The 2025 Web Performance Grand Prix
In Formula 1, milliseconds decide champions. Off the track, a team's website is its digital front line. This report analyzes which F1 team has the fastest website on the grid, testing on a modern 5G connection to see who truly delivers a world-class digital experience.
Constructors' Championship: Final Standings
Rank | Team | PageSpeed Score | LCP (s) | INP (ms) | CLS |
---|
Metric Deep Dive
Who has the best "0-60 time" or the most "stable car"? Select a metric below to see how the teams stack up in a head-to-head comparison. Lower is better for all metrics except PageSpeed Score.
Team-by-Team Debrief
Go behind the pit wall. Click on a team's summary row to expand it for a detailed analysis of their digital performance.
The Chequered Flag: Final Thoughts
The State of the Digital Grid
This analysis reveals a vast performance delta between the front-runners and the backmarkers. A fast website isn't black magic; it's the disciplined application of fundamentals. The top teams mastered image optimization, avoided render-blocking resources, and managed third-party scripts effectively. These are the core pillars of web performance.
The Tech Partner Paradox & Sponsorship Tax
A tech partner's logo on the car doesn't guarantee a fast site—the principles must be implemented. McLaren and Google show a successful synergy, while others struggle. Furthermore, teams like Racing Bulls and Stake F1 Sauber demonstrate the "Sponsorship Tax," where heavy third-party scripts for partners cripple performance, creating a conflict between revenue and fan experience.
The Path to Pole Position
Achieving a fast website requires treating it with the same rigor as a race car. It demands a culture where performance is a core requirement, not an afterthought. The teams that invest in clean code, smart architecture, and a user-first mindset will not only top these charts—they will win the more important race for fan loyalty and engagement.