Christian Horner’s smartest F1 return may not be another team
Photo by Kym Illman/Getty Images If Christian Horner returns to Formula 1, stepping straight back into a team principal role would feel like a step down from what he could and probably should be aiming for now. The more logical path forward is one that offers ownership, equity and long-term influence. That is why reports linking Horner to meetings with BYD vice-president Stella Li are so interesting.
There has been no official confirmation from either side , and that is important. But the fit makes enough sense to pay attention to, because Horner’s next move should not just be about landing another job. Christian Horner needs more than another F1 job Photo by Bob Kupbens/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images Horner has already done the traditional team boss story, and done it at the very top.
His time at Red Bull turned him into one of the defining figures of modern F1. The ownership element is the key detail. It changes the conversation from comeback job to legacy project, and that feels far more logical for someone who has already built and led a dominant operation.
BYD fits that narrative better than a typical team principal role. Stella Li has already spoken about a possible entry into Formula 1, and Horner would give any such project instant credibility within the sport. BYD makes sense, but Formula 1 still controls the door The caution is obvious.
Without confirmation from both sides, it cannot be treated as a done deal. There is also a bigger issue, Formula 1 itself. With Cadillac already approved as the 11th team for 2026, the sport is not exactly handing out new slots.