McLaren have formally lodged a notification of appeal with the FIA International Court of Appeal after the revised Monaco GP result triggered a fresh sporting fairness row in the 2026 Formula 1 season.
The team confirmed it is appealing decisions related to Stewards Document 99, Revised Final Race Classification Document 100 and Revised Championship Points Document 101, following the post-race process that changed the Monaco result after the FIA reviewed pit lane speed penalties.
The controversy centres on the reversal of penalties that had shaped the Monaco finishing order and championship points. Alpine’s successful review restored Pierre Gasly to the podium, but it also created a wider problem for teams whose drivers had already served penalties during the race or had their strategies affected by the original decisions.
McLaren made clear their appeal is not aimed at any rival team or driver. Instead, the Woking team argued that the way the situation has unfolded raises broader questions over consistency, fairness and the integrity of the championship.
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| Oscar Piastri during practice for the 2026 F1 Monaco GP | McLaren F1 Team |
“McLaren Racing can confirm that it has formally lodged a notification of appeal with the FIA International Court of Appeal regarding the following decisions related to the 2026 Monaco Grand Prix: Stewards Document 99; Revised Final Race Classification Document 100; Revised Championship Points Document 101,” the team said in a statement.
“While we fully respect the FIA’s judicial processes and the role of the Stewards, we believe this case raises important questions concerning sporting fairness, regulatory consistency and the integrity of competition.”
McLaren question sporting fairness after Monaco revision
The Monaco controversy has become one of the most complex regulatory disputes of the 2026 season because it is not simply about whether one penalty was right or wrong.
The issue is what happens when a penalty is removed after others have already served punishments or adjusted their race decisions based on the original rulings.
McLaren’s position is that teams followed the regulations and established practice as they were being applied during the Monaco weekend. If penalties are later removed from some competitors, the team argues that those who accepted the original decisions can be left at a disadvantage.
“Throughout the Monaco Grand Prix weekend – and in every event – all teams operated according to the regulations and established standard practices for what concerns the speed limit in the pit lane as they were applied at the time,” McLaren added. “Competitors adjusted their procedures accordingly and, where required, accepted and served penalties imposed under those regulations.
“In our view, the subsequent removal of penalties creates a situation in which some competitors are disadvantaged by having acted in accordance with the rules and the Stewards’ decisions. Such an outcome risks creating sporting inequity and undermining confidence in the consistent application of the FIA Sporting Regulations.”
That wording is significant.
McLaren are not arguing simply that Gasly should not have regained his position. They are challenging the wider consequence of revising the result after teams had already accepted penalties that could not be fully unwound.
Monaco appeal could test FIA consistency
The appeal now places the FIA’s regulatory process under renewed scrutiny.
Pit lane speeding is usually one of the most straightforward offences in Formula 1, but Monaco’s unique layout and the reported timing discrepancy turned a routine penalty process into a much larger issue.
The problem for the FIA is that the revised classification did not affect every competitor in the same way. Some penalties could be removed after the race through a points and classification change. Others, particularly penalties already served during the Grand Prix, had already shaped track position, strategy and race outcome in ways that cannot easily be reversed.
“Our decision to appeal is not directed at any competitor,” the team said. “Rather, it reflects our belief that the Championship benefits from regulations that are applied consistently, transparently and fairly to all participants.
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| Oscar Piastri during the F1 2026 Barcelona Grand Prix | McLaren F1 Team |
“McLaren remains committed to working constructively with the FIA, Formula One and fellow competitors to protect the integrity of the sport and maintain confidence in its regulatory framework.”
For McLaren, the championship implications matter too. Any revised classification or points adjustment can affect the fight against Ferrari, Mercedes and Red Bull, especially in a season where small swings have already carried major consequences.
But the bigger question now goes beyond one result.
If the FIA International Court of Appeal takes the case forward, it may have to address how Formula 1 handles errors that are identified after the event, particularly when some competitors can be restored while others cannot be compensated in the same way.
That makes McLaren’s appeal more than a dispute over Monaco.
It is now a test of how the FIA balances correction, fairness and sporting certainty when a Grand Prix result has already been shaped by decisions made in real time.
- John Smith



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