Which F1 records does Lewis Hamilton have? Most wins, poles and more

Lewis Hamilton is one of the most successful drivers in the history of Formula 1, but which records does he currently hold? Find out here!

Which F1 records does Lewis Hamilton have? Most wins, poles and more

It feels as though every race in the last year has thrust Lewis Hamilton on the path to breaking a new Formula 1 record, largely those once-unbelievable records set by Michael Schumacher. We have also included the records Hamilton shares with another driver, some of which he could hold alone in the next few years.

Most wins in Formula 1

Lewis Hamilton: 98
Michael Schumacher: 91
Sebastian Vettel: 53
Alain Prost: 51
Ayrton Senna: 41

Hamilton’s dominance has been so profound over the last seven years that not only does he have the most wins (taking 77 of those during his time at Mercedes), but he has almost double the wins of Sebastian Vettel in third place. His first win came in 2007 at the Canadian Grand Prix, just six races into his rookie season, while his most recent win was the 2021 Spanish Grand Prix.

Most points in Formula 1

Lewis Hamilton: 3928
Sebastian Vettel: 3048
Fernando Alonso: 1919
Kimi Räikkönen: 1864
Nico Rosberg: 1594.5

You may be surprised to see the absence of some of the F1 greats of this list, and that is because in 2010 Formula 1 switched to the current points system of awarding 25 points for a win. Before that, since 1991, drivers received only 10 points for a win. Prior to 1991, a driver would claim 9 points for a win, and 8 points between 1950 and 1960. In addition, there were fewer races in season, and up to 2009 only the top 8 got points.

Overall, the last 10 years or so have been far more conducive to racking up points, and the modern points system certainly skews the count in favour of drivers over the past decade. Rosberg’s additional half point comes from the 2009 Malaysian Grand Prix – the race was stopped due to rain on lap 31 of 56, meaning that half points were awarded - full points are given after 75% of the race has elapsed.

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes, celebrates with his team in Parc Ferme after securing his 100th pole position F1

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes, celebrates with his team in Parc Ferme after securing his 100th pole position F1

Photo by: Steve Etherington / Motorsport Images

Most consecutive race starts

Lewis Hamilton: 265
Nico Rosberg: 206
Daniel Ricciardo: 197
Riccardo Patrese: 187
Jenson Button: 179

While Hamilton will have to beat 5 other drivers before he breaks Raikkonen’s record of F1 races started (a whopping 334 entries and counting) he does hold the record for the most consecutive race starts. After testing positive for COVID-19 Hamilton had to miss the 2020 Sakhir Grand Prix. Before this, Hamilton had never missed a start since his 2007 debut.

Most entries with a single engine manufacturer

Lewis Hamilton: 275 (Mercedes)
Kimi Räikkönen: 198 (Ferrari)
Michael Schumacher: 181 (Ferrari)
David Coulthard: 150 (Mercedes)
Emerson Fittipaldi: 148 (Ford Cosworth)

Hamilton’s cars have only ever been powered by Mercedes, whether with McLaren between 2007 and 2012 and of course now with the Mercedes works team. Thus, he has more than surpassed his competitors in this record.

Most consecutive points finishes

Lewis Hamilton: 48
Kimi Räikkönen: 27
Michael Schumacher: 24
Fernando Alonso: 23
Valtteri Bottas: 22

Hamilton consecutively scored points 48 times between the 2018 British Grand Prix and the 2020 Bahrain GP, missing the following Sakhir Grand Prix after contracting COVID-19. This is somewhat contentious; some may argue that because he did not start, his streak should continue because he did not technically record a non-points scoring finish. Nonetheless, Hamilton safely has this record secured not only thanks to his legendary driving skills but also likely to the reliability of the Mercedes cars.

Race winner Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes F1 W11 crosses the finish line

Race winner Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes F1 W11 crosses the finish line

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

Total pole positions

Lewis Hamilton: 100
Michael Schumacher: 68
Ayrton Senna: 65
Sebastian Vettel: 57
Jim Clark and Alain Prost: 33

Hamilton’s first pole position was at the 2007 Canadian Grand Prix. He achieved an impressive six pole positions in his very first season. Hamilton has achieved at least a pole position in every season he has competed in, ranging from one pole position in 2011 and 2012, up to 12 pole positions in 2016.

Most podium finishes

Lewis Hamilton: 171
Michael Schumacher: 155
Sebastian Vettel: 122
Alain Prost: 106
Kimi Raikkonen: 103

The lowest number of podiums Hamilton achieved in a single season was five podiums in 2009 for McLaren, and also in 2013 with Mercedes.

Total races finished in the points

Lewis Hamilton: 237
Michael Schumacher: 221
Kimi Raikkonen: 216
Fernando Alonso: 208
Sebastian Vettel: 205

This is another record that Hamilton has taken from Michael Schumacher. While Schumacher may have started more races, Hamilton has finished in the points more often, scoring 234 times so far. Such has been Hamilton’s, and Mercedes’, consistency that he scored points in every race of the 2017 season – his worst finish being ninth place in the Mexican Grand Prix.

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes W12

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes W12

Photo by: Steve Etherington / Motorsport Images

Highest average points per race started

Lewis Hamilton: 14.28 points per race started
Sebastian Vettel: 11.46
Max Verstappen: 10.50
Valtteri Bottas: 9.72
Nico Rosberg: 7.74

Again, the modern points system skews in the favour of the modern driver. It is an unusual record in the sense that drivers can knock themselves off the top by scoring fewer points, and therefore reducing your overall average, a reality which might affect Vettel based on his 2020 and 2021 points scoring precedent.

Most consecutive race finishes

Lewis Hamilton: 48 (2018 British Grand Prix-2020 Bahrain Grand Prix)
Nick Heidfeld: 33 (2007 Chinese Grand Prix- 2009 Italian Grand Prix)
Kimi Raikkonen: 30 (2012 Australian Grand Prix- 2013 Hungarian Grand Prix)
Fernando Alonso: 29 (2013 Chinese Grand Prix- 2014 Belgian Grand Prix)
Nico Rosberg and Esteban Ocon: 27 (2008 Canadian Grand Prix- 2009 Japanese Grand Prix and 2016 Belgian Grand Prix-2017 Mexican Grand Prix)

This is another record halted by Hamilton’s positive COVID test in 2020. Again, this is a testament to both Hamilton’s abilities and the reliability of the cars provided by Mercedes.

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes W12

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes W12

Photo by: Jerry Andre / Motorsport Images

Total laps led

Lewis Hamilton: 5221
Michael Schumacher: 5111
Sebastian Vettel: 3499
Ayrton Senna: 2987
Alain Prost: 2684

Out of the 15,495 laps he’s completed, Hamilton has led over a third of those - clocking a monumental 26,260 kilometres in the lead.

Total races leading every lap

Lewis Hamilton: 22
Ayrton Senna: 19
Sebastian Vettel: 15
Jim Clark: 13
Jackie Stewart and Michael Schumacher: 11

Hamilton first led every lap in a race in the 2007 Hungarian Grand Prix in his McLaren MP4–22, with a very close Raikkonen behind him. It was the first time anyone had led every lap in a race in the 2007 season.

Total pole and wins in the same race

Lewis Hamilton: 59
Michael Schumacher: 40
Sebastian Vettel: 31
Ayrton Senna: 29
Alain Prost: 18

The vast majority of Hamilton’s poles have been with Mercedes - with Melbourne being his most successful circuit for pole positions, where he has secured pole 8 times.

Only driver to win a race in every season completed

Hamilton has won as little as one race in a season (2013), all the way up to 11 wins which he has achieved in multiple seasons since joining Mercedes.

Podium: second place Kimi Raikkonen, Lotus F1 Team, Ross Brawn, Mercedes AMG F1 Team Principal, race winner Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes AMG F1, third place Sebastian Vettel, Red Bull Racing

Podium: second place Kimi Raikkonen, Lotus F1 Team, Ross Brawn, Mercedes AMG F1 Team Principal, race winner Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes AMG F1, third place Sebastian Vettel, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Sutton Images

Records Hamilton shares with others

Most world championships

Michael Schumacher and Lewis Hamilton: 7
Juan Manuel Fangio: 5
Alain Prost and Sebastian Vettel: 4

An 8th world championship will likely be the next record on Hamilton’s radar. While he currently does not lead the 2021 driver standings, with only 4 points less than the leader Max Verstappen it is certainly far from over. He clinched his first world title in a particularly nail-biting manner in 2008 with McLaren, on the final corner of the last lap of the last race of the season. The other six world championships were won with Mercedes. He is the current world champion after winning the 2020 driver’s championship.

Most wins in first championship season

Jacques Villeneuve and Lewis Hamilton: 4
Juan Manuel Fangio and Giuseppe Farina: 3
Johnnie Parsons, Giancarlo Baghetti, Jackie Stewart, Clay Regazzoni, Emerson Fittipaldi and Juan Pablo Montoya: 1

This is obviously not a record that Hamilton can work on beating so he will have to settle with sharing this record with Villeneuve. Only Hamilton and Montoya have achieved a win in their first championship season since 2001 (Hamilton in 2007 and Montoya in 2001) which is likely a reflection of increased use of junior teams - and drivers graduating from junior categories into cars that are unfortunately not capable of winning a race. Pierre Gasly’s win at the 2020 Italian GP may serve to prove that point wrong though, after taking victory in an AlphaTauri.

Most wins at the same grand prix

Michael Schumacher (French GP) and Lewis Hamilton (Hungarian GP): 8
Alain Prost (Brazilian GP and French GP) and Ayrton Senna (Monaco GP): 6

While Hamilton shares this record with Schumacher like many of his other records, this one is slightly difficult to rank because while Schumacher and Hamilton have each won eight times at their respective GPs - they have also each won seven times at two other grands prix each, and then six times at seven more GPs between them. While Prost and Senna are also ranked, Hamilton and Schumacher would still cover the top 5 easily between them if repeating drivers. Hamilton can claim this record on his own if he wins the 2021 Hungarian Grand Prix on 1 August.

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes F1 W11

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes F1 W11

Photo by: Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images

Most consecutive wins at the same grand prix

Ayrton Senna (Monaco GP) and Lewis Hamilton (Spanish Grand Prix): 5
Juan Manuel Fangio (Argentine GP), Jim Clark (Belgian and British GP), Ayrton Senna (Belgian GP) and Michael Schumacher (Spanish GP and United States GP): 4

Hamilton’s record for most consecutive wins at the same grand prix is still ongoing, as he has won the Spanish GP every year since 2017 - including 2021.

Most consecutive seasons with at least one grand prix win

Michael Schumacher and Lewis Hamilton: 15
Alain Prost: 10
Ayrton Senna: 9
Nelson Piquet: 8
Having won a race in every season he has competed in (2007–2021), Hamilton’s streak is still ongoing.

Most podium finishes in a season

Michael Schumacher, Sebastian Vettel and Lewis Hamilton: 17
Nico Rosberg: 16
Fernando Alonso and Valtteri Bottas: 15

Hamilton achieved 17 podium finishes in a single season four times, in 2015, 2016, 2018 and 2019. Remarkably, Schumacher’s 17 podiums were the result of only 17 entries that season, so that could be a feat Hamilton could aim for, although it sadly is no longer possible in 2021 after the Monaco GP.

Fewest world championship seasons before first title

Jacques Villeneuve and Lewis Hamilton: 2 seasons
Denny Hulme and Emerson Fittipaldi: 3 seasons

Another record that Hamilton shares that he cannot work towards holding alone. However, the nature of contemporary F1 means that junior drivers seldom step up into race-winning cars, so he may have this record for a fair while.

shares
comments

Related video

Mazepin, Latifi and Raikkonen penalised after F1 Austrian GP, six others cleared

Previous article

Mazepin, Latifi and Raikkonen penalised after F1 Austrian GP, six others cleared

Next article

Alonso felt ‘sad’ taking final point off Russell in Austrian GP

Alonso felt ‘sad’ taking final point off Russell in Austrian GP
Load comments
Austrian Grand Prix Driver Ratings Plus

Austrian Grand Prix Driver Ratings

Formula 1's repeat visit to the Red Bull Ring offered a repeat winner, but there were several notable changes to the Styrian Grand Prix resulting from cooler temperatures and softer tyre compounds. Amid the shakeup in the order, there were several performances worthy of high ratings

How Norris and McLaren finally took on F1’s top teams “on merit” Plus

How Norris and McLaren finally took on F1’s top teams “on merit”

Max Verstappen was rarely troubled in the Austrian Grand Prix as he completed a clean sweep of Formula 1's two races at the Red Bull Ring. He leaves with his points advantage extended thanks in no small part to the disruption caused to Mercedes by an on-form Lando Norris, in perhaps the most complete McLaren showing since the V8 era

The inconvenient truth behind F1’s anti-plastic stance Plus

The inconvenient truth behind F1’s anti-plastic stance

Single-use plastics have become a pressing environmental issue, and Formula 1 has committed to removing them from the paddock by 2025. But behind these headline initiatives, says STUART CODLING, the commercial rights holder and several teams continue to operate partnerships with some of the world’s largest producers of the raw materials that make these plastic items

Formula 1
Jul 4, 2021
How the cost cap is putting new pressures on F1's top teams Plus

How the cost cap is putting new pressures on F1's top teams

Formula 1’s budget cap means that even the richest teams now have to juggle what they can afford to spend – to the extent that Mercedes recently had to back out of an important tyre test. MARK GALLAGHER explains how the bean-counters now have to work to the limits of the regulations just like technical directors do

Formula 1
Jul 3, 2021
Why Mercedes isn't fooled it's ahead of Red Bull despite Austrian GP practice pace Plus

Why Mercedes isn't fooled it's ahead of Red Bull despite Austrian GP practice pace

After a comprehensive defeat to Red Bull and Max Verstappen in Austria last weekend, Mercedes remains wary of taking its promising pace as a guarantee for success. But with lessons learned from the Styrian GP, the Black Arrows squad continues to be poised for another almighty tussle against its familiar foe

Formula 1
Jul 2, 2021
Why '5/10' Ricciardo isn't giving up on his McLaren quest Plus

Why '5/10' Ricciardo isn't giving up on his McLaren quest

Daniel Ricciardo has endured a tough start to his McLaren career. He's been comprehensively outscored by his team-mate so far, and with each passing race the explanations of his struggles can increasingly be seen as excuses. But while admitting that his on-track performances don’t merit a particularly flattering mark, Ricciardo is convinced that he will make a success of the move

Formula 1
Jul 2, 2021
Why F1’s secret rulebook is causing angst among the ranks Plus

Why F1’s secret rulebook is causing angst among the ranks

With competition on the track increasing as the 2021 Formula 1 season intensifies, any possible advantage is being aggressively fought over. This includes off the track, as F1's rules and regulations come under scrutiny which, for multiple reasons, is causing unease up and down the grid

Formula 1
Jul 1, 2021
The crucial improvements Russell needs to reproduce to soothe Styrian GP DNF "hurt" Plus

The crucial improvements Russell needs to reproduce to soothe Styrian GP DNF "hurt"

Having been cruelly denied a long-awaited first points finish as a Williams driver at the Styrian GP, George Russell gets another crack at it this weekend at the Red Bull Ring. While his impressive pace remains unquestioned, a few other vital gains shown at recent races will be needed again to finally deliver

Formula 1
Jun 30, 2021