend energy at various points on a lap for optimum racing.
 
"It may look a little weird that one car can overtake so easily another car," Stella said.
 
"It's important the spectators understand why that was so easily [done], or even that in one car the battery is now quite full, while the car ahead has the battery quite empty. Therefore, something [new] is coming from a racing point of view.
 
"The power-unit exploitation as a racing and overtaking variable will be particularly important in being able to communicate effectively to our spectators."
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McLaren technical director for performance, Mark Temple, said: "Now we have a similar capacity battery but you have a higher level of power. So you can use that more on a single straight, get a bigger boost in that one straight from that extra battery capacity.
 
"But then maybe your [battery] pack is empty. If you press your boost mode and you choose to use all of the energy, you'll then go into the next corner and come out of it with only what you were able to recover in that corner. And that could then leave you exposed in a following straight, which maybe traditionally wouldn't be such an opportunity.
 
"The most interesting aspect, and in a way the thing that's the hardest to simulate, is going to be those kind of overtaking, attacking, and defending scenarios. In 2026 the amount of energy that you have will be much more of a factor in the strategy."  
The drivers will still be free to compete
Stella said McLaren had reviewed its approach last season, when drivers Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri were fighting for the championship, and agreed that allowing them to race each other would continue through 2026.
 
The team faced several difficult situations because of the way they were operating, which they considered fair.
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This included allowing Norris to pursue a different strategy at the Hungarian Grand Prix, which resulted in him winning ahead of Piastri, even though the Australian driver had been leading for much of the early part of the race.
In Italy, Piastri was ordered to give second place back to Norris after the British driver had lost the position following team intervention on strategy and a slow pit stop.
 
And there were incidents in Singapore and Austin where their cars collided – with varying degrees of severity – which also needed to be managed.
 
Throughout, both drivers insisted that the team's approach was what they preferred because they both wanted the best chance to win the championship. Norris won the title by two points from Red Bull's Max Verstappen, while Piastri finished third.
 
"We talked quite a lot last year at McLaren about internal racing," Stella said. "From that point of view, we will enter 2026 with continuity – we will continue racing the McLaren way.
 "If we have been able to achieve success in 2024 and then 2025, what has added extra value is that we have achieved success together with our drivers in such a collaborative, supportive and united way.
 
"All of this has fundamentally led us to confirm that fairness, integrity, equal opportunities, sportsmanship – all of these are fundamental for the team, for Lando and for Oscar." If anything, they have been confirmed and strengthened."
 
But Stella acknowledged that there were ways the team could "streamline" its operations.
 
"Also, we all acknowledge that the amount of work related to internal competition, for example, for the team and to some extent for the drivers as well, was significant," he said.
 
"So, any effort we can make to simplify this racing together to some extent will be welcome. It will really be a matter of fine-tuning because once we reviewed the work we had done, in most cases we said we would still do the same thing." "But we have found some opportunities where we can improve the way we work together."


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