Skip to main content

Formula One, or F1, is the pinnacle of racing sanctioned by the FIA. F1 drivers are supremely talented individuals, who drive the fastest road course racing cars in the world, reaching speeds of up to 220 mph (360 km/h) and sometimes being subjected to in excess of 5 g in corners. However, these skills are richly rewarded, and at the top end of the sport, drivers earn lucrative salaries, comparable to the best paid boxers, basketball players and footballers.

Founded in 1906, Formula One has grown to become hugely popular, with the last drivers championship having a global television audience of 425 million. With such popularity and profile comes major merchandising and endorsement deals. The economic climate of F1 has bankrupted several teams, but is generally considered profitable for most involved and is also seen as excellent marketing.

F1 drivers are the best auto racing drivers in the world, although salaries between those at the top and bottom of the sport fluctuate massively. In 2014, it was revealed that Sebastien Vettel earned a staggering 30 times more than his Red Bull teammate Daniel Ricciardo, despite the fact Ricciardo finished higher than Vettel last season. The best paid Formula One drivers earn well in excess of the top NASCAR or IndyCar drivers, with IndyCar drivers only earning, on average, a tenth of their F1 counterparts.

 10. Nico Rosberg – $30 million

via judge13.com

Last season’s runner-up to Lewis Hamilton, Nico Rosberg’s second place finish in the 2014 drivers championship was his best to date. Now 29 years of age, Rosberg has been in Formula One since 2006, spending his first three seasons with Williams before joining Mercedes, where he has spent his last five seasons and continues to race with today. After four races of this season, Rosberg is second, behind teammate Lewis Hamilton just as the 2014 season finished. Rosberg’s new contract with Mercedes will see him pick up $14.8 million a year. He might be able to climb up this list very soon.

9. Sebastian Vettel – $45 million

via carscoops.com

Four-time world champion Sebastian Vettel is the joint-third most successful F1 driver of all time, behind only Michael Schumacher and Juan Manuel Fangio, and he is still only 27. Having signed a new contract with Ferrari this year, Vettel looks set to double his wealth and skyrocket up this list over the next year, with a three-year deal worth $50 million for the first year and $30 million for the two after that. Vettel is the youngest driver to ever win the drivers’ championship, the youngest ever runner-up and the youngest to ever win a race. He became world champion in 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013. Only Schumacher and Ayrton Senna have more pole positions to their name. Vettel began F1 at the age of 18 with BMW Sauber, before joining Toro Rosso and eventually Red Bull. The German won four championships in six seasons with Red Bull before joining Ferrari this year.

T7. David Coulthard – $70 million

via f1fanatic.co.uk

David Coulthard retired from Formula One in 2008 after 14 years in the sport. DC, as he was known, spent two seasons with Williams, nine with McLaren and four with Red Bull. Coulthard never won a championship but was consistently in the upper-reaches of positions between 1995 and 2003. He finished as a runner-up in 2001, and coming third in 1995, 1997, 1998 and 2000. In 247 races, he won 13 grands prixs. Coulthard lives in Monaco, but owns property in England, Belgium and Switzerland. He has worked for the BBC since 2009, and earned a large chunk of his fortune through the sale of Monaco’s Columbus Hotel for $45 million in 2010, which Coulthard co-owned.

T7. Alain Prost – $70 million

via f1fanatic.co.uk

Alain Prost is a four-time F1 world champion, only Schumacher and Fangio have won more, with Sebastien Vettel equaling the Frenchman’s tally of four. The oldest man on this list, Prost is now 60 years of age and began his F1 career in 1980 with McLaren, he also drove for Renault, Ferrari and Williams, before retiring in 1993. Prost won four drivers championships, finished as a runner-up four times and only once finished outside the top five in 13 seasons of racing. After such a consistently successful career, it is unsurprising that Prost was richly-rewarded. Prost created his own Formula One team in 1997, named Prost Grand Prix, which raced up until the 2002 season. Since that, Prost has been sporadically involved in TV work, bicycle races and working as an ambassador for Renault, he currently resides in Switzerland.

6. Jenson Button – $100 million

via 3news.nz

The 35-year-old Jenson Button has been involved in Formula One since 2000, and his crowning moment came in 2009, when he became world champion with Brawn GP. Button has previously raced for Williams, Benetton, Renault, BAR and Honda, Brawn/Mercedes and currently McLaren. Prior to joining Brawn and becoming world champion, Button had only a single race win after nine years in F1. Like many F1 drivers, Button lives in the principality of Monaco, although he also owns property in the UK and Bahrain. Button has owned an impressive array of vehicles; including his championship winning Brawn BGP 001, a Nissan GT-R, a Honda S600, a Honda NSX Type R, a Bugatti Veyron, a VW Campervan and a series of Ferraris, including an Enzo. Button is also an ambassador and appears in television adverts for ‘Head and Shoulders’.

5. Lewis Hamilton – $110 million

via hugoboss.com

 

Like Sebastian Vettel, Lewis Hamilton looks set to multiply his already vast wealth over the coming years. His most recent contract with Mercedes is worth a base salary of $30.1 million a year, with performance related bonuses worth up to $10 million a year. On recent form, Hamilton looks set to pick up $40.1 million a year. The 30-year-old became world champion for the second time last year, and leads in the early days of this seasons championship also. In 2007, Hamilton moved to the tax-haven of Switzerland, before relocating to another tax-haven, Monaco, in 2012. In 2013, he acquired a private jet, a Bombardier Challenger 600 series.

Hamilton also owns a collection of Mercedes, two AC Cobras and recently purchased the $1.5 million Ferrari LaFerrari. He has endorsement deals with Santander, Tag Heuer and Reebok, and is currently Britain’s highest earning athlete, ahead of Jenson Button, Wayne Rooney and Andy Murray.

4. Eddie Irvine – $175 million

via youtube.com

The least successful man on the track on this list, is the joint third most successful financially. Eddie Irvine won only four races out of the 148 he took part in, all of which came in the 1999 season when he finished second. Irvine spent 10 seasons in F1, racing for Jordan, Ferrari and Jaguar. With a less illustrious racing past in comparison to most on this list, you will not be surprised to find out that a large chunk of his fortune is not down to his work on the track. Irvine has invested in property throughout his life and currently owns more than 50 properties, as well as a sports complex in Bangor.

3. Kimi Raikkonen – $180 million

via theguardian.co.uk

Kimi Raikkonen became the best paid racing driver in the world in 2007 when he joined Ferrari. The move also saw him win his first and only World Drivers’ Championship in the 2007 season. Raikkonen raced with Sauber, McLaren and Ferrari, before leaving Formula One in 2010, he returned in 2012, with Lotus, before rejoining Ferrari last year. The Finnish driver also owns a Motocross World Championship team. Raikkonen is 35 years of age and currently sits in fourth in this seasons drivers championship.

2. Fernando Alonso – $220 million

via biser3a.com

Most F1 drivers discover their ability and passion for racing in their early-mid teens, but not Fernando Alonso, who began karting at the age of three. A two-time world champion and three-time runner-up, the lowest position Alonso has ever finished a season is sixth. Such consistent excellence has made him one of the best paid drivers in the world for 10 years now, and gives him the extraordinary wealth which leaves him in second spot on this list. His current two-year deal with McLaren, which began this year, could see him earn up to $40 million this year, if he activates his performance-related bonuses. Alonso first raced for Minardi, before joining Renault, McLaren, rejoining Renault, Ferrari, and at the start of this year, McLaren once more.

1. Michael Schumacher – $780 million

via parismatch.ca

 

Statistically the greatest driver in Formula One history, Michael Schumacher is a very distant top spot on this list. In fact, Schumacher’s wealth equates to 43% of the entire top 10. Such is the German’s financial clout, he has donated more money than most on this list are worth, and was at one stage thought to be the first ever billionaire sportsman, although such claims appear slightly wide of the mark. A seven time world champion, Schumacher is the most successful driver in F1 history and the third wealthiest sportsman of all time, behind only Ion Tiriac and Michael Jordan.

He began F1 racing in 1991 and didn’t retire until 2012, although he did take a four year break between 2006 and 2010. Over 19 seasons, he raced for Jordan, Benetton, Ferrari and Mercedes, winning two championships with Benetton and five with Ferrari. Schumacher suffered a serious head injury whilst skiing in December 2013 and has been receiving regular treatment ever since, although he is said to have severe brain injuries, as well as being paralyzed and wheelchair-bound; we wish him a speedy-recovery of course.