Published: 10:19, March 30, 2026
Max Verstappen says he is considering F1 retirement
By Reuters
Red Bull's Max Verstappen ahead of the race in Japanese Grand Prix, Suzuka, Japan, March 29, 2026. (PHOTO / REUTERS)

Max Verstappen said his current unhappiness has left all options on the table, including retirement once the current Formula 1 season ends.

A winner of 71 ​career F1 races, which trails only Lewis Hamilton (105) and Michael Schumacher (91) ‌all-time, Verstappen finished eighth at the Japanese Grand Prix on Sunday.

The four-time F1 drivers' champion from 2021 to 2024 for Red Bull relinquished his seat at the top ​of the sport when McLaren's Lando Norris won the title last ​season.

Verstappen, 29, has bemoaned recent technical changes to F1 cars and ⁠reiterated his disappointment Sunday, according to the BBC. New F1 engines now ​have a 50-50 split between electrical power and fuel combustion.

On the record as ​critical of the changes, the Dutch driver was asked if there was a chance he would walk away from his Red Bull contract that runs through the 2028 season.

"That's what ​I'm saying," said Verstappen, who finished sixth in the season-opening race at ​Australia, did not finish at China and had his worst finish of the season Sunday.

With ‌races ⁠at Bahrain and Saudi Arabia canceled this season because of conflict in the Middle East, the F1 schedule now heads into a one-month pause and will return May 3 at Miami. It is widely believed that Verstappen will weigh ​his future before racing ​resumes, while expecting ⁠to finish out the season regardless of what he decides.

"Privately I'm very happy," Verstappen said, according to the BBC. "You ​also wait for 24 races. This (season) it's 22. But normally ​24. ⁠And then you just think about is it worth it? Or do I enjoy being more at home with my family? Seeing my friends more when you're ⁠not enjoying ​your sport?"

Verstappen is not only struggling in ​races, he failed to emerge from the second stage of pole qualifying Saturday, when only the best ​10 lap times move on to the third and final stage.