Max Verstappen of the Netherlands driving the (3) Oracle Red Bull Racing RB22 Red Bull Ford on track during qualifying ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Japan at Suzuka Circuit on March 28, 2026 in Suzuka, Japan. (Photo by Simon Galloway/LAT Images) // Getty Images / Red Bull Content Pool //

Formula 1 Rumor: Miami Upgrade Package Could Decide Verstappen’s Red Bull Future

The Miami GP may be the weekend that tells Max Verstappen whether Red Bull still knows how to build him a championship car.

No, Miami will not decide his entire career. Verstappen is not going to make a career call because of one race in Florida. But this is not just another Grand Prix either. It is the first public test of Red Bull’s emergency RB22 upgrade, and it comes with the team already looking nothing like the steamroller that once owned Formula 1.

Red Bull sits sixth in the constructors’ standings with only 16 points. Verstappen is ninth in the drivers’ standings with 12 points. Mercedes has won all three races so far, with Kimi Antonelli leading the championship. For a team that used to measure success by trophies, Red Bull is now counting damage-limitation points.

The pressure is obvious. So obvious that even the betting markets, fan forums, F1 podcasts, and tested online casinos will be looking at Miami the same way: is Red Bull wounded, or is Red Bull broken?

The RB22 Upgrade Is the Real Story

Red Bull reportedly used a 200 km filming day at Silverstone to run a revised RB22 with Verstappen behind the wheel. The package included a new floor, new sidepods, and a new front and rear wing, with the update aimed at improving a car that has been described as nervous, unstable, and difficult to tune.

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That is not a cosmetic update. That is Red Bull trying to prove the RB22 is not a lemon.

The timing matters. The Miami Grand Prix will be the first race after a long break due to the cancellations in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia. It will also be the first race after FIA technical refinements aimed at addressing driver concerns over the new engine rules and energy management.

In other words, Miami is not just a race. It is a reset point.

Red Bull Gets Extra Time – And Fewer Excuses

The FIA has extended Miami FP1 from 60 minutes to 90 minutes. The stated reasons are the long gap since the last Grand Prix, recent technical changes, and the fact that Miami is a Sprint weekend, meaning teams have only one practice session before Sprint qualifying.

That helps Red Bull. It gives the engineers more time to compare Silverstone data with real track running. It gives Verstappen more laps to understand whether the revised RB22 has a wider setup window. It gives the team a better chance to find out whether the upgrade is real performance or just new carbon fiber.

But it also removes excuses.

If the car still looks unstable after a 200 km filming day, a month of development time, and a longer FP1 session, the paddock will notice.

Verstappen’s Patience Is the Issue

This is where the rumor becomes dangerous for Red Bull.

Verstappen is under contract through 2028, but Reuters has reported that the deal includes known break clauses. He has also been one of the loudest critics of the new engine era, calling it “anti-racing.”

Max Verstappen of the Netherlands and Oracle Red Bull Racing talks with race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase on the grid prior to the F1 Grand Prix of Austria at Red Bull Ring on July 02, 2023 in Spielberg, Austria. (Photo by Mark Thompson/Getty Images) // Getty Images / Red Bull Content Pool
Max Verstappen of the Netherlands and Oracle Red Bull Racing talks with race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase on the grid prior to the F1 Grand Prix of Austria at Red Bull Ring on July 02, 2023 in Spielberg, Austria. (Photo by Mark Thompson/Getty Images) // Getty Images / Red Bull Content Pool

His long-time race engineer, Gianpiero Lambiase is set to join McLaren at the end of 2027, a move Verstappen has said he gave his blessing to. That does not mean Verstappen is leaving. But it does add to the sense that Red Bull’s once rock-solid structure is no longer untouchable.

Verstappen can drive around a bad balance. He has done that before. He can drag a difficult car into places it does not belong. He has done that too.

But no driver, not even Max Verstappen, can drive around a collapsing technical direction forever.

McLaren Is Not Standing Still

The other problem for Red Bull is that its rivals are not waiting.

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella says McLaren will have “a completely new car” for Miami and Canada, mainly from an aerodynamic upgrade point of view. Mercedes has won the first three races, and McLaren is already chasing with a major package of its own.

That means Red Bull’s upgrade will not be judged in isolation. It will be judged against Mercedes’ momentum and McLaren’s next step.

If Red Bull finds two tenths and McLaren finds three, nothing changes. If Red Bull makes the car different but not faster, nothing changes. If Verstappen still has to wrestle the RB22 through every corner, nothing changes.

And if nothing changes, the Verstappen speculation gets louder.

No Win Needed, But Direction Is Mandatory

Red Bull does not need to win Miami to calm the waters.

It does need direction.

The RB22 must look more stable. Verstappen must look less trapped by the car. The upgrade must show that Red Bull understands its problem and has a path out of it.

If Miami works, Red Bull buys time. The Verstappen exit talk cools, at least for a while. If Miami fails, Red Bull will not just have a performance problem.

It will have a Max problem.