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Everything you need to know about the new 2026 Formula 1 engines


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The roar of Formula 1 engines fired back to life this week as the teams prepare for the biggest rule change in the history of the world’s number one motorsport category.

The 2026 F1 season, which starts with the curtain-raising Australian Grand Prix at Albert Park on March 8, will see the introduction of new chassis and engine regulations designed to improve the racing spectacle, while pushing the sport closer to meeting its ambitious target of becoming carbon-neutral by 2030.

It’s a massive overhaul of every fundamental area, and it will continue to push the boundaries of engineering, technology, reliability and, perhaps most significantly, the way teams and drivers get to the finish line first.

For Honda, which dominated the previous ground-effect era in its partnership with Red Bull Racing and its sister operation, Racing Bulls, it has switched teams in 2026 and now joins forces with the iconic Aston Martin brand to power the cars driven by two-times world champion Fernando Alonso and his teammate Lance Stroll.

“Honda participation in F1, the pinnacle of automobile racing, has been the embodiment of the spirit of the company founder, Soichiro Honda, who inspired Honda engineers to commit to becoming number one in the world and to take on the most difficult challenges,” said Honda CEO, Toshihiro Mibe, at the launch of the new Honda RA626H power unit at the state-of-the-art Aston Martin F1 facility in the UK recently.

“It is also the starting point of the long-cherished approach at Honda to embrace difficult challenges.”