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white FIA logo with Canadian GP F1 themed background in red and white

FIA declares rain hazard for F1 Canadian Grand Prix today

white FIA logo with Canadian GP F1 themed background in red and white — Photo: © IMAGO

FIA declares rain hazard for F1 Canadian Grand Prix today

Rain is expected to his Montreal at deeply unhelpful times on Sunday

The FIA has declared a 'rain hazard' at the Canadian Grand Prix today (Sunday May 24), the second time in as many races they've taken the step.

With the forecast looking turbulent for today's race, the hazard was declared ahead of qualifying on Saturday, during which George Russell took an increasingly important pole position and a race start free of tyre spray.

The 'rain hazard' rule is a new one for the 2026 season (you'll understand why that is shortly), but it isn't quite the gamechanger that it appears.

The short version is: if the official forecast predicts a decent chance of rain, teams are allowed a very, very minimal amount of work on the cars in order to avoid excessive skid plank wear. Er. That's it. This is very much something that the teams need to know about, but fans shouldn't rip up their race-watching plans because of it.

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What's a rain hazard in F1, anyway?

Glad you asked! A rain hazard being declared means that the sport's 'official weather service' has given a forecast that there's at least a 40% probability of precipitation at some point in the race.

The hazard needs to be declared no later than two hours before qualifying, and if the cars are in parc ferme when a rain hazard is declared, work detailed in 'FIA-F1-DOC080' can be undertaken.

That's very much not a setup change concession for performance, though. This is because teams set up their cars with the assumption that their new active aero will be in play, reducing downforce on fast straights.

Montreal is expecting brutal weather on race day.
Montreal is expecting brutal weather on race day.

If it's raining and the active aero is reduced to zero or partial activation, then those cars will be sucked down onto the track more in the speedy sections, chipping away at their skid planks and risking disqualification.

To prevent a farcical situation with half the field disqualified after post-race inspections, teams under a rain hazard are allowed to change active front aero settings, which could see them reduce corner downforce and prevent plank wear in that way.

They will also, more simply, be allowed to adjust the ride height of their cars.

Got it? Good.

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