Gucci will replace BWT as Alpine F1 Team's title sponsor from the 2027 season under a deal valued between $80 million and $100 million annually, according to three people briefed on the terms. The Italian fashion house becomes the first luxury brand to hold an F1 title position since Tag Heuer's discontinued Red Bull arrangement ended in 2016. BWT, the Austrian water treatment company whose pink livery became Alpine's visual signature since 2022, exits after five years as naming-rights partner.
The announcement arrives eleven months before the sponsorship activates, an unusually long lead time that suggests extensive livery redesign and integration planning. Gucci parent Kering negotiated the deal directly with Renault Group's sports marketing division, bypassing the third-party agencies that typically broker mid-tier F1 sponsorships. The contract runs through 2031, matching Alpine's current Concorde Agreement term and power unit supply commitment. BWT's departure was expected after the brand reduced its overall motorsport budget by 30 percent in fiscal 2025, cutting programs in Formula E and endurance racing while keeping only its Williams F1 technical partnership.
The deal reframes Alpine's commercial model from performance-technology adjacency to lifestyle aspiration. BWT paid approximately $25 million per year for title rights, a mid-pack rate reflecting Alpine's 2022-2025 constructor finishes between sixth and eighth place. Gucci's tripled spend signals confidence that F1's US and Asian audience growth justifies luxury pricing even without podium results. Kering has tracked F1 viewership data showing the sport's 18-34 demographic now over-indexes on fashion-forward social platforms compared to traditional luxury customer bases. Ferrari remains the template—its brand valuation grew 22 percent between 2019 and 2024 despite only one constructor title in that span, driven largely by apparel and experience revenue rather than racing success.
The partnership creates immediate complexity for Alpine's existing apparel supplier Puma, whose contract runs through 2028. Gucci typically controls all branded soft goods when entering sports partnerships, as seen in its North Face collaboration and Balenciaga's recent tennis plays. Puma's deal was signed in 2020 at $8 million annually, modest by F1 standards but including co-branded streetwear lines sold through both Puma and Alpine channels. Renegotiation talks are expected before the Las Vegas Grand Prix in November, with Gucci likely to assume full kit design while Puma retains technical undergarment supply. The clearest precedent is Mercedes-AMG Petronas, where Tommy Hilfiger designed team wear but Puma manufactured racing suits under a split-rights structure.
Livery direction remains unannounced, but Gucci's recent brand repositioning under creative director Sabato De Sarno favors muted tones and geometric minimalism over the maximalist patterns of the Alessandro Michele era. That preference aligns poorly with BWT's legacy pink, which Alpine extended across helmets, pit equipment, and hospitality infrastructure. Three design studios are bidding on the 2027 livery project, including the London consultancy that handled Aston Martin's 2021 rebrand. One person familiar with the process said Gucci has requested palette options that avoid direct Ferrari red overlap while maintaining recognizability under floodlights. The team's 2026 car—still running BWT pink—will serve as a visual bridge year.
Beyond trackside activation, the deal unlocks Gucci's retail and event network for Alpine. Kering operates 528 directly owned stores globally, compared to BWT's 74 sales offices. Alpine will gain access to Gucci's Milan, Paris, and Shanghai flagships for car displays and driver appearances, a hospitality lever no current F1 team outside Ferrari possesses at scale. Gucci's entry also validates F1's luxury brand thesis after years of water-treading: LVMH explored title partnerships with three teams between 2019 and 2023 without closing a deal, citing insufficient audience quality data. Stefano Domenicali, F1's CEO, has privately told team principals the sport needs two luxury title sponsors to justify the $750 million Liberty Media spent building paddock clubs and rebranding races.
Watch for coordinator moves in Alpine's commercial department. Gucci will likely place two executives inside Enstone to oversee brand compliance, standard practice for sponsors exceeding $50 million annually. BWT's remaining 2026 contract includes performance clauses tied to constructor position; finishing ninth or tenth triggers a 15 percent rebate, approximately $3.75 million, which BWT has already negotiated to redirect toward its Williams technical partnership if applicable. Gucci's deal contains no performance thresholds, reflecting luxury's focus on presence over results. The 2027 livery reveal is penciled for February in Milan, not at the traditional car launch calendar in England.
Kering's stock rose 1.8 percent in Paris trading Tuesday on unrelated earnings, but the Alpine announcement provides the first evidence that its $1.2 billion annual marketing budget is rotating toward sports after years of heavy film and music investment. Gucci's last major sports play was a $12 million tennis sponsorship portfolio in 2023 that included US Open courtside branding. F1 represents a tenfold commitment increase.
The takeaway
Luxury's first F1 title bet since 2016 at triple the rate BWT paid, valuing audience optics over constructor standings.
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