
Red Bull junior Arvid Lindblad, 17, receives F1 super license
Red Bull's rising star Arvid Lindblad officially has his super license, just a few months before he turns 18.
On Tuesday, the World Motor Sport Council approved the team's request to grant the 17-year-old his super license early after finding 'that the driver has recently and consistently demonstrated outstanding ability and maturity in single-seater formula car competition.' Lindblad currently sits third in the Formula Two standings with two wins.
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The British driver had the necessary points to receive his super license, which allows him to participate in Formula One sessions, but he does not turn 18 until August. Similar to how a request was made for Mercedes' Kimi Antonelli last year before his 18th birthday, Red Bull had asked weeks ago, meaning this is not directly related to Max Verstappen being on the brink of a race ban. Rather, this expands Red Bull's options within its current reserve driver pool, which includes Ayumu Iwasa (who is competing in Super Formula).
Verstappen needs to navigate the Canadian and Austrian GP weekends cleanly before penalty points will begin dropping off. The Dutchman is one penalty point away from receiving a one-race ban, and if this were to occur, it's likely that one of the Racing Bulls drivers — Isack Hadjar or Liam Lawson — would be promoted to replace Verstappen, leaving the door open for Lindblad to slot in.
Regardless of how Verstappen's penalty situation pans out, the super license will allow Lindblad to participate in free practice sessions earlier than August, if Red Bull so chooses. Teams are required to run a rookie driver in each car twice per season. The rules changed in 2025, meaning teams need to run rookies in four free practice sessions total this season rather than the previous two. Lindblad would be an option for both Red Bull and Racing Bulls.
The age requirement for a super license was introduced after Verstappen made his shocking F1 debut in 2015 at 17 years old after just one year in Formula Three.
A new clause was added to the regulations last season, when there was speculation around Antonelli. Drivers previously needed to be 18 years old and hold a drivers license when first applying for a super license, and the latter requirement was removed last summer.
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