Formula One F1 - Abu Dhabi Grand Prix - Yas Marina Circuit, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates - December 7, 2025 McLaren's Lando Norris with chief executive Zak Brown celebrate with teammates after becoming the 2025 Formula One World Champion REUTERS/Amr Alfiky
LONDON, Jan 22 (Reuters) - Formula One champions McLaren plan to wait until the second or third day of pre-season testing in Barcelona next week before running their car in order to allow maximum development time.
The test at the Circuit de Catalunya will take placebehind closed doors, without media access, and bethe first time all teams -- now up to 11 with debutants Cadillac -- have had their 2026 cars on the track together.
Although held over five days, teams are limited to three days each.
McLaren Principal Andrea Stella told reporters in a technical briefing that his team had faced an "unprecedented" amount of work to prepare for one of the sport's biggest regulation changes.
"The sheer volume of redesigning...through the last 20 months at McLaren has been probably the biggest design or in general dealing with a new car project that I was part of," the Italian said.
"This all makes it extremely interesting to see how the cars will perform, how the competitiveness order will be somehow mixed up.
"We are champions but we don't carry the being champions into '26 ... everyone will start from zero."
Formula One is entering a new engine era with changed aerodynamics and tyres affecting how drivers race.
Stella said McLaren's 'ambitious' programme was on plan and the car was on a dyno at a facility in Austria before being transported to Spain.
Some other teams -- notably Cadillac, Audi and Renault-owned Alpine -- have already run their new cars in private shakedown sessions.
"We plan to start testing either in day two or day three," said Stella. "We will not be testing on day one. We wanted to give ourselves as much time as possible for development.
"If you are early on track you will have the reassurance of knowing what you need to know as soon as possible.
"But at the same time it means that you might have committed to the design and the realisation of the car relatively early, so you will have a compromise against development time and ultimate performance."
DRIVERS REMAIN ON EQUAL TERMS
Stella said the team had reviewed last season and Britain's world champion Lando Norris and Australian teammate Oscar Piastri would remain on equal terms to fight for the title "the McLaren way".
At the same time, some ways of operating could be streamlined.
"It will be in reality a matter of fine-tuning because once we reviewed what we have done, in most of the cases we said that's exactly what we would still do again," he explained.
"But we have found a few opportunities in which we can streamline the way in which we operate collectively."
Formula One will also have two tests in Bahrain next month before the season starts in Australia on March 8.
McLaren's chief designer Rob Marshall said every component had been affected by the rule changes and suggested the car would not change much between testing and Melbourne as the team got to grips with it.
"Also, we need to take into account what the opposition are up to. We need to be inspired by what they may or may not achieve and may or may not show us," he said.
"There's a lot of stuff that we need to dial in and tune in, so I think bringing a lot of new stuff to it, early doors, would complicate stuff."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin; Editing by Kate Mayberry)
