2026 Spanish F1 GP

2026 Spanish F1 GP

Lewis Hamilton won 2026 Spanish F1 GP for Ferrari. The final order and points sit below.

Jun 14, 2026Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya66 laps4.657 km
L
Race winnerLewis HamiltonFerrari · 1:32:28.105

Results

Pos.GridDriverTeamTimeLapsPts
12Lewis HamiltonFerrari1:32:28.1056625
21George RussellMercedes1:32:47.6666618
34Lando NorrisMcLaren1:32:51.8246615
45Max VerstappenRed Bull1:33:08.6026612
57Oscar PiastriMcLaren1:33:26.7666610
66Isack HadjarRed Bull+1 lap658
714Pierre GaslyAlpine+1 lap656
88Liam LawsonRacing Bulls+1 lap654
911Arvid LindbladRacing Bulls+1 lap652
1013Franco ColapintoAlpine+1 lap651
P1Grid 2

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

Time
1:32:28.105
Laps
66
Pts
25
P2Grid 1

George Russell

Mercedes

Time
1:32:47.666
Laps
66
Pts
18
P3Grid 4

Lando Norris

McLaren

Time
1:32:51.824
Laps
66
Pts
15
P4Grid 5

Max Verstappen

Red Bull

Time
1:33:08.602
Laps
66
Pts
12
P5Grid 7

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

Time
1:33:26.766
Laps
66
Pts
10
P6Grid 6

Isack Hadjar

Red Bull

Time
+1 lap
Laps
65
Pts
8
P7Grid 14

Pierre Gasly

Alpine

Time
+1 lap
Laps
65
Pts
6
P8Grid 8

Liam Lawson

Racing Bulls

Time
+1 lap
Laps
65
Pts
4
P9Grid 11

Arvid Lindblad

Racing Bulls

Time
+1 lap
Laps
65
Pts
2
P10Grid 13

Franco Colapinto

Alpine

Time
+1 lap
Laps
65
Pts
1

Race report

Lewis Hamilton won the 2026 Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix for Ferrari, completing 66 laps with a recorded time of 1:32:28.105. The podium order in the source classification was Lewis Hamilton, George Russell, Lando Norris.

Lewis Hamilton won the 2026 2026 Spanish F1 GP for Ferrari, completing 66 laps with 1:32:28.105. The final classification places the result in a clear race-report frame rather than a live-timing feed: winner, podium order, team identity, gap or status text, and lap counts are all carried into the table below. Lewis Hamilton, George Russell, and Lando Norris define the podium sequence used by this page, while the surrounding quick facts preserve the date, circuit and distance context. The source summary also records: Lewis Hamilton won the 2026 Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix for Ferrari, completing 66 laps with a recorded time of 1:32:28.105. The podium order in the source classification was Lewis Hamilton, George Russell, Lando Norris. The event was held at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, a race course in Montmeló. F1DB records 4.657 km circuit length, 66 race laps, 307.236 km race distance for this race. The top ten classification table below keeps the source ordering intact, including gap, lap and points fields when supplied by F1DB. Fastest lap reference: Lewis Hamilton - 1:20.122 - Lap 44. Use this page as a compact race archive rather than a live timing report: every result comes from the pinned static snapshot and will be refreshed only when the project bumps the F1DB release tag.

The event sits at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya in Montmeló, with a listed circuit length of 4.657 km and a race distance of 307.236 km. That circuit context matters because Formula 1 results are not just finishing positions; they combine venue layout, lap count, distance, tyre and timing rhythm, and the pressure of converting grid position into a classified finish. This archive therefore keeps the factual venue block near the result table so readers can compare one Grand Prix with another across the 2017-2026 window. The copy is written in a newsroom style, but every factual claim is limited to the fields that are present in the approved race data. A long, high-speed circuit can make lap deficits read differently from a short street course, and a race distance just above three hundred kilometres gives the classification a different rhythm from a stop-start event with many retirements. The page keeps those venue facts close to the result so the report remains useful even when incident-level detail is not available.

The results table keeps the classification order intact. Top-ten readers can follow Lewis Hamilton, George Russell, Lando Norris, Max Verstappen, Oscar Piastri, Isack Hadjar, Pierre Gasly, Liam Lawson, Arvid Lindblad, and Franco Colapinto, then open the full table to see retirements, non-classified finishes, lap deficits and zero-point finishes. Grid and points columns are part of the same contract because they explain how a race result moves beyond the winner line: a driver may finish high after starting deep, or score points while still leaving the podium untouched. Pierre Gasly shows the largest positive grid-to-finish move in the stored table, gaining 7 positions from grid 14 to finish 7. Points are displayed as supplied, so a reader can distinguish podium value from lower top-ten scoring without jumping to another page. Fastest lap context is preserved as Lewis Hamilton - 1:20.122 - Lap 44, which keeps another race-performance signal near the final order without turning the page into a speculative live blog.

Strategy and race-control context is handled conservatively. Where the source does not include safety-car timing, virtual safety-car periods, penalties, overtakes or collision notes, this page does not invent them. Instead, it uses the available classification, lap, status, gap, grid and points fields to describe what can be verified. That keeps the report useful for comparison work while avoiding fake colour. If a future approved data refresh adds richer incident or stint detail, the report can expand in place; until then, the stable contract is a clean Grand Prix report anchored in winner, podium, venue, table and source-backed finishing status. Readers still get a complete race page because the table shows the decisive sporting outcome, while the prose explains how to read that outcome without pretending to know every stint, radio call or stewarding note.

Team and driver performance is read through the classification rather than through unsupported paddock narrative. Ferrari receives the winner line because Lewis Hamilton is first in the stored result, but the surrounding rows remain just as important for understanding the race. A second-place finisher may protect a large points haul, a midfield driver may climb through the order, and a retirement can explain why a known contender disappears from the points. The full table is therefore not decorative; it is the main evidence object on the page. Lap counts, status text and zero-point rows help distinguish a normal finish from a late mechanical loss, accident status or non-classified result, while grid and points fields keep the race connected to qualifying and scoring context.

For championship reading, the safest signal in this v1 archive is the race-level points field rather than a fabricated season standings story. The 2026 2026 Spanish F1 GP page highlights who won, which team converted the result, who scored, and which rows remained outside the points. It also keeps the date and route stable for search, sitemap and legal attribution. Readers who return after a 2026 refresh should see the same route and page structure, with updated classification only when the pinned data source changes. That gives the site a repeatable editorial rhythm: headline, subtitle, quick facts, full result table, long-form report, and related races. The result can then be compared across the whole 2017-2026 archive without changing page conventions from season to season.