Sephora, the LVMH-owned beauty retailer with 2,700 stores across 35 countries, has secured title sponsorship of F1 Academy in a deal sources familiar with terms place north of $10 million annually. The agreement makes Sephora the first beauty brand to title-sponsor a motorsport series and arrives six weeks before the 2025 season opener in Jeddah, now branded the F1 Academy powered by Sephora.
The deal coincides with all ten Formula 1 teams committing to multi-year participations in the women's feeder series, up from single-season arrangements in 2024. Each team fields one car; the Sephora money flows to F1 Academy's central operations rather than team budgets directly, though teams receive baseline funding to cover driver coaching, track time, and logistics. The series runs seven rounds on F1 Grand Prix weekends, offering $100,000 in prize money per season and a guaranteed F1 Friday practice session for the champion. Williams driver Abbi Pulling won the 2024 title.
This matters because F1 Academy was burning capital faster than sponsorship could replace it. The series launched in 2023 with backing from Formula 1's commercial team, but operating costs—transporting 15 identical Tatuus T-421 chassis, staffing paddock hospitality, paying circuit fees—were outpacing the $3-5 million annual budgets teams could justify without material sponsor support. Sephora's entry changes the unit economics. The retailer gains activation rights at every race weekend, paddock branding, and co-marketing with F1's social channels, which drove 8.7 million engagements around Academy content in 2024. Sephora's customer base skews 70% female, ages 18-34; F1's US television audience is now 40% female, up from 28% in 2019. The overlap is tight.
The deal also validates F1 Academy's utility as a filtering mechanism for Formula 1 teams weighing whether to develop women drivers for race seats. No F1 team has fielded a woman in a Grand Prix since 1976; the Academy creates a standardized benchmark. Doriane Pin, the 2023 runner-up, tested with Williams in Abu Dhabi last month and signed a multi-year reserve role. Pulling's practice session at the Mexican Grand Prix logged the fastest sector-two time in FP1, a fact Williams' sponsorship deck now includes. Teams need proof-of-concept before asking title sponsors to underwrite a woman in a race seat; the Academy provides comparable data across chassis, circuits, and conditions.
Watch three follow-ons. First, whether Sephora negotiates category exclusivity or if rival beauty brands can sponsor individual teams—Aston Martin has been in talks with Estée Lauder for 18 months. Second, whether F1 Academy expands beyond seven rounds; ten is the threshold where teams need dedicated personnel rather than dual-hatting mechanics from F1 operations. Third, monitor which Academy drivers secure Formula 3 tests in January; that's the formal pipeline to F1, and three teams (Alpine, Red Bull, McLaren) have told drivers in private paddock conversations they'll consider 2026 F3 seats if Academy performance holds.
Natalia Granada's signing with Rodin Motorsport, announced Monday, fills the final 2025 grid slot. The Colombian driver brings backing from Claro, the América Móvil telecom brand, which paid an estimated $1.2 million for her seat. That's the new floor for Academy entry: driver contributes seven figures, team covers operations, Sephora funds the series infrastructure, F1 provides track access and global distribution. The model works if Sephora renews past year three, which hinges on whether a driver reaches F1 before the cosmetics brand's marketing committee loses patience with the timeline.
The takeaway
Sephora's **$10M+** annual title deal gives F1 Academy financial stability while F1 teams lock multi-year commitments, creating a funded pipeline for women drivers as proof-of-concept intensifies.
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