Formula 1 has spent the better part of the last decade convincing the world that hybrid complexity was the future. Efficient, road-relevant, and technically brilliant. All true-but if you’ve watched the first few races of 2026, you can see the cracks are starting to show.
Now the FIA is preparing a course correction, with or without the current power unit manufacturers. President Mohammed Ben Sulayem says the V8 is coming back. By 2031 at the latest, Formula 1 will move away from its current V6 turbo-hybrid formula and return to a simpler, louder engine architecture-and if the manufacturers don’t agree to it sooner, the FIA can force it.
“It’s a matter of time,” he said. “In 2031, it’s done anyway.”
To understand how we got here, you have to go back to 2014, when F1 ditched its screaming naturally aspirated V8s for the current V6 hybrid units. At the time, the move made sense. The auto industry was preparing to pivot hard toward electrification, and Formula 1 needed to adapt.
Fast-forward to 2026, and that philosophy has been pushed to an exhausting breaking point. The current power units split output close to 50/50 between internal combustion and electric energy; even with an in-season rules adjustment, many inside and outside the sport are still not satisfied.
The FIA has already tweaked energy harvesting limits to improve drivability and reduce some of the more awkward speed differentials. Even though we’re just four races into the current ruleset, behind the scenes, the conversation about what comes next is already raging.
There’s talk of adjusting the balance again as soon as 2027, possibly shifting toward a 60/40 split in favor of combustion. But that’s a bridge solution. The real change is coming with the next full regulation cycle in 2031, and that’s where the V8 re-enters the picture.
“You get the sound, less complexity, lightweight,” Ben Sulayem said of V8s. “You will hear about it very soon and it will be with a very, very minor electrification.”
A V8 delivers most of what people miss without completely abandoning modern expectations. This won’t be a full throwback to 2005; there will still be a hybrid component accentuating the V8 aura, just not one that dominates the entire show.
“I’m positive, they [power unit manufacturers] want it to happen. But let’s say the manufacturers don’t approve it [for 2030]. The next year, it will happen. In 2031 its done anyway. It will be done. V8 is coming.”
If the FIA wants to accelerate the timeline and introduce V8s in 2030, it will need support from at least four of the six current power unit manufacturers-Mercedes, Ferrari, Honda, Audi, Red Bull Powertrains, and General Motors. If that doesn’t happen, 2031 remains the fallback, and at that point, the FIA doesn’t need permission.
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