F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Red Bull confirms second year of Perez deal not guaranteed

Christian Horner has clarified that Sergio Perez’s recently signed two-year extension with Red Bull offers the Milton Keynes-based outfit the flexibility to part ways with the Mexican driver at the end of 2025.

Ahead of last weekend’s Canadian Grand Prix, Red Bull confirmed that Perez had been awarded a new two-year contract that runs until the end of 2026, thus covering the first season of Formula 1’s next-generation engine and technical regulations.

The renewal was expected, even despite Perez’s recent slump that has kept him off the podium since last April’s Chinese Grand Prix.

However, it came to light in Montreal last weekend that Perez’s new deal only guarantees the six-time Grand Prix winner a single season of steady work with Red Bull.

This detail was revealed by Horner – perhaps inadvertently – when the Red Bull chief commented on Perez’s renewal but also on the extension offered to Visa Cash App RB’s Yuki Tsunoda.

“They are all Red Bull drivers,” Horner told Sky F1.

“We have decided to extend Checo for one more year, but in the meantime we also wanted to exercise the option of Yuki. He is doing great at RB at the moment. So yes, he will stay for another year.”

Later on, speaking to Swedish streaming service Viaplay, Horner clarified the terms of Perez’s agreement.

“Well, 1+1=2, so it’s a two-year contract,” the Briton confirmed. “As with any contract, there’s a lot in it, but that’s, of course, between the driver and the team.”

With Red Bull Racing’s line-up signed and sealed for 2025, and with Tsunoda’s tenure with RB now also locked in, Horner and Helmut Marko will turn their attention to the second seat at the Faenza-based outfit.

The word in the paddock is that Ricciardo’s situation with the team remains tenuous at best, although the Aussie did himself no harm by delivering in Canada his best race weekend of the year.

But it is rumored that if the 34-year-old can’t uphold his newfound form in the upcoming races, Red Bull is likely to replace Ricciardo with reserve driver Liam Lawson.

In any case, the Kiwi is in the running for a seat with RB in 2025. But if no materializes, he would then be free to leave the bulls and go his own way in F1.

Keep up to date with all the F1 news via Facebook and Twitter

Michael Delaney

Recent Posts

Krack: First race finish for Aston Martin ‘no reason to celebrate’

An Aston Martin car finally crossed the finish in 2026, with Fernando Alonso completing the…

43 minutes ago

Norris slams ‘yo-yo’ racing as drivers lose control

Reigning F1 world champion Lando Norris has sounded the alarm over the sport’s new-era power…

2 hours ago

Wolff ‘in two minds’ over potential Horner F1 comeback

Toto Wolff and Christian Horner – two names that defined a generation of Formula 1…

3 hours ago

Komatsu tells Bearman: ‘No point beating yourself up’

Haas team principal Ayao Komatsu has rallied behind rookie driver Oliver Bearman after his high-speed…

18 hours ago

Mekies steps in: ‘Zero discussions’ with Max about retirement

As Max Verstappen’s dissatisfaction with the 2026 technical landscape shifts from simmering frustration to a…

19 hours ago

Once F1's youngest charger, whose career never took off

When he popped up in motorsport's junior ranks in the UK in the late seventies,…

20 hours ago