F1 Betting Predictions
A working shortlist of F1 calls, grouped by the market each one sits in. Open any pick and the thinking behind it is right there — the car pace, the track fit and the tyre strategy, no name pulled from thin air. Written by Freya Madsen.
🏎️ Today's F1 Predictions
No F1 races on the board right now
There are no F1 races listed right now. The board goes quiet between race weekends and over the winter break.
This page rebuilds on its own — fresh predictions show up the moment the next games are confirmed.
How to use these F1 predictions
Every pick folds out into the reasoning behind it: the bet type the selection is built on, the race and conditions that drive it, and the argument linking the two. That's what separates these F1 predictions from a bare list of names — the card spells out where the edge comes from, so you can weigh it yourself.
Clock the bet type first
Whether it's a podium, a points finish or a driver head-to-head, the selection's wording tells you what's actually being backed before you read a word of the case.
Weigh the argument behind it
Open the pick and the write-up walks through car pace, track fit, tyre degradation and qualifying versus race pace — enough to decide for yourself whether it stacks up.
Favour the calls that converge
A selection is firmest when the car pace, the track fit and the logic all pull one way. Where they pull apart, treat it as a lean, not a lock.
Which F1 predictions actually earn a stake
Confidence shouldn't be spread evenly across the grid. The picks worth a second look are the ones where the car performance, the track fit and the tyre strategy all agree. A car that suits the circuit's demands with a driver who manages tyres — and a write-up that says so — carries far more weight than one strong result at an unrelated track.
A lean is more honest than a lock
F1 carries real variance even when it looks technical — a botched pit stop, a first-lap tangle or a sudden shower can rewrite a race that looked settled. That's exactly why naming a fair price beats promising a winner, and why podium, points and driver head-to-head markets often offer more value than the outright.
Use it to narrow down, not to pile on
The page works best as a filter. Run an eye over the firmest reads, check the practice long-run pace, qualifying and the weather, then back only the handful where it all lines up. Over a season, being selective and staking small beats betting every race by a distance.