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FanDuel Is Now Formula 1’s Official Betting Partner — What That Means for Race Fans

FanDuel has been named Formula 1’s first-ever Official Betting Operator in the US and Canada. Here’s what the multi-year deal means for F1 fans who bet, from integrated markets on f1.com to the wagering options FanDuel will roll out through the 2026 season.

By Jason Martinak Updated May 4, 2026
Formula 1 and FanDuel

Formula 1 has never had an official sportsbook partner in the United States — until now. On April 30, 2026, FanDuel was named the Official Betting Operator of Formula 1 in the US and Canada, marking the first time the sport has formalized a betting relationship with a North American sportsbook. The multi-year agreement arrives at a pivotal moment: F1 is in the middle of its North American swing, with the Miami Grand Prix just around the corner in early May and the Canadian Grand Prix to follow.

What the Partnership Actually Involves

This is not a logo-on-a-banner arrangement. FanDuel odds and betting content will be integrated directly into F1’s official Betting Guide and editorial content across both the f1.com website and the official F1 app. That integration is age-gated, keeping it compliant and appropriately ring-fenced, but for fans who are of legal betting age and already on the platform, it means F1’s own digital properties will now surface FanDuel lines, real-time insights, and betting context throughout each race weekend.

If you are someone who flips between the F1 app and your sportsbook during a Grand Prix weekend, this partnership is designed to close that gap. FanDuel will deliver odds and analysis natively inside the F1 ecosystem rather than making fans leave the app to find them. For a sport that has increasingly leaned into data — lap times, tire strategies, pit stop windows — real-time betting context fits naturally into that information-dense viewing experience.

FanDuel and F1 also plan to collaborate on responsible gaming content tailored specifically for F1 fans, which signals that both sides are thinking carefully about how this integration gets built over time. Beyond what launches at Miami, both parties have indicated that more new ways to wager will roll out later in 2026.

The Betting Markets FanDuel Will Push

The markets confirmed at launch cover the core of what most F1 bettors already gravitate toward. Race winners are the most straightforward entry point — picking who stands on the top step of the podium. Podium finishes open things up considerably, letting bettors back a driver to finish in the top three without needing to predict the exact result. Head-to-head driver matchups are where a lot of the sharpest F1 action lives, pitting two drivers directly against each other regardless of where they finish overall.

These three market types are a logical starting set for building a new F1 betting audience. Race winner markets are familiar to any sports bettor. Podium bets reduce the binary risk of a DNF derailing a ticket. And head-to-head markets let bettors make comparative judgments — say, whether Oscar Piastri will outqualify Lando Norris, or whether Max Verstappen will beat his teammate over the course of a race — without needing to predict the full field. With McLaren’s Piastri currently leading the drivers’ championship heading into Miami, there is no shortage of interesting matchup angles heading into the North American stretch of the calendar.

The announcement of additional wagering options later in 2026 suggests FanDuel has a deeper market roadmap in development. Fastest lap props, constructor head-to-heads, and session-specific markets like qualifying results are all logical candidates as the partnership matures. For existing FanDuel users, the practical immediate change is that F1 content and markets will start appearing more prominently within the app itself, not just buried in a motorsport tab.

How This Fits Into the Broader League Partnership Landscape

F1 entering an official US betting partnership is notable not because the concept is new — it is very much not — but because F1 was one of the last major sports properties without one. The NFL counts DraftKings, FanDuel, and Caesars among its official sportsbook partners. The NBA has deals with both DraftKings and FanDuel. MLB has aligned with DraftKings and FanDuel as well. In each of those cases, the partnerships accelerated how quickly betting content entered league-owned media properties, and how aggressively sportsbooks promoted those sports to their customer bases.

FanDuel’s 17 million customers in North America represent a large pool of potential F1 bettors who may not currently think of Formula 1 as a wagering option. Official partnerships change that by putting the sport in front of an engaged, betting-active audience through the sportsbook’s own marketing. For F1, it creates a channel to reach people who might watch a race because they have a bet on it — the same conversion path that has driven growth in NFL and NBA betting engagement.

It is worth noting the broader context of F1’s betting strategy. In March 2026, just weeks before the FanDuel announcement, F1 struck a separate multi-year deal with Betway covering Canada, Mexico, and other international markets. FanDuel is specifically the US and Canada sportsbook and iGaming partner, meaning there is some geographic overlap but distinct roles. The parallel structure suggests F1 is building a patchwork of regional betting partners rather than a single global arrangement.

Jonny Haworth, F1’s Director of Commercial Partnerships, framed the announcement this way: “We’re delighted to welcome FanDuel as our new Official Betting Operator in the United States and Canada — markets that continue to increase their love and engagement with Formula 1.” Karol Corcoran, FanDuel’s Managing Director, pointed to what makes F1 particularly suited to live betting integration: “Formula 1 generates an incredible amount of real-time data, and our platform is built to turn that into engaging betting opportunities for fans.”

Why North America, Why Now

F1’s North American fanbase has grown substantially over the past several years, a rise driven in large part by the Netflix series Drive to Survive, which turned team dynamics and driver rivalries into must-watch television for millions of people who had never previously followed the sport. Attendance at the US Grand Prix in Austin, the Miami Grand Prix, and the Las Vegas Grand Prix has consistently broken records. A dedicated US sportsbook partner is a logical extension of that commercial momentum.

The timing of the FanDuel announcement — just days before the Miami GP — is deliberate. Miami represents the kind of event where casual fans engage at their highest level, and having FanDuel’s integration visible on f1.com and in the F1 app during race week puts the new partnership in front of exactly the audience it is designed to reach. If you have been looking for a reason to open a betting account or explore what F1 wagering looks like, the FanDuel promo code offers a practical starting point heading into one of the season’s most-watched events.

For bettors who already use other books, the FanDuel-F1 partnership also serves as a reminder of how quickly sports betting integrations are reshaping the media experience around live sports. DraftKings has long been aggressive with its own league partnerships and live betting content, and FanDuel now has a dedicated Formula 1 lane to develop. The next few months will reveal how deep that content commitment runs as additional markets come online and the F1 calendar moves through the summer.

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