2025 McLaren F1 car launch: title favourites first to reveal new car — in camouflage livery

F1

McLaren 2025 F1 car launch: Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri get behind the wheel of the new McLaren MCL39 as the reigning constructors' champions are the first to reveal their car for the new season.

2025 McLaren MCL39 at Silverstone shakedown

McLaren MCL39 featured a camouflage scheme ahead of the full grid livery reveal on February 18

McLaren

McLaren is the first Formula 1 team to reveal its 2025 car, releasing images of the MCL39 on track at Silverstone where Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri completed a handful of laps as part of a pre-season shakedown.

The car is an evolution of last year’s constructors’ championship-winning machine, and was clad in a camouflage livery. Every F1 team has agreed to reveal their new-season paint schemes at an event in London on February 18.

Despite being cautious about its chances in 2024, McLaren was largely the class of a closely-matched field throughout the year. Lando Norris picked up his first race victories in Miami, Zandvoort, Singapore and Abu Dhabi, while team-mate Oscar Piastri followed suit in Hungary and Azerbaijan.

The combined effort of both drivers ultimately meant that it clinched the team’s first world constructors’ title since 1998, and this year the team is targeting the drivers’ championship too.

“We believe we have made further steps forward since the Championship-winning MCL38 but we won’t know where we sit in the standings until we get into qualifying in Australia [the first race of the season],” said Zak Brown, McLaren Racing’s CEO. “We’re a team that never stops racing and we’ll be giving it our all to bring both Championships back to Woking.”

2025 McLaren MCL39 in Silverstone pitlane at shakedown

McLaren

Pitstop for 2025 McLaren MCL39 F1 car during Silverstone shakedown

McLaren

Last year, Lando Norris was the nearest challenger to Max Verstappen in the drivers’ championship, but the field was so closely matched that a small improvement from one team could offer a decisive advantage and reshuffle the competitive order from 2024.

“It’s exciting to hop in the MCL39 for the first time and see what it can do on track, ahead of pre-season testing in Bahrain,” said Norris. “I’ve been prepping for the season ahead and the mood is feeling positive but focused. We’re all looking forward to getting the car on track in Bahrain ahead of our competitive debut in Australia and to see where we net out amongst the other teams. It’s shaping up to be an exciting season.”

But although the performance of the new car against rivals is unknown, Norris has no doubts about his own form.

“I certainly know I’ve got a lot of what it takes,” he told Sky Sports F1 at the end of last year. “There’s no doubt about that, and I’m confident in saying that. I clearly, and I think this year I proved not everything is where it needs to be, but even since those moments, I feel like I’ve improved a lot in the last quarter and second half of the year, a huge amount.

“I have confidence in myself, which is, is not a common thing, and I’m never going to go around screaming that kind of thing. But I have confidence that I can fight against Max, and I can fight against Charles and all these other drivers who are just as capable of winning championships, even Lewis and stuff like that”.

McLaren MCL39 at 2025 Silverstone shakedown

Norris looks certain to be pushed hard by his team-mate in 2025, continuing on from last year, where there was often little to choose between both drivers. “The margins at the top are likely to be incredibly tight but I’m excited by the room for growth after two seasons in the sport,” said Piastri. Winning grands prix early in my career has given me the taste for success and I want much more.

“It’s great to get behind the wheel of the MCL39 for the first time ahead of us putting it through its paces in Bahrain.”

 

McLaren 2025 car launch live stream 

McLaren’s Silverstone shakedown was carried out behind closed doors but F1’s livery reveal, featuring all ten teams will be live-streamed. The show begins at 8pm GMT on February 18.

 

2024: Back on top

4 Lando Norris McLaren 2024 Abu Dhabi GP

McLaren has come a long way since its 2018 nadir

McLaren

McLaren put an end to its 26-year wait for a ninth constructors’ title in 2024, as it captured six race victories, a sprint win in Brazil and eight pole position starts.

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Its success can be traced back to a game-changing upgrade at the Miami GP, which saw the MCL38 fitted with a new front wing, front suspension and front brake duct, bodywork, floor, rear suspension and rear brake ducts. The benefits were felt immediately, as Norris took advantage of a well-timed safety car to take a career-first victory.

Norris was again in the hunt for victory at the following round in Imola, and further race-winning performances from the team in Hungary, Zandvoort, Azerbaijan, Singapore and Abu Dhabi soon saw McLaren turn into the favourites for the constructors’ title.

For a time, Norris looked to be in contention for a drivers’ title too but critical errors as well as questionable decisions from the pitwall meant he was ultimately unable to best Verstappen, who, despite his Red Bull’s relative underperformance, was able to secure his fourth consecutive world championship with three rounds to spare.

Had the Woking outfit been a threat from the offset in Bahrain, Norris likely would have posed a much larger threat to F1’s dominant Dutchman.

 

2025: Title contention? 

McLaren will arguably head into 2025 as title favourites. The team’s leap in year-on-year performance since 2022 has seen it gradually climb higher up the grid, and now as F1’s defending constructors’ champions, the Woking outfit could be the team to beat throughout 2025.

But with as many as four teams possibly in contention for both world titles, the key to success could all be in the start.

In 2023 and 2024, McLaren off to relatively slow starts and had to introduce important updates across the season in order to catch up. Should the Woking outfits latest F1 creation be quick from the get go, it could make defending its constructors’ crown and competing for a drivers’ title relatively simple.

“Every race weekend, you watch Formula 1’s best driver pairing, Lando and Oscar, get behind the wheel of the MCL38 and put in a shift for this team,” said McLaren team boss Zak Brown.

“More often than not this year, that’s been at the front of the field, with six grand prix wins, 21 podiums, and eight pole positions, including a run of 14 consecutive podiums, the second-longest streak in our history.

“Our drivers have done us proud. Lando pushed Max hard in the drivers’ championship and is the first driver to finish second for us since Jenson [Button] in 2011. And in only his second season, Oscar has become the first McLaren driver to finish as high as fourth for us since Lewis [Hamilton] in 2012.

“On and off track, both made huge strides this year, showing they’ve got what it takes to challenge for the championship.”

 

McLaren 2025 F1 driver line-up

Oscar Piastri 2023 McLaren headshot
Lando Norris Oscar Piastri
  • Lando Norris signed a multi-year extension with McLaren in January 2024
  • Oscar Piastri penned extension midway through 2023 campaign, keeping him at McLaren until 2025
  • Pato O’Ward signed as reserve driver for 2025

 

Key personnel

CEO: Zak Brown

Zak Brown on 2023 Dutch Grand Prix grid in front of McLaren F1 car

Can Zak Brown lead McLaren back to the top of F1?

DPPI

Motor sport marketing mogul Zak Brown took over McLaren at the end of 2016, and has helped initiate a sea-change in both its F1 performance and overall racing activities.

The team went from almost propping up the grid in 2017 to finishing third in 2020 in what was a remarkable turnaround.

“I would say that the reason why we’re having success today is getting the right people in place: Andreas Seidl [team principal], James Key [technical director], Andrea Stella [racing director and Piers [Thynne, operations director] have done an awesome job and that’s just on the racing side,” Brown told Motor Sport’s ‘My big break’ podcast last year.

As well as expanding the team’s motor sport participation to include IndyCar, Formula E and Extreme E, Brown has managed to draw in sponsors such as British American Tobacco, Google and NEOM to the Woking squad.

The list of names attached to McLaren has come partly through the team remaking its image into one of the most engaging outfits on the grid, partly focused around Norris and its social media output.

Team principal: Andrea Stella

Andrea Stella

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Previously a race engineer for Michael Schumacher, Kimi Räikkönen and Fernando Alonso at Ferrari, Andrea Stella has been McLaren’s executive director of racing since 2019, having initially joined in 2015.

The Italian’s appointment has proven to be prosperous, with the team finding consistent improvement after the departure of Andreas Seidl.

“His move into this role is a great example of the strength in depth we have in our team,” said Brown.

Technical director: James Key

Having spent several years at what is now Aston Martin, James Key became of the youngest ever technical directors of an F1 team when he took charge during its Midland era.

Key stayed at the team as it then transitioned to Spyker and again to Force India.

After holding the same post at both Sauber and Toro Rosso, Key took over technical matters at McLaren in 2018, helping – along with Brown and Seidl – to shift the team back to the sharper end of the grid.