What are track limits in Formula 1?
Track limits are the boundaries of the racing surface, defined by the white lines that mark the edge of the asphalt. If a car has all four wheels fully across that line, the driver is considered to be off track.
The four-wheel rule
The rule is clear: if all four wheels are beyond the white line, that's a track limits breach. A single wheel touching the line counts as on track.
¿Te gustó este artículo?
Pon a prueba lo que aprendiste con nuestra app oficial Formula Trivia One Master.
Ver App GratisConsequences by session
| Session | Consequence |
|---|---|
| Free practice | Warning only |
| Qualifying | Lap time deleted |
| Race | Warning → 5s → 10s → drive-through |
In the race the system is cumulative: three warnings, then a 5-second penalty on the fourth offence. Each further breach escalates the punishment.
Why it matters
Drivers ride the edge because gaining tenths in a fast corner can mean crossing the white line by centimetres. The FIA tightened enforcement because some modern circuits (Austria, Bahrain) let drivers cut corners without losing time.
Detection methods
- Fixed cameras at every flagged corner.
- Optical sensors along the white lines at some GPs.
- GPS comparing car position to the track edge.
FAQ
What if I go off avoiding a crash? If the run-off is safety-justified, no penalty, but the driver must give back any position gained.
Is the green tarmac off-track? Yes. Gravel and green run-offs are outside track limits. The asphalt right beyond the white line also counts as off-track.
Are some corners exempt? The FIA publishes before each GP which corners are strictly monitored.
Want to master F1 regulations and terminology? Test your knowledge with Formula One Trivia, the official app for iOS and Android.

