how do they transport f1 cars
Formula 1 cars are moved around the world using a tightly planned mix of custom trucks, cargo planes, and sea freight, with the cars partly dismantled and packed into specially designed containers for protection and efficiency. Behind every race, there is a huge logistics âcircusâ that shifts tens of tons of cars, spares, and garage gear in just a few days between events.
Big picture: how they move
- Teams use three main modes: road trucks for European races, cargo planes for longâhaul âflyawayâ events, and ships for heavy, nonâurgent equipment.
- Each team moves roughly 40â50 tonnes of freight per race, including up to three chassis (two race cars plus a spare) and enough parts to build multiple cars.
Stepâbyâstep from one race to the next
- Strip the cars down
- After the chequered flag, mechanics start dismantling the cars: wings, suspension, bodywork, and many internal components come off so everything packs into standardized crates.
* Even the pit wall stand, garage structures, and hospitality units are modular so they can be broken down into labeled cases.
- Pack into custom containers
- Chassis are bolted into bespoke frames and mounted on pallets, then slid into shaped boxes that match aircraft cargo bays.
* Sensitive parts (electronics, aero bits, steering wheels) go into padded, sometimes climateâcontrolled, containers, all barcoded and itemized on detailed packing lists.
- Send by truck, plane, or ship
- For European rounds, teams load everything onto tall, purposeâbuilt race trailers; the trucks drive circuitâtoâcircuit, often overnight.
* For overseas races, the bulk of the valuable kit goes by **cargo plane** (often on fleets of wideâbody freighters arranged by F1âs logistics partner, like DHL), while slower, heavier items travel earlier by sea to save cost and emissions.
- Rebuild at the next track
- At the destination, local trucks take the pallets from airport/port to the circuit, the garage is rebuilt, and the cars are reassembled from their crates back to full running condition.
* Crews work on tight timetables, often through the night, so everything is ready for Friday practice.
Trucks, planes, and ships compared
| Transport mode | When itâs used | What it carries | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Road trucks | Mainly European races with drivable distances between circuits. | [8][1]Cars, garage kit, spares, hospitality units. | [1][8]Flexible, cheaper than air, easy to schedule. | [8][1]Limited to land routes; slower than air over very long distances. | [1][8]
| Cargo planes | âFlyawayâ races in regions like Asia, the Americas, Middle East. | [5][7][1]Chassis, critical parts, timeâsensitive equipment. | [7][3][5]Fast, secure, can move entire teams in days. | [5][7]Very expensive and carbonâintensive. | [1][5]
| Sea freight | Nonâurgent gear sent weeks ahead of longâhaul races. | [8][5][1]Heavy equipment, duplicate garage structures, some tools. | [5][1]Much cheaper and more carbonâefficient than flying. | [1][5]Slow and less flexible; cannot carry lastâminute upgrades. | [5][1]
How many cars and parts go?
- Teams usually move two race chassis plus a spare tub, plus enough components to build at least a third car if needed.
- One teamâs freight to a flyaway race can fill over a dozen aircraft pallets or more than a dozen standardized freight containers, weighing 30â40+ tonnes.
Why it looks so âinsanely organizedâ
- Every item down to the smallest nut is catalogued so nothing is forgotten; a missing box can derail a whole weekend.
- With 20+ races a year across multiple continents, teams often have parallel sets of sea freight circulating the globe so one batch is always en route to a future race while another is in use.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.