F1 Drivers’ Championship standings 2026

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BARCELONA, SPAIN - JUNE 13: Pole position qualifier George Russell of Great Britain and Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team Second placed qualifier Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Scuderia Ferrari and Third placed qualifier Andrea Kimi Antonelli of Italy and Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team look on during qualifying ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Barcelona-Catalunya at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya on June 13, 2026 in Barcelona, Spain. (Photo by Bryn Lennon - Formula 1/Formula 1 via Getty Images) | Formula 1 via Getty Images

With the calendar set to flip to July, it is a perfect time to check the standings.

The Formula 1 Drivers’ Championship standings, that is.

Kimi Antonelli remains in the lead ahead of the British Grand Prix, thanks to a string of five consecutive wins, but teammate George Russell pulled within 40 points of the young Mercedes driver thanks to Sunday’s win at the Austrian Grand Prix. Lewis Hamilton is lurking as well, in the wake of his first Grand Prix win for Ferrari, coming at the Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix a few weeks ago.

Here are the 2026 F1 Drivers’ Championship standings following the British Grand Prix.

2026 F1 Drivers’ Championship Standings​


Here are the current F1 Drivers’ Championship standings, following the British Grand Prix.

PositionDriverTeamPointsBest Finish
1Kimi AntonelliMercedes1791
2George RussellMercedes1541
3Lewis HamiltonFerrari1471
4Charles LeclercFerrari1081
5Lando NorrisMcLaren972
6Oscar PiastriMcLaren822
7Max VerstappenRed Bull762
8Isack HadjarRed Bull524
9Pierre GaslyAlpine423
10Liam LawsonVCARB396
11Arvid LindbladVCARB207
12Oliver BearmanHaas185
13Franco ColapintoAlpine186
14Gabriel BortoletoAudi68
15Carlos SainzWilliams69
16Alexander AlbonWilliams58
17Esteban OconHaas39
18Fernando AlonsoAston Martin110
19Nico HülkenbergAudi011
20Valtteri BottasCadillac013
21Sergio PérezCadillac014
22Lance StrollAston Martin015

How does F1 scoring work?​


In the Grand Prix format, the top ten finishers score points. The winner of the Grand Prix collects 25 points, while the second-place finisher earns 18 and the third-place finisher earns 15.

Here is the allocation for points in the top ten of a Grand Prix race:

P1: 25 points
P2: 18 points
P3: 15 points
P4: 12 points
P5: 10 points
P6: 8 points
P7: 6 points
P8: 4 points
P9: 2 points
P10: 1 point

In an F1 Sprint race, the top eight finishers score points, starting with eight points for the winner, down to one point for the driver finishing eighth.

How do tiebreakers work in F1?​


Tiebreakers in the F1 standings work on a “countback” system, looking at race results. For example, when there is a tie at the top of the standings, that is broken by counting the number of Grand Prix wins. If, hypothetically, two drivers finish the year tied in points atop the standings, the driver with the most Grand Prix wins would win the championship. If that number is the same, the driver with the most second-place finishes would win, working down the finishing order until the tie is broken.

This countback system came into play last year when Max Verstappen, Oscar Piastri, and Lando Norris were battling for the 2025 Drivers’ Championship. Heading into the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, all three drivers had seven Grand Prix victories, so Norris’ eight second-place finishes — compared to five for Verstappen and four for Piastri — gave the eventual Drivers’ Champion an advantage on countback.

Looking at the standings right now, our first tie involves Oliver Bearman and Franco Colapinto, who both have 18 points. Bearman is 12th in the standings, and Colapinto is 13th, due to Bearman’s P5 at the Chinese Grand Prix. Colapinto’s best finish is a P6 at the Canadian Grand Prix.

We can also see the countback system at the bottom of the standings. Nico Hülkenberg, Valtteri Bottas, Sergio Pérez, and Lance Stroll are the four drivers yet to score a point this year. Hülkenberg sits 19th in the standings thanks to a pair of P11 finishes (first in China and then in Japan). Bottas is next, with a P13 from the Chinese Grand Prix, followed by Pérez, who finished 14th at the Spanish Grand Prix.

Stroll rounds out the field in P22, as his best finish this year was a P15 at his home race, the Canadian Grand Prix.

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