Oracle Red Bull Racing

Red Bull Racing Ltd Bradbourne Drive
Tilbrook, Milton Keynes, MK7 8BJ United Kingdom
Phone: +44 (0) 1908 279 700 - Fax: +44 (0) 1908 279 711
redbullracing.redbull.com


Season 2025
Foto Red Bull
CEO/Founder: Oliver Mintzlaff
Team Chief: Christian Horner
Technical Chief: Pierre Waché
Sports Director: Helmut Marko

Chassis 2025: RB21

Engine: Honda RBPT
Tyre: Pirelli

First driver  
  Second Driver
   Tsunoda Yuki
Race
15
1
Qualifying
16
0
Points
230
12
Highest Race Finish
1th
9th
Highest Qualifying Position
1th
5th
Fastest Lap
0
0

Reserve Driver: Hadjar Isack


Season 2025

After the 2024 earthquakes, the Horner case and the farewell of the brilliant designer Adrian Newey, Red Bull is preparing for 2025 with the knowledge that it is no longer the best car on the grid. The new single-seater is expected to be more than an evolution of the RB20 so complicated to handle on some categories of circuits, especially city ones, aiming for a car that is more balanced and in some ways less revolutionary than its predecessor. The team's sporting advisor, Helmut Marko, said the new single-seater, which should be called RB21, will be designed to have a wider operating window when it comes to tire exploitation and identifying an optimal setup for qualifying and the race.

Four-time world champion Max Verstappen will, of course, continue to be the first driver, but he will be joined by new teammate Liam Lawson, who takes the place of Mexican Sergio Perez.

At the O2 Arena in London on Feb. 18, the Oracle Red Bull team unveiled the livery of the new single-seater in the presence of Team Principal Christian Horner, drivers Max Verstappen and Liam Lawson. Immediately afterwards, the team released images and videos of the 2025 single-seater, the RB21


History

Red Bull Racing is an Austrian Formula 1 racing team based in Milton Keynes, UK, owned by the Red Bull company (a manufacturer of the energy drink of the same name and a previous sponsor of other racing teams) after it took over the British team Jaguar Racing. Since 2022 it has been entered in the Formula 1 World Championship under the name Oracle Red Bull Racing, for sponsorship reasons.

In 1996 Jackie Stewart founded the stable under the name Stewart Grand Prix, receiving official support from Ford. In 2000 the American automaker takes full control of the stable, renaming it Jaguar Racing; the British team does not achieve significant results and in 2004, due to financial problems, Ford sells the entire team, for the symbolic sum of one dollar, to the Austrian multinational beverage company Red Bull. In early 2005 the ex-Jaguar management was replaced by a new group led by Christian Horner, with Günther Steiner as technical director.

It won the constructors' championship and drivers' championship for four consecutive years (2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013) with Sebastian Vettel at the helm, then returned to success in the 2021 drivers' world championship, and in both world championships in 2022 and 2023 with Max Verstappen. In 2024 he won the drivers' title again with Verstappen, but finished only third in the Constructors' Championship.

(source Wikipedia)


Team history and statistics
First race:

2005 Australian Grand Prix


First victory:

2009 China Grand Prix



Formula 1 Seasons *
Year Chassis Engine Points
2025 Red Bull RB21 Honda RBPT 239
2024 Red Bull RB20 Honda RBPT 589
2023 Red Bull RB19 Honda RBPT 860
2022 Red Bull RB18 Red Bull RBPTH001 759
2021 Red Bull RB16B Honda RA620H 585.5
2020 Red Bull RB16 Honda 319
2019 Red Bull RB15 Honda 417
2018 Red Bull RB14 TAG Heuer 419
2017 Red Bull RB13 TAG Heuer 368
2016 Red Bull RB12 TAG Heuer 468
2015 Red Bull RB11 Renault 187
2014 Red Bull RB10 Renault Energy F1-2014 405
2013 Red Bull RB9 Renault RS27-2013 596
2012 Red Bull RB8 Renault RS27-2012 460
2011 Red Bull RB7 Renault RS27-2011 650
2010 Red Bull RB6 Renault RS27-2010 498
2009 Red Bull RB5 Renault RS27 153.5
2008 Red Bull RB4 Renault RS27 29
2007 Red Bull RB3 Renault RS27 24
2006 Red Bull RB2 Ferrari 056 16
2005 Red Bull RB1 Cosworth Racing TJ2005 34

* Season with at least 1 point won (since 2000)