Grid live · June 13, 2026

Formula 1 Betting Tips Today

Today's board of F1 calls, sorted by market. Every tip folds open into the case behind it — the car pace, the track fit, the tyre strategy and the grid. We make the call, then we prove it. All free. By Adrien Laurent.

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🏎️ Today's F1 Betting Tips

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Board's clear for now

No calls are up at the moment. The board goes quiet between race weekends and over the winter break.

The board rebuilds itself — the moment the next grand prix is confirmed, the tips land here.

Formula 1 betting tips today by Adrien Laurent
Every free call on this board is backed in writing — the car pace, the track fit, the tyre strategy and the grid that built it.

How to read the board

Each tip opens into three things: the market it's playing, the race it's built on and the argument connecting the two. No mystery picks, and nothing locked behind a paywall — the edge is spelled out so you can judge it before you back it.

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Market first

Podium, points finish or a driver head-to-head — the wording tells you exactly what's being backed before you read on.

2

Read the case

Open the tip. Car pace, track fit, tyre degradation and qualifying versus race pace. Judge it on merit.

3

Back the convergence

The strongest plays are where the car pace, the track fit and the reasoning all agree. Anything less is a lean — stake it like one.

Free doesn't mean careless. The bets that earn the biggest stake are the ones where everything points the same way — and even those get a sensible one.

Free, but not free of reasoning

Plenty of sites give away a name today and call it a free tip. We give away the whole argument. The plays worth a proper look are the ones where the car performance, the track fit and the tyre strategy all back each other up. A car that suits the circuit's demands with a driver who manages tyres — with a write-up that says exactly that — beats any single strong result at an unrelated track.

Conviction is not certainty

We'll say when we love a call. We won't name a lock — F1 carries real variance even when it looks technical, a botched pit stop, a first-lap tangle or a sudden shower rewriting a race that looked settled. That's exactly why podium, points and driver head-to-head markets often offer more value than the outright. Read each tip as a probability with a case behind it.

Filter hard, bet light

The board is a filter, not a slip. Check the practice long-run pace, qualifying and the weather, back only the few where the whole picture lines up. Over a season, the selective player staking small laps the scattergun.

Straight answers

Car pace relative to the circuit, tyre degradation and likely strategy, qualifying position and clean air, plus reliability and penalty risk, and whether the price still offers value. Every call carries its own write-up, so the case is laid out in front of you rather than hidden behind a name.
Car pace relative to the circuit, tyre degradation and likely strategy, qualifying position and clean air, plus reliability and penalty risk tend to decide a weekend — often more than the name in the cockpit.
A head-to-head backs one driver to finish ahead of another, usually teammates in the same car. It removes a lot of the pace uncertainty, which is why many bettors find it cleaner than outright winner markets.
Yes. The tip and the complete case behind it are both free to read. There is no premium tier hiding the good stuff.
It rebuilds around the F1 calendar and the latest practice, qualifying and weather information, so what you see reflects the race weekends actually coming up.
It depends on the circuit. Where overtaking is hard, grid position is a major predictor of the finish; on tracks with easier overtaking and high degradation, race pace and strategy matter more.
Adrien Laurent
Written by
Formula 1 Betting Tips specialist

I'm Adrien Laurent, based in Nice, and I write the F1 betting tips at horse-racing.tips — reading car pace, track type and strategy over the headline driver names.

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For information only. There's no such thing as a guaranteed result — never stake more than you can comfortably lose.