Formula 130 Apr 20263 min readBy F1 News Desk

F1's Six-Point Fix List: Inside the FIA's Plan to Save the 2026 Rules

Pressure for change is now broad and explicit, with reporting from The Race outlining six specific technical solutions on the table to address problems with the 2026 F1 regulations. The proposals range from raw power increases to deployment changes and energy recovery limits.

F1's Six-Point Fix List: Inside the FIA's Plan to Save the 2026 Rules

Key Takeaways

  • 1.The list, according to The Race, includes power increases, deployment changes, energy recovery limits, and a series of related modifications intended to reduce the speed differentials that drivers have repeatedly described as dangerous.
  • 2.Lando Norris has been the most public voice of frustration.

Five rounds into the 2026 era, Formula 1 has stopped pretending that the new regulations are working as intended. The FIA is now openly preparing what amounts to an emergency rescue package, and reporting from The Race has put numbers and shape to it. Six specific technical solutions are under active discussion, and they reach far beyond the boost-mode tweak rushed through after Ollie Bearman's Suzuka crash.

The list, according to The Race, includes power increases, deployment changes, energy recovery limits, and a series of related modifications intended to reduce the speed differentials that drivers have repeatedly described as dangerous. The video outlines six specific technical modifications being considered, including power increases, deployment changes and energy recovery limits, alongside refinements that target the moments mid-straight where cars currently slow because the battery has run out.

The driver case for change has been built quietly across consecutive race weekends. Lando Norris has been the most public voice of frustration. He expressed how soul-crushing it is to hear engines go quiet mid-straight when the battery depletes, and he has separately said he could not stop his car from deploying energy even when he did not want to overtake. His description of qualifying losing its raw, flat-out nature, with drivers forced to lift and coast to manage battery deployment instead of pushing to the limit, is now the consensus view among his peers.

Max Verstappen has gone further. He has described the 2026 regulations as anti-driving and pointed at the moments where different energy modes between cars create dangerous closing speeds. The damage that did at Suzuka was made literal by Bearman's accident. Damon Hill, watching from outside the cockpit, captured the sense of risk by describing the dangerous speed differentials between cars as being like getting hit from behind on a motorway.

The political picture is what makes the FIA's task hard. Thomas Maher has reported hearing admissions inside the FIA itself that the 50/50 power split between combustion and electrical components has not delivered the racing the rule-makers hoped for. He has expressed sarcastic criticism that the FIA ruined the regulations chasing a 50/50 split, and his framing has caught on inside the paddock. Rolling back the split entirely is politically impossible because Audi entered F1 on the basis of the current rules. But the six fixes appear to be designed to soften its sporting consequences without touching the underlying engineering principle.

There is also pressure from the entertainment side. Andrea Stella has argued that the sport needs to confront the reality that current cars have produced an artificially manufactured racing spectacle, with overtakes that feel more like a video game boost button than pure racing skill. Red Bull team boss Laure Mekies has gone further, warning that leaving the rules unchanged will inevitably lead to a highly compromised product.

The FIA's stated goals, as the technical proposals come together, are to reduce the massive energy variations that produce mid-straight slowdowns, to restore consistent top speeds across a lap, and to shift focus back to driver skill rather than energy management. The six fixes are how it intends to get there.

What is unclear is whether they will be enough. Some inside the paddock have already begun to ask whether the 2026 regulations have caused damage that cannot be undone with mid-season tweaks. The FIA is betting they have not. By Miami, the racing world will start to find out.

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