STATISTICS
SEASON
- Season Position
- 15th
- Season Points
- 2
- Grand Prix Races
- 4
- Grand Prix Points
- 2
- Grand Prix Wins
- 0
- Grand Prix Podiums
- 0
- Grand Prix Poles
- 0
- Grand Prix Top 10s
- 1
- DHL Fastest Laps
- 0
- DNFs
- 0
- Sprint Races
- 2
- Sprint Points
- 0
- Sprint Wins
- 0
- Sprint Podiums
- 0
- Sprint Poles
- 0
- Sprint Top 10s
- 0
CAREER STATS
- Grand Prix Entered
- 35
- Career Points
- 21
- Highest Race Finish
- 6 (x1)
- Podiums
- 0
- Highest Grid Position
- 7 (x3)
- Pole Positions
- 0
- World Championships
- 0
- DNFs
- 6
Biography
- Date of Birth
- 14/10/2004
- Place of Birth
- São Paulo, Brazil
I WANT TO BE ABLE TO FIGHT FOR THINGS AND TO MAKE MY COUNTRY PROUD OF EVERYTHING I CAN ACHIEVE.
Gabriel Bortoleto is among the bright young stars of Formula 1, the former F2 champion also carrying the hopes of a nation as the first Brazilian to compete in the sport full-time since Felipe Massa in 2017.
Born in Sao Paulo, Bortoleto was karting aged seven and soon winning local championships. Four years later he was winging his way to Europe to follow in the footsteps of hero Ayrton Senna, achieving international karting success and paving the way for a move to single-seaters.
Since then, he has won races in almost every category he has contested, initially building his experience in Italian F4 and Formula Regional through 2021 and 2022, and doing enough to be signed by Fernando Alonso’s A14 management company.
With the two-time World Champion in his corner, Bortoleto moved up a gear, brilliantly capturing back-to-back F3 and F2 titles in 2023 and 2024, the latter including a remarkable rise from last to first during the Monza Feature Race – a performance that made him an outside contender for one of the few vacancies on the 2025 F1 grid.
With their own race line-up locked in, McLaren agreed to release Bortoleto from his driver development deal with the team and whispers of a race seat with Kick Sauber – following a company-wide evaluation by new boss Mattia Binotto – soon turned into concrete news.
Racing alongside the experienced Nico Hulkenberg, his rookie season featured the low of a crash-strewn home Grand Prix weekend, but also the highs of five top-10 finishes – more than enough to convince new team owners Audi to retain him for their first F1 campaign as a works squad in 2026.
Related Videos

P12 Bortoleto convinced he could have fought for points if he’d had ‘a clean weekend’

2026 Miami GP Qualifying: Brake fire forces Bortoleto to stop on track

P22 Bortoleto laments ‘many, many problems’ in Miami Qualifying

Bortoleto: P11 ‘was our pace’ in Miami Sprint

Bortoleto encouraged by Audi progress despite narrowly missing SQ3

Upgraded Audi 'a bit different' - Bortoleto hopeful of improvement in Miami
Related Articles
View all
Bortoleto disqualified from Miami Sprint over technical breach
All the special liveries, helmets, and team kit for Miami
Audi drivers react to McNish becoming Racing Director
What F1 drivers have been up to before the Miami GP
The state of play at Audi
Audi pair Hulkenberg and Bortoleto take on F1 ‘Grid Games’
