Sephora signed as title sponsor of F1 Academy, the all-female junior racing series launched in 2023, becoming the first beauty brand to hold top billing in Formula 1's pipeline competition. Financial terms were not disclosed. The deal renames the championship the F1 Academy by Sephora and positions the LVMH-owned retailer across broadcast integrations, trackside branding, and athlete content rights for the series' third season.
The series runs five race weekends in 2025 alongside Formula 1 grands prix, with 15 drivers competing in identical Tatuus F4-T421 chassis. Teams include affiliates from McLaren, Alpine, and Williams. Current grid includes drivers aged 16 to 24, several backed by national federation funding. The Academy operates below F3 in the open-wheel ladder but receives more broadcast hours than most junior categories—Sky Sports carries live coverage, and highlights run on F1TV. Sephora gains logo placement on all 15 cars, paddock hospitality presence, and first-refusal rights on driver appearances in North America and Europe.
The deal extends beauty's momentum into women's sports beyond endemic athletic brands. Sephora's parent company LVMH already holds Formula 1 partnerships through TAG Heuer and Louis Vuitton, but this marks the conglomerate's first women's racing play and Sephora's first motorsport deal of any kind. The retailer operates 2,300 stores across 35 countries and has been testing athlete partnerships in individual sports—track star Sha'Carri Richardson signed in 2023, and WNBA content deals ran during the 2024 playoffs. F1 Academy gives Sephora a controlled environment with guaranteed screen time and a demographic that skews 18-34, matching the retailer's core customer.
For F1, the deal validates the commercial thesis behind launching a women's series rather than funding individual driver scholarships. The Academy's sponsorship inventory was previously anchored by Chrome, Google's browser, in a one-year deal. Sephora's multi-year commitment—length undisclosed—signals that non-endemic brands see enough reach to justify title spend. The series drew 1.2 million unique TV viewers in its debut season, per F1-provided figures, and paddock attendance at support races averages 8,000-12,000 where grandstands are open. That compares to 15,000-25,000 for F3 events at the same venues.
The timing lands ahead of Sephora's U.S. store refresh cycle and LVMH's broader push into experiential retail. The retailer is reopening 70 North American locations in 2025 with revised layouts that emphasize in-store events and brand activations. F1 Academy races in Miami, Austin, and Mexico City give Sephora three home-market activations in Q2 and Q3, the retailer's highest-revenue quarters. The deal also insulates the series from title-sponsor churn that has plagued other junior categories—GP3 and Formula Renault both cycled through four title sponsors in their final five seasons before folding.
Sponsor coordination is handled by Formula 1's commercial rights division, not by individual teams, which simplifies approvals and keeps branding consistent across broadcasts. Sephora will control a portion of the series' social media output, including driver takeovers and behind-the-scenes content, which generated 18 million impressions in 2024 across Instagram and TikTok. The retailer's digital team will embed during at least two race weekends to produce owned content, per sources familiar with the activation plan.
The deal leaves open questions about whether Sephora will extend into individual driver sponsorships or remain series-level only. Three current Academy drivers—Aurelia Nobels, Emely de Heus, and Maya Weug—are out of contract for 2026 and would be eligible for personal-services agreements. Sephora has not historically signed athletes to multi-year endorsement deals outside of track and field, preferring campaign-based partnerships. The Academy's contract structure allows title sponsors to negotiate direct athlete deals separately, but those terms are not automatic.
Watch for Sephora's activation strategy at the March 15 season opener in Jeddah, where the retailer is expected to unveil car liveries and announce a content series. LVMH's broader F1 spend comes up for renewal in 2026, and Sephora's performance in the Academy could influence whether the conglomerate expands beauty presence into the main grand prix sponsorship grid.
The takeaway
First beauty-brand title deal in junior open-wheel validates F1 Academy's non-endemic sponsor thesis and gives Sephora controlled reach into 18-34 demo across five race weekends.
f1 academysephoralvmhwomen's racingmotorsport sponsorshipbeauty brands
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