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adidas and Audi Revolut F1 Drop First Teamwear and Fanwear Range

adidas x Audi Revolut F1 Teamwear Collection

There’s a new uniform in the paddock: adidas’ Audi Revolut F1 teamwear has been revealed as the first joint collection from adidas and the Audi Revolut Formula 1 Team, combining streamlined design with performance-led materials for life at full throttle. From the pit lane to the grandstand, it’s a range designed to travel — and to work — as the team builds towards its debut on the grid.

This is the first collection since adidas became the official team partner of the Audi Revolut Formula 1 Team, arriving with the not-so-small ambition of giving everyone from drivers to engineers to mechanics a unified kit that can handle the grind — while also handing fans the same clean, purposeful look for race weekends and beyond. In short: style for the paddock, function for the workload, and enough visual swagger to travel well from trackside to terminal gate.

A collection with one foot on the grid and the other in the stands

The brief reads like it was written by someone who’s carried a tyre gun in one hand and a coffee in the other: make it technical, make it wearable, and make it unmistakably “team.” adidas’ latest performance technologies are baked in across the range, with pieces tailored for the many jobs that keep an F1 operation running — and the global fanbase that keeps it roaring.

The design thread is subtle but deliberate: red accents used as a unifying anchor, echoing the performance cues of the Audi Revolut Formula 1 Team car. The palette leans greyscale — inspired by titanium’s strength and stealth — and the silhouettes take a refined approach, with minimal linework and restrained branding. It’s less “shouty sponsor banner,” more “I know exactly where my torque wrench is.”

The headline numbers and the key bits of kit

adidas x Audi Revolut F1 Teamwear Collection

The drop spans around 160 pieces, and the highlights cover the full working ecosystem of a modern F1 team — plus the footwear that keeps everyone moving when the clock is screaming.

Driver wear: monochrome, stripped back, and properly sharp

The collarless jersey sits on a simple monochrome base, with light grey three-stripe branding on the shoulders, offset by red line highlights on the sleeves and inner neckline. It’s clean, aerodynamic in spirit, and just loud enough to register when the cameras find you.

Engineers: fitted tees with big outerwear energy

The tee is cut close to the body for a sharper silhouette, then contrasted by oversized puffers and jackets — pulled together with subtle red highlights that keep the look cohesive without turning it into a Christmas jumper.

Mechanics: utility first, pockets second, then more pockets

The mechanics’ jacket is rooted in a utility black, charcoal and graphite colourway, and there’s a clever zipper shape designed to increase pocket space — because if you’ve ever watched a mechanic work, you know they carry half a workshop like a magician carries scarves. adidas’ CLIMACOOL technology is built in to help with temperature regulation when the pace spikes.

Footwear: bespoke ADIZERO EVO SL to finish the uniform

A custom ADIZERO EVO SL completes the coordinated look in grey and red. The Lightstrike Pro midsole is there for all-round comfort, while the aesthetic stays stripped back — light on fuss, heavy on purpose, which is exactly how an F1 team likes its kit.

adidas on the partnership: “best in class technology at the forefront”

Michael Batz, Motorsport Category GM at adidas, framed the collection as the starting gun for what’s coming next — not just a merch moment, but a functional statement of intent.

Michael Batz, Motorsport Category GM at adidas said: “We are excited to officially mark the start of our journey with Audi Revolut Formula 1 Team, through a full teamwear collection which features adidas’ signature design and best-in-class technology at the forefront. Expertly crafted for the team to introduce themselves to the grid with style, each piece embodies the power, strength, and design of the car to meet the overall build-up to and race-day demands. We can’t wait to see it in the paddock and stands across upcoming race weekends!”

The drivers weigh in — and they sound like kids handed the keys to the sweet shop

For the drivers, the symbolism is as loud as the engines used to be: three stripes alongside four rings, on the biggest stage in motorsport.

NICO HULKENBERG, DRIVER AT AUDI REVOLUT F1 TEAM SAID: “The first time representing two leading icons on the track. Wearing the three stripes next to the four rings is a huge moment, and I’m excited to put on the jersey that has been built with precision and driven forward by adidas’ highest level of technical detailing – meaning it delivers style, functionality and hopefully a lot of speed.”

And for Gabriel Bortoleto, the appeal is the performance mindset — the same obsession with marginal gains, translated into the clothing the team lives in.

GABRIEL BORTOLETO, DRIVER AT AUDI REVOLUT F1 TEAM SAID: “Working with adidas is an incredible opportunity for our team. In a sport fueled by constant advancement and innovation, having the best in the game in designing pieces for athletes to meet their needs to perform at the top is incredible. Knowing our kit has been crafted with careful thought and tailored to what we require makes that first moment that I get to wear it, alongside my team, in front of our fans, even more special.”

Berlin reveal date, and when fans can buy the full drop

The adidas Audi Revolut F1 teamwear range will be formally unveiled in Berlin on 20 January at the official Audi Revolut F1 Team Lauch Event — the first public moment the two brands come together to present the team’s new identity.

For anyone ready to kit up early, the full teamwear drop will be available from 19 February via adidas.com/motorsport, www.audif1.com, and a worldwide selection of adidas wholesale accounts.

If you’re the sort who believes teamwear should do more than just sit nicely in a wardrobe, this one looks built for the messy, brilliant reality of modern Formula 1 — where the smallest details matter, and the people who move fastest aren’t always the ones holding the steering wheel.

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