Section 7: Violations & Penalties
7.1 Regulatory Framework — Sporting Regulations, Article 54
Penalties in Formula 1 may be imposed by the Stewards under Article 54 of the Sporting Regulations, or administratively by the Race Director for defined infringements. Penalties are classified as follows:
7.2 Race Penalties — Article 54.3
- Drive-Through Penalty (DT): The driver must enter the pit lane, drive through it without stopping, observing the pit lane speed limit, and exit. Must be served within three laps of notification (Article 54.3.a).
- Stop-and-Go Penalty (SG): The driver must enter the pit lane, stop for 10 seconds, then exit. Must be served within three laps of notification (Article 54.3.b).
- Time Penalty: A defined number of seconds is added to the driver's total race time. Common amounts are 5 seconds (minor infringements), 10 seconds (moderate infringements), and 20 seconds or 30 seconds (significant infringements).
- Grid Drop: A defined number of grid positions are removed from the driver's starting position at a future race. Typically 3, 5, or 10 grid places depending on severity.
- Disqualification (DSQ): The driver and car are excluded from the results of the relevant session or race. Any points scored are rescinded.
7.3 Driving Infringements (Sporting Regulations, Articles 27 and 54)
- Collision causing a retirement: Typically investigated and may result in a 5–10 second penalty or grid drop, depending on fault determination by Stewards.
- Forcing a driver off track / making contact: Investigated per Article 27.5; penalties of 5 seconds to grid drops.
- Defending more than once (weaving): Article 27.7; typically 5 second penalty.
- Unsafe release from pit stop: Article 28.13; typically 5 second penalty.
- Speeding in the pit lane: Fine and/or grid penalty; the penalty is calculated on a sliding scale based on the extent of the excess speed.
- Ignoring blue flags (being lapped): Repeated failure to allow a lapping car to pass results in a drive-through penalty (Article 27.8). A blue flag must be obeyed within a reasonable distance; three consecutive blue flag displays without action is the enforcement trigger.
- False start (jumping the lights): Drive-through penalty (Article 33.4).
- Starting from the wrong grid position: Drive-through penalty.
7.4 Technical Infringements
- Car below minimum weight: Disqualification from the relevant session or race results, per Technical Regulations Article 4.2 and Sporting Regulations Article 54.4.
- Illegal fuel / fuel composition: Disqualification from the race results.
- Exceeding fuel flow rate: Disqualification from the race results (Article 5.1.4 TR; has been enforced — e.g., Sebastian Vettel DSQ at Australian GP 2014).
- DRS / Active Aero usage infringement: Investigation by Stewards; disqualification if confirmed.
- Power Unit component substitutions exceeding allocation: Grid penalty under Article 28.2 of the Sporting Regulations. The allocation per driver per season for 2026 PU components is defined in Article 28.2 of the Sporting Regulations; exceeding the allocation triggers a ten (10) grid place penalty for each additional element.
7.5 Power Unit Component Penalty Rules — Sporting Regulations, Article 28.2
In 2026, the Power Unit component allocation is defined as follows (per driver, per season):
- Internal Combustion Engine (ICE): 4 units
- Motor Generator Unit – Kinetic (MGU-K): 4 units
- Energy Store (ES): 2 units
- Control Electronics (CE): 2 units
- Turbocharger (TC): 4 units
- Exhaust system components: as specified in Article 28.2.f
When a driver introduces their second additional element (i.e., exceeds the allocation for the first time for a specific component), a ten-grid place penalty is applied. For each subsequent additional element, a further five-place grid penalty is applied. If the accumulated penalty exceeds the grid positions available, the driver starts from the pit lane (Article 28.3).
7.6 Sporting Exclusion and Championship Points Deductions
Under the FIA International Sporting Code, the FIA World Motor Sport Council has authority to impose penalties on Competitors or drivers beyond the Stewards' immediate powers, including exclusion from the championship, fines up to the amounts specified in the ISC, points deductions, and bans from attending events.
Notable precedents include Red Bull Racing being found to have exceeded the Cost Cap in 2021 (announced October 2022), resulting in a $7 million fine and a 10% reduction in aerodynamic testing time for 2023 under the Financial Regulations enforcement framework.
7.7 Protest Procedure — Sporting Regulations, Article 13
A Competitor wishing to protest a decision must lodge a formal protest with the Clerk of the Course no later than 30 minutes after the session or race results are published. A protest deposit (as specified in the national ASN or FIA schedule of fees) must be lodged with the protest. The Stewards will convene to hear the protest and issue a decision. Appeals against Stewards' decisions may be made to the FIA International Court of Appeal within a defined time limit.