DriveNews.co.uk: Your Ultimate Hub for Comprehensive Automotive News and Insights! We bring you the latest reports, stories, and updates from the world of cars, covering everything from vehicle launches to driving tips. Stay with DriveNews.co.uk to stay revved up about the automotive world 24/7

Contacts

  • Owner: SNOWLAND s.r.o.
  • Registration certificate 06691200
  • 16200, Na okraji 381/41, Veleslavín, 162 00 Praha 6
  • Czech Republic

Seven-time Formula One champion Lewis Hamilton to join Ferrari in 2025

Photo by Jay Hirano ATPImages/Getty Images

Photo by Michael Potts/BSR Agency/Getty Images

Seven-time Formula One world champion Lewis Hamilton will race for Ferrari from the 2025 season after nearly 20 years – and 103 Grand Prix wins – in Mercedes-powered cars.

Hamilton and Ferrari have confirmed reports out of Italy earlier this week of what is likely one of Formula One's most significant driver transfers of all time, in the tie-up between its most successful driver and team.

The British driver will partner Monegasque ace and five-time Grand Prix winner Charles Leclerc (below), who last week signed a multi-year contract to continue with the Scuderia Ferrari team for «several more seasons».

Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images

Late last year Hamilton signed a two-year deal to remain with Mercedes for the 2024 and 2025 seasons, but it appears there was an escape clause in his contract that has allowed him to leave early – after 12 years with the German giant.

He will replace Spain's Carlos Sainz, whose contract with Ferrari runs out at the end of this year.

Hamilton is the most successful driver in Formula One history, with more Grand Prix wins (103) and pole positions (104) than any other driver – and seven World Drivers' Championships, tied with Michael Schumacher.

Meanwhile Ferrari remains F1's most successful constructor, winning 16 championships since 1961 – though its most recent was back in 2008, the same year Hamilton pipped Ferrari driver Felipe Massa to claim his first World Drivers' Championship title by a single point.

Photo by Alessio Morgese/NurPhoto via Getty Images

By 2025 Hamilton will have spent all 18 years in Formula One driving a Mercedes-powered car – six with McLaren, which used Mercedes engines, and 12 with the factory Mercedes team.

Six of Hamilton's seven World Drivers' Championship titles have been with the factory squad, but since the switch to new Formula One regulations in 2022 – with new car designs designed to promote closer racing – Mercedes has not been able to replicate its prior success.

Mercedes-AMG finished third in the standings in 2022 – and second in 2023 – after winning the Constructors' Championship for the previous eight years in a

Read more on drive.com.au