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Red Bull and Racing Bulls 2026 F1 liveries unveiled alongside Ford in Detroit
By Chris Medland - Jan 15, 2026, 10:45 PM ET

Red Bull and Racing Bulls 2026 F1 liveries unveiled alongside Ford in Detroit

The 2026 liveries for the Ford-partnered Red Bull and Racing Bulls teams have been unveiled during a season launch event in Detroit.

The Ford Racing season launch featured a number of the brand’s racing properties, with the two Formula 1 teams showing off their liveries for the upcoming season. Red Bull Ford Powertrains will build a power unit for the first time this year and supply both Red Bull and Racing Bulls, kicking off a new era in F1 that includes both the engine and aerodynamic regulations.

The new Red Bull design features much of the classic styling but with a gloss finish on a brighter blue base color, closer to the team’s earlier years in the sport, while Racing Bulls evolves its popular white design from last season.

Michigan Central Station was the venue for the season launch that marks Ford’s return to F1 for the first time since 2004.

“One hundred and twenty-five years ago, my great-great-grandfather, Henry Ford, stepped into a car he called ‘Sweepstakes’,” Ford Racing GM Will Ford said. “He wasn’t a professional racer, and he wasn’t a favorite to win. He was a man with his back against the wall. That October day in 1901, his victory on the Grosse Pointe dirt track didn’t just win him a trophy – it secured the investment that allowed Ford Motor Company to exist.

“At Ford, we weren't just inspired by racing. We were born from it. That is why the air at Ford Racing feels different right now. After a 22-year absence, we are returning to the pinnacle of motorsport. Twenty-two years is too long. As we prepare for the Australian Grand Prix in March 2026, we are returning to our identity.

“When I first saw the new liveries for Oracle Red Bull Racing and Visa Cash App Racing Bulls, I didn’t see a marketing asset. I saw my family’s name back on a global stage where we have unfinished business.

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“Seeing the Blue Oval integrated into those designs was a reminder of the weight we carry. It’s a testament to dedication of our engineers in Dearborn and Milton Keynes have already spent in the trenches.

“We are supporting the development of a power unit that is a high-voltage marvel. This isn’t a hobby. This is the drama of the sport – the late nights and the brutal technical hurdles of building a solution that can survive the most demanding tracks on the planet.

“People often say the track is a laboratory. That’s too clinical. The track is a battlefield.

“The spirit of innovation we are pushing in F1 is the same one you see across our entire portfolio. Whether it’s the Ford Raptor T1+ in the sand dunes of Dakar, our Mustangs at Le Mans, or a Raptor in the ruts of Baja, every mile we lap is an investment in our customers.

“Let’s be clear: The high-voltage systems and battery software we are refining for 2026 are the literal blueprints for the trucks and cars our customers will drive every day. When you buy a Ranger Raptor or an F-150, you are buying the data and the grit earned during races. We at Ford aren't only in F1 to collect trophies. We are there to engineer more capable Ford vehicles.

“I’ve felt the electricity in our hallways. Our employees aren't spectators – they are part of this mission. They know that when those cars take to the grid in Melbourne, they carry the legacy of 1901 and the future of our company.

“We are optimistic, but we aren't naive. The competition is fierce, and we respect the challenge. In racing, you win and lose with equal grace, but you never stop pushing.

“To the fans who have waited two decades: we’re back. To our team: thank you for the work that got us here.

“The Blue Oval is back where it belongs. Now, let’s go racing.”

Chris Medland
Chris Medland

While studying Sports Journalism at the University of Central Lancashire, Chris managed to talk his way into working at the British Grand Prix in 2008 and was retained for three years before joining ESPN F1 as Assistant Editor. After three further years at ESPN, a spell as F1 Editor at Crash Media Group was followed by the major task of launching F1i.com’s English-language website and running it as Editor. Present at every race since the start of 2014, he has continued building his freelance portfolio, working with international titles. As well as writing for RACER, his broadcast work includes television appearances on F1 TV and as a presenter and reporter on North America's live radio coverage on SiriusXM.

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