Disney Consumer Products has extended its Formula 1 commercial relationship to include the F1 Academy, the all-female developmental series launched in 2023. The partnership adds the Academy to Disney's existing F1 agreement, which already covers the main championship. Financial terms were not disclosed. The Academy operates 10 race weekends supporting F1 grands prix, fielding 15 drivers across 5 teams.
The expansion arrives as F1 Academy secures Sephora as a title sponsor, joining a commercial roster that includes Gatorade, Puma, and TAG Heuer. The Academy's sponsor structure mirrors the main championship's tiered approach—global partners at the top, category sponsors below—but operates at lower rights fees reflecting the series' 190,000 average viewership per race weekend in 2024. Disney now holds licensing rights to develop Academy-branded consumer products, a category absent from the women's racing market until this deal.
The Disney move signals two things. First, Formula 1 Management believes the Academy has enough brand separation from the main championship to warrant distinct commercial partnerships without cannibalizing the primary rights package. Second, Disney's Consumer Products division sees enough consumer interest in women's motorsport to justify product development costs. The licensing play is narrow: apparel, accessories, possibly collectibles. The Academy's audience skews younger and more female than F1's core—43% of Academy viewers are women, versus 31% for the main championship—which maps to Disney's core consumer demographic.
The Sephora sponsorship carries different weight. Beauty brands have circled motorsport for three years, watching cosmetics companies enter the NFL (Dior with the Cowboys, CoverGirl with NFL social content) and NBA (MAC with league-wide activations). Sephora's entry validates the category for other prestige beauty players evaluating trackside presence. The Academy provides lower entry costs than main F1 sponsorship—which starts at $8 million annually for category exclusivity—while still offering paddock access and driver partnerships. Sephora's deal includes branding on all 5 team cars and hospitality activations at Academy races, creating retail content without the $25 million minimum for a mid-tier F1 team sponsorship.
Disney's Consumer Products strategy here is patient capital. The Academy will not generate Marvel or Star Wars-level product revenue in year one. The play is establishing licensing early in a category Disney expects to grow as the Academy adds teams (target: 8 teams by 2026) and secures a standalone broadcast window. Disney already produces F1 content for ESPN in the U.S. and holds character licensing for F1-themed entertainment. Adding the Academy creates optionality: if the series grows, Disney owns product rights at pre-growth pricing.
The Academy's commercial momentum depends on 2025 performance. The series must retain its current 15-driver grid, add at least one new team, and secure a U.S.-based title sponsor to justify the Sephora and Disney additions. Formula 1 Management has committed to funding the Academy through 2027, but commercial sustainability requires sponsor revenue covering 60% of operating costs by then. Current sponsorship covers approximately 35%, per industry estimates.
Watch for Disney's first Academy product line in Q3 2025, likely timed to the U.S. Grand Prix in Austin. That race weekend features an F1 Academy round, creating a retail moment Disney can activate across its consumer channels. Also watch Sephora's activation strategy at the next Academy race in Jeddah this March—if the brand brings influencer talent to the paddock, expect other beauty players to follow.
The Academy now has the commercial infrastructure of a standalone series. Whether it has the audience to support that infrastructure reveals itself over the next 18 months.
The takeaway
Disney adds F1 Academy licensing as Sephora joins, testing if women's racing developmental series can support standalone consumer product lines.
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