2019 F1 Championship Standings

2019 F1 Standings: See all Driver & Constructor season results

2019 Australian F1 GP Podium`: 1. Bottas, 2. Hamilton, 3. Verstappen

2019 F1 Championship Overview

The 2019 Formula 1 season is has 21 Grand Prix event and is just like 2018, one of the longest season ever in F1 history.

The schedules below shows the 2019 F1 standings according all 2019 F1 race classifications of each Grand Prix. F1 has a drivers and constructors championship.

The drivers standings overview shows the amount of wins, poles and podiums.

In the sidebar on the right you can navigate to other Formula 1 seasons. You can go all the way back to 1950 F1 results. The year that Formula 1 started.

Here you can find the 2019 F1 teams overview.

 

Overview & Report

 

2019 F1 Championship Overview

2019 F1 World Championship
NOGrand PrixDateWinnerTeamLapsTime
12019 Australian F1 GPMarch 17Finland Valtteri Bottas
Germany Mercedes5801:25:27.325
22019 Bahrain F1 GPMarch 31United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Germany Mercedes5701:34:21.295
32019 Chinese F1 GPApril 14United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Germany Mercedes5601:32:06.350
42019 Azerbaijan F1 GPApril 28Finland Valtteri Bottas
Germany Mercedes5101:31:52.942
52019 Spanish F1 GPMay 12United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Germany Mercedes6601:35:50.443
62019 Monaco F1 GPMay 26United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Germany Mercedes7801:43:28.437
72019 Canadian F1 GPJune 9United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Germany Mercedes7001:29:07.084
82019 French F1 GPJune 23United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Germany Mercedes5301:24:31.198
92019 Austrian F1 GPJune 30Netherlands Max Verstappen
Austria Red Bull7101:22:01.822
102019 British F1 GPJuly 14United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Germany Mercedes5201:21:08.452
112019 German F1 GPJuly 28Netherlands Max Verstappen
Austria Red Bull6401:44:31.275
122019 Hungarian F1 GPAugust 4United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Germany Mercedes7001:35:03.796
132019 Belgian F1 GPSeptember 1Monaco Charles Leclerc
Italy Ferrari4401:23:45.710
142019 Italian F1 GPSeptember 8Monaco Charles Leclerc
Italy Ferrari5301:15:26.665
152019 Singapore F1 GPSeptember 22Germany Sebastian Vettel
Italy Ferrari6101:58:33.667
162019 Russian F1 GPSeptember 29United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Germany Mercedes5301:33:38.992
172019 Japanese F1 GPOctober 13Finland Valtteri Bottas
Germany Mercedes5201:21:46.755
182019 Mexican F1 GPOctober 27United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Germany Mercedes7101:36:48.904
192019 USA F1 GPNovember 3Finland Valtteri Bottas
Germany Mercedes5601:33:55.653
202019 Brazilian F1 GPNovember 17Netherlands Max Verstappen
Austria Red Bull7101:33:14.678
212019 Abu Dhabi F1 GPDecember 1United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Germany Mercedes5501:34:05.715

 

2019 F1 Championship Report


Hamilton overtakes Fangio with number Sixth

Some changes were introduced for the 2019 season, such as the enlargement of the front and rear wing to promote overtaking. The several winglets of the front wing were banned, while the DRS gap of the rear wing was enhanced to help drivers overtake the car in front.

Silly season revving up at Paul Ricard

The 2019 drivers pose for a group photo during the Australian GP at Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit on March 17

Sporting changes had some little tweaks, with a point awarded for the Fastest Lap of each race. To earn the Fastest Lap point, the driver needed to finish the race inside the top 10.

The year was always going to be exciting, with rookies such as the F2 champion from 2018, George Russell (Williams) and the two drivers who were part of the top three, Lando Norris (McLaren) and Alexander Albon (Toro Rosso, then Red Bull for the second half) entering the sport. Also, Antonio Giovinazzi had earned a full drive with Alfa Romeo alongside Kimi Raikkonen, who took Charles Leclerc’s seat at Alfa Romeo after the Monegasque went to Ferrari in the Finnish driver’s place.

Also, the return of Grand Prix-winner Robert Kubica after his near-fatal rallying accident in 2011 was a major talking point. The Polish driver returned to the sport with Williams as Russian Daniil Kvyat also returned with Toro Rosso after a year of absence. Carlos Sainz (now at McLaren), Pierre Gasly (now at Red Bull), Daniel Ricciardo (now at Renault) were after new challenges after switching teams too for the 2019 season.

Hamilton and Mercedes were favored to win the championship after the Englishman had dominated in 2017 and 2018. The British driver was aiming for his sixth Formula 1 World Championship, but after winter testing, a heavy challenge was expected from Ferrari.

Ralf: Beating Michael's records not easy for Hamilton

F1, Tests, Barcelona, Mercedes W10 driven by Lewis Hamilton

Despite struggles in winter testing when trying to unlock the potential of the W10, Mercedes hit the ground running in the first race, at Australia. Lewis Hamilton qualified on Pole Position and Valtteri Bottas was second, six tenths clear of the Ferrari of Sebastian Vettel. Max Verstappen lined up fourth in his first race with a Honda engine, while the Ferrari debut for Leclerc was not the best, with fifth and almost a second away from first.

Bottas led a Mercedes 1-2 while Verstappen gave Honda its first podium since Rubens Barrichello had finished third in the 2008 British Grand Prix with the works Honda team. Verstappen’s strategy helped him take third from Vettel, who found himself under attack from Leclerc late in the race.

The second weekend was different, as Ferrari locked up the front-row with Leclerc on Pole as the second youngest pole-sitter ever. After some controversy with team orders being called upon to prevent Leclerc from overtaking Vettel in Australia, the Monegasque qualified on Pole ahead of the German.

However, a spin from Vettel while fighting Hamilton and a cylinder misfiring on Leclerc’s engine prompted the second consecutive Mercedes 1-2 of the year and Hamilton’s first win of the year.

Vasseur: Leclerc & Hamilton self-criticism 'merciless'

Lewis Hamilton sheers up Charles Leclerc who lost his maiden win due to a power unit issue

Although Ferrari did not get the result at Bahrain, they were competitive and had the best car of the field at that track and a championship fight was expected. However, Mercedes again dominated the next rounds, with consecutive 1-2s at China and Azerbaijan.

At Azerbaijan, the Silver Arrows broke the record for most 1-2 finishes to start the season, previously held by Williams from the 1992 season. Leclerc seemed to be the early contender against Mercedes, but an untimely mistake in Q2 left him well behind.

After four rounds, Hamilton and Bottas had two wins apiece. At Spain, Bottas achieved his third straight Pole and there was talk around many media outlets that he could eventually upset Hamilton’s title bid.

However, Hamilton’s steamroller as too much to overcome and he won the next four races in a row. At Monaco, the entire week which preceded the race was marked by the death of legendary three-time World Champion Niki Lauda. The Mercedes team chose to honor the Austrian champion by wearing red caps and painting the halo of their cars with red, Lauda’s characteristic color.

2019 F1 Championship Standings

Tribute to Niki Lauda during the F1 Grand Prix of Monaco on May 26

The race was dramatic, with Hamilton leading and Verstappen second after he had overtaken Bottas in the pit lane. Verstappen had earned a 5-second penalty for putting Bottas in the wall of the pit lane, but he was attacking Hamilton, who was struggling after Mercedes had put him on the medium tyre for the final stint of the race, with rivals on the hard tyre.

After a desperate attempt to overtake from Verstappen into the Nouvelle Chicane were the Red Bull and the Mercedes touch, Hamilton was able to win the race in honor of Lauda. Vettel finished second and Bottas third, as they took advantage of Verstappen’s penalty. Gasly took the Fastest Lap and finished fifth after starting eighth.

A hot moment of the year arrived in Canada, where Ferrari showed again their straight-line speed to claim Pole Position, this time with Sebastian Vettel’s SF90. Hamilton lined up second, a couple of tenths off the German’s lap and Leclerc was third, albeit seven-tenths behind his teammate. For Renault, Ricciardo starting fourth was a brilliant sight, given the team had scored only 14 points in the first six Grands Prix.

Masi: F1 could change rules for 2020

Lewis Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel almost hit during the 2019 Canadian F1 GP

On Sunday, Vettel protected his lead at the start and was closely followed by the Silver Arrow of Hamilton during the entire race. On lap 48, Vettel had to cut Turn 4 after a mistake heading into the corner, as he returned to the track, Hamilton was about to overtake him but the German left no space and the Englishman had to back out of the move, otherwise, he would have been put into the wall by the Ferrari.

Vettel was given a 5-second penalty for his move and Hamilton crossed the line in second but won the race to Ferrari’s and Vettel’s anger. Vettel showed his frustration in the post-race ceremony and Ferrari announced they would appeal the sanction, but eventually, it did not deliver the result expected by them.

Sixth and seventh for Renault at Montreal was a solid result for the team and what they had been waiting for the entire campaign.

After 10 straight wins for Mercedes (eight for Hamilton) going back to the last two races of 2018, it was Verstappen’s day at Austria, home of Red Bull Racing. After Leclerc had taken Pole Position and Hamilton was penalised for impeding Raikkonen in qualifying, the Dutchman started second. Even though Verstappen had a really bad start and lost several places, he managed to put himself in contention and a great display of overtaking left him close to Leclerc in the closing laps.

Marko: Leclerc best driver after Verstappen

Race winner Max Verstappen celebrates on the podium as second placed Charles Leclerc looks dejected in Austria (2019)

Verstappen got past after a great fight and even forced Leclerc out of the track (cleanly) when the Monegasque tried to hold his position and won the race. A stunning drive from the Dutchman which delivered Honda’s first F1 victory since the 2006 Hungarian Grand Prix (won by Jenson Button). Bottas was the other podium finisher, ahead of Vettel and Hamilton.

Hamilton won a record sixth British Grand Prix at Silverstone in another Mercedes 1-2. At this point, Hamilton had won seven of the first 10 races and his championship lead was a comfortable 39 points over Bottas. The following race was at Hockenheim and despite Hamilton’s Pole Position in the weekend where Mercedes was celebrating 125 years of motorsport in their home circuit, it all went wrong in the race.

Verstappen went on to win a crazy wet-dry-wet race at Hockenheim with Vettel (who recovered from last to P2) and Kvyat, who scored his second career podium and the first for Toro Rosso since Vettel’s win at Italy in 2008, on the podium.

Hamilton managed to still increase his lead at the top with ninth place, after the two Alfa Romeos were penalised for driver aids at the start. Also, Kubica scored his one and only point of the year, with P10 for the Williams.

Max's father hopes Red Bull close to Mercedes

Max Verstappen (Red Bull) gets passed by Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes) in lap 67 in Hungary

At Hungary, the in-form Verstappen got his first career Pole Position before losing in a great battle on Sunday to Hamilton, who got a different strategy and performed a magnificent final stint to catch and pass the Dutchman.

After Hamilton had won eight of the 12 Grands Prix in the first half of the year, a fight for the championship was unlikely with Bottas 62 points behind. However, the second half of the year was stunning, with more than one team with chances to win almost in every race and a fantastic show of power from the Ferrari engine, which would raise many eyebrows in the process.

At Spa and Italy, Ferrari and mainly Leclerc showed that their engine was comfortably ahead of the field. Both wins were emotional for Leclerc, not only because they were his first two (and only wins to date), but because at Spa-Francorchamps, his childhood friend Anthoine Hubert had died on Saturday after a terrible and sad crash on the F2 Feature Race. At Italy, the emotions were different, as it was Ferrari’s first win in front of the Tifosi since 2010 (when Fernando Alonso beat Button to the win).

Ferrari kept dominating with a surprise 1-2 at Singapore, where engine power should not have given them such an advantage. A new downforce package and a good strategy from the team helped Vettel turn a 1-3 for the team (led by Leclerc) into a 1-2 and what was his only win of a tough year.

Schumacher: Vettel in danger if conflict worsens

Sebastian Vettel VS Charles Leclerc on track in the SF90 at Sochi (2019)

Moving on to the Russian Grand Prix, Ferrari again dominated Saturday with Leclerc being untouchable at the front. Hamilton managed to qualify second, ahead of Vettel. In the race, Vettel led ahead of Leclerc after a great start, which was arranged by the team before the race in order to put Vettel ahead of Hamilton.

However, Vettel did not let Leclerc get past and the situation helped Hamilton (who started on the medium tyre compared to the soft-starting Ferraris) maintain within striking distance. Eventually, Leclerc stopped before Vettel and was ahead after the German pitted. However, an engine failure for Vettel brought the Virtual Safety Car out and Hamilton made a free stop to keep the lead.

Hamilton won in another Mercedes 1-2 with Leclerc third. By this race, the new Red Bull driver, Albon, had finished in the top six in his four races with the Milton Keynes-based team and had scored more points than Verstappen in that span.

The weekend in Japan was a different one, with Saturday's action cancelled due to Typhoon Hagibis. On the Sunday-morning qualifying, Vettel put his Ferrari in Pole, ahead of Leclerc, Bottas and Hamilton.

Source: Penske could buy Mercedes' F1 team

Mercedes-AMG Petronas Motorsport celebrates their 6th constructors F1 title after winning the 2019 Japanese GP

Eventually, Bottas won in front of Vettel and Hamilton, securing Mercedes’ sixth straight World Constructors’ Championship, which tied Ferrari (1999-2004) for the longest streak ever. The two Renault cars were excluded from the race days after the GP because of the use of driver aids on the car (automated brake bias system).

The next race, at Mexico, was won by Hamilton from third place on the grid, ahead of Vettel and Bottas. Pole Position was initially taken by Verstappen, but he failed to slow down in Q3 after Bottas had crashed, earning a three-place grid penalty and Pole was handed to Leclerc.

In the race, Hamilton and Verstappen collided at the first corner of the first lap but both managed to continue running after both had excursions to the grass.

At this point, rumours about the legality of the Ferrari engine had started. Technical directives from the FIA regarding fuel-flow limits and new sensors to measure it had seemingly hindered Ferrari’s performance on the Power Unit side. Verstappen, always vocal, had accused the Italian team of cheating.

2019 US F1 GP Post-Race Press Conference

Lewis Hamilton wins his 6th drivers title after finishing the United States GP 2019

At Austin, Hamilton had the chance to secure his sixth championship and move ahead of Juan Manuel Fangio’s tally of five. Fifth place in qualifying was not a great omen for the championship leader with his teammate in Pole, but Hamilton had a great start and his one-stop strategy left him fighting for the lead with Bottas in the late stages of the race.

Hamilton finished second behind Bottas and secured a glorious sixth Formula 1 championship which put him one ahead of Fangio and just one behind Michael Schumacher’s tally. Also, it was the sixth straight Drivers’ title for Mercedes, an unprecedented feat.

The Englishman became the fourth driver after Fangio, Schumacher and Vettel to secure at least three straight titles in F1 history. He also joined Schumacher in winning five championships with the same team (the German legend did it with Ferrari).

The final two races of the year had some interest, as third in the championship was not sealed yet, with Verstappen and the two Ferraris in contention. A fight for sixth in the World Drivers’ Championship was also open between Sainz, Gasly and Albon.

2019 F1 Championship Standings

The start of 2019 F1 Grand Prix of Brazil at Autodromo Jose Carlos Pace on November 17 in Sao Paulo

Verstappen won a crazy race at Brazil in front of first-time podium-finishers Gasly and Sainz. Gasly had given Toro Rosso its second podium of the year, while the Spaniard gave McLaren its first since the 2014 Australian Grand Prix.

At the race in Sao Paulo, the two Ferrari drivers crashed into each other and had to retire from the race while fighting for third place.

In the finale at Abu Dhabi, Hamilton dominated from Pole Position, with Verstappen and Leclerc filling the podium places. Verstappen maintained his third place in the World Drivers’ Championship, while Sainz secured a solid sixth in the standings ahead of two drivers who had driven Red Bull cars for half of the year.

Hamilton’s Sixth Symphony was fitting to celebrate the 70th season of Formula 1 racing.

Drivers Standings

2019 F1 Standing Drivers Championship

PDriverPtsAUSBAHCHIAZESPAMONCANFREOSTBRIGERHUNBELITASINRUSJAPMEXUSABRAABU
1United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton41321121*11151*9123*41*3*1271*
2Finland Valtteri Bottas3261*221234*232DNF83252131DNF*4
3Netherlands Max Verstappen278344434541*51*2*DNF834DNF6312
4Monaco Charles Leclerc26453*55*5DNF3323DNF4112364*4*183
5Germany Sebastian Vettel24045334225*416234*131DNF22DNF175
6Spain Carlos Sainz96DNF19147861168655DNFDNF1265138310
7France Pierre Gasly951186*DNF65*810741469118147916218
8Thailand Alex Albon921491011118DNF1515126105665455146
9Australia Daniel Ricciardo54DNF187DNF129611127DNF1414414DNFDSQ86611
10Mexico Sergio Pérez52131086151212121117DNF1167DNF7871097
11United Kingdom Lando Norris49126188DNF11DNF9611DNF911107811DNF788
12Finland Kimi Räikkönen43879101417157981271615DNF1312DNF11413
13Germany Nico Hülkenberg37717DNF141313781310DNF1285910DSQ1091512
14Russian Federation Daniil Kvyat371012DNFDNF9710141793157DNF1512101112109
15Canada Lance Stroll21914129DNF169131413417101213119121319DNF
16Denmark Kevin Magnussen206131313714171719DNF81312DNF17*91515181114
17Italy Antonio Giovinazzi14151115121619131610DNF13181891015141414516
18France Romain Grosjean8DNFDNF11DNF101014DNF16DNF7DNF131611DNF1317151315
19Poland Robert Kubica1171617161818181820151019171716DNF1718DNF1619
20United Kingdom George Russell01615161517151619181411161514DNFDNF1616171217
2019 F1 results distribution of points: P1 = 25, P2 = 18, P3 =15, P4 = 12, P5 = 10, P6 = 8, P7 = 6, P8 = 4, P9 = 2, P10 = 1 point
* = This driver drove the fastest lap of the race and scored 1 extra point when classified in the top 10.

DNQ = Did Not Qualify, DNS = Did Not Start, Ret = Retired, DSQ = Disqualified, NC = Not Classified

Drivers Stats

2019 F1 Drivers Statistics Table

DriverGP1st2nd3rdPodPoleLapsFLRETPTS
United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton211142175126260413
Finland Valtteri Bottas21474155123332326
Netherlands Max Verstappen2132492118032278
Monaco Charles Leclerc21226107121643264
Germany Sebastian Vettel2115392117823240
Spain Carlos Sainz210011011330496
France Pierre Gasly210101012342295
Thailand Alex Albon210000012450192
Australia Daniel Ricciardo210000011200554
Mexico Sergio Pérez210000011690252
United Kingdom Lando Norris210000011020549
Finland Kimi Räikkönen210000012240243
Russian Federation Daniil Kvyat210011011940337
Germany Nico Hülkenberg210000011820337
Canada Lance Stroll210000012140321
Denmark Kevin Magnussen210000011881320
Italy Antonio Giovinazzi210000012110214
France Romain Grosjean21000001043078
Poland Robert Kubica21000001179021
United Kingdom George Russell21000001182020

Teams Standings

F1 Constructors Standings 2019

PTeamCarAUSBAHCHIAZESPAMONCANFREOSTBRIGERHUNBELITASINRUSJAPMEXUSABRAABUPts
1Germany Mercedes44211211115191234131271739
771221234232DNF83252131DNF4
2Italy Ferrari545334225416234131DNF22DNF175504
1653555DNF3323DNF41123644183
3Austria Red Bull11186DNF6581074146         417
23            5665455146
33344434541512DNF834DNF6312
4United Kingdom McLaren4126188DNF11DNF9611DNF911107811DNF788145
55DNF19147861168655DNFDNF1265138310
5France Renault3DNF187DNF129611127DNF1414414DNFDSQ8661191
27717DNF141313781310DNF1285910DSQ1091512
6Italy Toro Rosso1            911814791621885
231491011118DNF151512610         
261012DNFDNF9710141793157DNF1512101112109
7United Kingdom Racing Point11131086151212121117DNF1167DNF787109773
18914129DNF169131413417101213119121319DNF
8Switzerland Alfa Romeo7879101417157981271615DNF1312DNF1141357
99151115121619131610DNF13181891015141414516
9United States Haas8DNFDNF11DNF101014DNF16DNF7DNF131611DNF131715131528
26131313714171719DNF81312DNF1791515181114
10United Kingdom Williams631615161517151619181411161514DNFDNF16161712171
88171617161818181820151019171716DNF1718DNF1619


Free F1 Newsletter

Weekly Free Newsletter [sp-form formid=293980]

Last News Update

Newest Photos

Newest Podcast

Last Race Result

On this day…

Race Tickets

Available 2024 tickets
Qatar GP
Abu Dhabi GP

Available 2025 tickets:
Bahrain GP -15%
Monaco GP -5%
Austrian GP -5%
Belgium GP
Hungarian GP
Italian GP

Check out & order at our F1 Tickets Store »