Formula One teams are set for a virtual meeting this Thursday to open discussions on possible adjustments to the 2026 technical regulations, with any early changes potentially arriving before the Miami Grand Prix.
The session will be led by Nikolas Tombazis and brings together team technical directors, engine manufacturers, and Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile officials to review data from the opening rounds of the season.
This first meeting is not expected to produce drastic decisions, but rather to narrow down key areas that require attention ahead of a broader summit later in April.
Early-season races in Australia, China, and Japan have already provided enough data to touch major areas of concern, particularly around how the new power unit regulations are playing out on track.
Much of the focus centres on energy management. Drivers have been forced into extended lift-and-coast phases to manage battery usage, limiting their ability to push consistently across a race distance.
That shift has affected the overall flow of races, with less sustained wheel-to-wheel action and more emphasis on conserving deployment rather than attacking.
The discussion will lean toward changes that can be introduced without forcing major redesigns under the cost cap.
Among the areas expected to be reviewed are the amount of deployable electrical energy per lap, fuel-flow limits, and how power modes are accessed during different phases of a race.
Any immediate adjustment would require strong backing across the grid, with a super-majority needed if both Formula One and the FIA support the proposals.
Power unit-related changes also depend on agreement from the majority of manufacturers, adding another layer to the process.
This marks the starting point of what is likely to be a gradual refinement cycle rather than a total reset of the regulations.
The current framework is expected to remain in place, with only targeted tweaks considered to address early issues while maintaining the broader direction of the 2026 rules.
With the next race approaching in Miami, the timeline leaves little room for delay. Whether agreement comes quickly or stretches into the coming rounds, the pressure to act is already clear from across the paddock.
