The 2025 Formula 1 season has just wrapped up, but Pirelli is already focused on 2026. Today, the tire compounds presented last Tuesday in Abu Dhabi were officially homologated. This step allows the manufacturer to announce the tire selections for the first three races of the next season: Australia, China, and Japan.
Melbourne
With the 2026 range consisting of only five different tire types, Pirelli has selected the softest compounds for the Australian GP, scheduled from March 6 to 8. The lineup will include C3 as Hard, C4 as Medium, and C5 as Soft. According to Pirelli, this choice in 2024 favored two-stop strategies for several teams.
Shanghai
For the Chinese GP (March 13-15), Pirelli has chosen a more balanced selection with C2 as Hard, C3 as Medium, and C4 as Soft. This combination is likely to be used for much of the season, making the C3 the most important tire of the year. Unless Pirelli decides on a compound step-up that excludes it from nomination, the C3 will be the tire that teams and drivers feel most confident with and will likely use in nearly every race weekend.
Suzuka
For the Japanese GP (March 27-29), due to high lateral loads, Pirelli has opted for the hardest compounds in line with previous seasons: C1 as Hard, C2 as Medium, and C3 as Soft. This selection has shown varying strategic developments between 2024 (average of two pit stops due to high thermal degradation) and 2025 (only one stop due to construction improvements introduced by Pirelli combined with lower temperatures).
Early-season exposure
In the first three races of March, teams, drivers, and personnel will have the opportunity to test all five compounds in race conditions, although they will already have been extensively used in pre-season testing. This will allow the teams to make initial evaluations and consider adjustments to the tire nominations for subsequent races.
When will the first adjustments be made?
Specifically, the data analysis conducted after the Japanese GP (considering that Pirelli announces its nominations about three months before each event) could directly influence the tire selections from the British GP (July 3-5, R11) onwards.
