As of the 2026 Canadian Grand Prix, out of the 782 drivers who started a Grand Prix, there have been 116 Formula One Grand Prix winners. The first Grand Prix winner was Giuseppe Farina at the 1950 British Grand Prix. The most recent driver to score their first Grand Prix win is Kimi Antonelli who took his first win at the 2026 Chinese Grand Prix.
Lewis Hamilton holds the record for the most race wins in Formula One history, with 105 wins to date. Michael Schumacher, the previous record holder, is second with 91 wins, and Max Verstappen is third with 71 victories. Hamilton also holds the distinction of having the longest time between his first win and his last. He won his first Grand Prix at the 2007 Canadian Grand Prix, and his last at the 2024 Belgian Grand Prix, a span of 17 years, 1 month and 18 days.
Riccardo Patrese holds the record for the longest period of time between two race wins – more than six-and-a-half years between the 1983 South African Grand Prix and the 1990 San Marino Grand Prix. Mario Andretti had to wait the longest time between his maiden victory at the 1971 South African Grand Prix and his second win – coming five years, seven months and 18 days later at the 1976 Japanese Grand Prix. Verstappen holds the record for the most consecutive wins, having won ten Grands Prix in a row from the 2023 Miami Grand Prix to the 2023 Italian Grand Prix.
Verstappen is also the youngest winner of a Grand Prix; he was 18 years and 228 days old when he won the 2016 Spanish Grand Prix. Luigi Fagioli is the oldest winner of a Formula One Grand Prix; he was 53 years and 22 days old when he won the 1951 French Grand Prix.
Three Grands Prix, the 1951 French, the 1956 Argentine and the 1957 British Grands Prix, were won by two drivers sharing a car, so both drivers in each event were credited with a Grand Prix victory. In addition to event-specific trophies, gold medals have been awarded to all victors from the 2022 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix onwards.
This list includes the winners of the 11 Indianapolis 500 races between 1950 and 1960, as they were part of the World Championships in early years, even though they were not run by Formula One regulations, nor are they referred to as Grands Prix.
This article is based solely on the supplied corpus. No external sources were consulted; claims that could not be substantiated against the corpus were omitted under the drop-the-claim rule.
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