Ferrari is playing one of its most important cards well in advance for the 2026 Formula 1 season. The new regulatory cycle represents uncharted territory for all teams, but the Maranello team will have a larger operational margin compared to its main competitors, at least in the first half of the season.

According to the Italian media, this advantage stems from Ferrari’s final position in the 2025 Constructors’ Championship. Finishing fourth gives the team an 85% coefficient for using aerodynamic tools, translating into more wind tunnel time and greater CFD (Computational Fluid Dynamics) freedom compared to McLaren, Red Bull, and Mercedes.

Ferrari’s aggressive plan

The Italian team has already defined a precise allocation of work between the wind tunnel and computational fluid dynamics. The Aerodynamic Testing Periods (ATP), each lasting around eight weeks, will guide the development of the new car. In the first months of 2026, Ferrari will be able to use up to 68 actual hours of wind tunnel testing, totaling 272 runs — about 48 more than the reigning world champion team.

On the CFD front, the advantage is equally significant: Ferrari can analyze up to 1,700 new geometries, around 300 more than McLaren, the team most restricted by the rules. This means more opportunities to explore aerodynamic solutions, more trials, and crucially, a greater margin for error at a stage where mistakes are an essential part of the development process.

In practical terms, the team led by Loic Serra will be able to test more configurations for the front wing, floor, bodywork, and rear end, choosing the final technical direction with greater confidence. In a context where “marginal gains” matter, this advantage could prove decisive.

Testing milestones and early development

The first real answers will come during the Bahrain winter tests, the first major milestone for the 2026 project. Ferrari will be able to check the correlation between CFD, wind tunnel data, and track performance — historically one of the team’s strengths, as highlighted by Frédéric Vasseur.

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If the data confirms the simulations, Ferrari can set up a very defined upgrade plan for the first three ATPs of the season. In a championship that will begin in total uncertainty, having more time to make mistakes and learn could be the most powerful weapon of all.

Ferrari is positioning itself to turn a difficult 2025 into a technical springboard. By maximizing their allocated testing time, the team aims to bridge the gap to the front-runners and emerge as a dominant force when the new power units finally roar into life. Ultimately, the battle for the next era of F1 isn’t just happening on the track; it’s being won right now in the quiet halls of Maranello’s wind tunnel.

Jan 4, 2026Luca Marini

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