F1 Academy has secured Unilever's Dirt Is Good laundry brand as a multi-year partner, giving the two-year-old series its first major fast-moving consumer goods sponsor. The deal, announced this week, covers branding across team kits, trackside presence, and content integration. Financial terms were not disclosed, but the partnership sits in the mid-six-figure annual range for a junior motorsport property, according to two people familiar with the structure.
Dirt Is Good markets detergent under regional labels—Persil in Europe, OMO in Latin America and Asia-Pacific—and positions itself around active, outdoor lifestyles. The brand's entry into a feeder series marks a shift from the usual beverage, finance, and automotive sponsors that anchor junior racing. Unilever's willingness to place Dirt Is Good on F1 Academy kits suggests the brand sees value in the series' audience skew: younger, more female, more digitally engaged than Formula 1's core viewership.
F1 Academy launched in 2023 with five teams and 15 drivers, all female, running a seven-round calendar supporting Formula 1 grands prix. The series is a direct pipeline to higher categories—several drivers have already signed with W Series or Formula 3 teams—but its commercial value has been unproven until now. The Unilever deal changes that calculation. A global FMCG brand rarely commits to a property without seeing audience data and engagement metrics that justify the spend. The fact that Dirt Is Good chose F1 Academy over more established junior series—Formula 2, Formula 3, or regional Formula 4 championships—signals that the series is delivering reach, not just racing.
The timing is also deliberate. F1 Academy's 2024 season expands to eight rounds, with stronger integration into F1 race weekends and dedicated broadcast windows. The series now has guaranteed TV slots on Sky Sports F1 and ESPN, which means Dirt Is Good branding will appear in front of millions of viewers who otherwise would not watch a junior category. That kind of passive reach is expensive to buy in traditional motorsport, where junior series air on delayed feeds or digital-only streams. F1 Academy's attachment to grand prix weekends gives sponsors trackside visibility and broadcast time without paying F1-level rights fees.
The deal also reflects a broader shift in motorsport sponsorship. Brands that historically avoided junior categories are now testing them as cheap entry points into the F1 ecosystem. Unilever is not buying team ownership or title sponsorship; it is buying association with a narrative—female drivers, diversity, grassroots racing—that carries cultural momentum. That narrative is worth more to a consumer brand than raw lap times or championship points. Dirt Is Good can run campaigns around "getting dirty," "breaking barriers," and "active lifestyles" without needing its sponsored drivers to win races. The brand message is the racing, not the results.
What to watch: whether F1 Academy announces additional FMCG or lifestyle sponsors before the March season opener in Jeddah. The Unilever deal sets a pricing floor for similar brands eyeing entry. Also watch whether any Dirt Is Good-sponsored drivers land Formula 3 seats for 2025—Unilever's willingness to follow talent up the ladder would signal genuine long-term commitment rather than one-year media arbitrage. The series is also expected to announce expanded team lineups by late February, which would increase inventory for future sponsors.
F1 Academy now has 23 drivers across seven teams for 2024, the largest grid in its history. Unilever's entry means the series is no longer a philanthropy play—it is a commercial product with measurable sponsor ROI.
The takeaway
F1 Academy landed its first major FMCG sponsor, proving junior motorsport can carry mass-market consumer brands if the audience skew and broadcast placement justify the spend.
f1 academyunileversponsorshipjunior motorsportfmcgdiversity
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