Formula 1 Rumor: Verstappen’s biggest problem is the grossly overweight Red Bull RB22
In Formula 1, every ounce matters. A heavier car means slower acceleration, longer braking distances, higher tire wear, and reduced cornering speeds. For the radical 2026 regulations — which slashed the minimum weight target to promote closer racing and better agility — hitting that limit has become one of the biggest engineering battles on the grid.
–by Mark Cipolloni–
And right now, the spotlight is firmly on Milton Keynes. Leaked weighbridge data from the Chinese Grand Prix scrutineering, captured by VIP fans on official FIA monitors and rapidly spreading across paddock whispers and social media, suggests Red Bull’s RB22 is carrying a disastrous amount of excess bulk. If accurate, this could be the single biggest reason Max Verstappen is struggling to match the blistering pace of Mercedes and others in the early part of the season.
The reported figures are damning and match independent analyses circulating in F1 media:
Weights of 2026 Formula 1 Cars (Minimum Allowed: 1697.6 lb)
| Team | Car Weight (lb) | Total Weight (lb) | Overweight (lb) | Lap Time Loss (s/lap) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mercedes | 1521.2 lb | 1702.0 lb | +4.4 lb | ~0.07 |
| Alpine | 1536.0 lb | 1716.0 lb | +18.7 lb | ~0.30 |
| McLaren | 1538.2 lb | 1718.2 lb | +20.9 lb | ~0.33 |
| Ferrari | 1540.4 lb | 1719.6 lb | +23.1 lb | ~0.37 |
| Williams | 1565.3 lb | 1746.0 lb | +48.5 lb | ~0.77 |
| Red Bull | 1580.0 lb | 1760.0 lb | +62.8 lb | ~1.00 |
Note: Aston Martin, Haas, Audi, Cadillac, and Racing Bulls overweight figures have not leaked.
Red Bull’s total of 1760.0 lb — roughly 62.8 lb over the new minimum — is a full 58 lb heavier than Mercedes. Using the industry-standard penalty of approximately 0.16 seconds per 10 lb (or ~0.016 s per lb depending on the circuit), that translates to a staggering one-second-per-lap disadvantage straight out of the garage. That’s not a minor handling quirk; that’s the difference between fighting for poles and starting from the midfield.
Mercedes sits almost perfectly on the limit with just a negligible ~0.07 s penalty. Even the midfield runners like Alpine, McLaren and Ferrari are only giving away three- to four-tenths — time they can claw back with setup tweaks. Red Bull? They’re bleeding a full second before they even touch the throttle pedal or aero.
Red Bull technical director Pierre Wache has already admitted the issue publicly, telling reporters the team faces “challenges with the weight — it’s the case for everybody. Maybe some people did a better job than us, but on our side, we will have to find some weight on the car.” He added that the philosophy has always been to make the car quicker first, but the weight now demands urgent attention before updates can focus purely on performance.

For Max Verstappen, this is brutal. The Dutchman has repeatedly called the RB22 “horrendous” on team radio and openly criticized the new regs. Even the four-time champion can’t magic away physics. An extra 63 lb means slower exits, more tire degradation, and longer stopping distances — problems no amount of driving genius can fully overcome. Insiders say the weight is masking whatever potential the new Ford-powered RB22 actually has in aero and power.
This isn’t Red Bull’s first dance with overweight cars (they started 2022 heavy too), but in the ultra-sensitive 2026 era of smaller, lighter, active-aero machines, it’s unforgivable. Rivals are already enjoying “free” lap time simply by being closer to the limit. Williams is also heavy, but nowhere near Red Bull’s level. Mercedes, meanwhile, looks like it nailed the target from day one.
The team is now on an emergency weight-loss program — stripping components, rethinking cooling, hunting every ounce. But development time is limited and every update spent on dieting is one not spent on outright speed.
If these leaked figures hold up (and multiple independent sources and fan-captured weighbridge photos point the same way), the grossly overweight Red Bull RB22 isn’t just a technical footnote — it is Verstappen’s biggest problem in 2026. The question now is whether Red Bull can slim down fast enough to keep the champion in the title fight… or whether the extra pounds will turn their season into a heavyweight disaster.
