Barilla just announced it’s becoming the official pasta sponsor of Formula 1 in a multi-year deal that leans into both its heritage and the sport’s global stage. For the racing crowd, this means more than trackside signage, with pasta bars in the paddock, digital activations, and a brand push that turns food into fan experience.
Barilla is going all out for the Austin Grand Prix from October 17 to 19. Barilla announced pasta meal kit deliveries, pop-ups, and a race-week menu inspired by Domenica Italiana, a Sunday ritual of connecting over a shared pasta feast. It’s part activation, part culinary show, part just having fun around plates of fusilloni while cars are traveling at 200 mph on the Circuit of the Americas ( COTA) race track.
What the Barilla–F1 partnership really means
Barilla
This deal is more than a buzzy brand tie-in, it’s a signal of how F1 continues evolving into a lifestyle platform, not just a racing series. Expect to see Barilla-branded pasta bars in the paddock and VIP zones, trackside signage, and consumer promos tied to races across the globe.
This is also a statement about how F1 wants to work with brands that bring lifestyle or culture, not just automotive or tech. For Barilla, the potential upside is to weave pasta into race-day rituals — whether fans are watching from home or trackside — giving the brand a space usually dominated by luxury, tech, or performance goods.
The Austin activation and local push
Barilla and F1
Between October 16 and 19, Barilla plans to roll scooters through downtown delivering 5,513 pasta meal kits. The number is the length in meters of the Circuit of the Americas. You can also grab kits at a Barilla Vespa pop-up at Fareground, 111 Congress Avenue. After the race weekend, select Austin restaurants will begin carrying Barilla’s premium Al Bronzo line.