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McLaren’s Shocking Fine for Taping a Button Fully Explained

Highlights
- McLaren fined €30,000 for taping CDS button at Monaco GP
- Tape blocked marshals from quickly activating clutch disengagement system
- Fine included €10,000 suspended, reflecting prior similar penalties
- Incident occurred during second practice ahead of 2026 Monaco GP
- McLaren acknowledged breach and accepted the stewards’ verdict
- Button taping risks safety and delays stranded car recoveries
McLaren receives a €30,000 fine at the Monaco Grand Prix after taping Lando Norris’s clutch disengagement button during second practice, a breach the stewards deem a clear safety infringement.
The transparent tape prevents marshals from pressing the CDS button by hand, requiring a tool to pierce it. That defeats the system’s purpose of rapid, gloved activation during recoveries.
Norris’s car stops unexpectedly in FP2. He and a McLaren representative meet stewards soon after. McLaren admits the tape is applied for aerodynamic reasons and accepts responsibility.

The FIA’s clutch disengagement system enables marshals to select neutral on a stranded car quickly. Preserving easy access reduces recovery time and limits secondary risks around a blocked track.
This is not unprecedented. Racing Bulls receives a €30,000 sanction in Montreal for a CDS-related breach, €20,000 suspended. McLaren’s partial suspension reflects the warning that case provides.
The competitive effect is indirect. Recovery delays can influence sessions, but the priority is safety. The ruling signals minimal tolerance for aerodynamic gains that compromise mandated accessibility.
The incident arrives during McLaren’s 1000th Formula 1 race celebrations, including a special livery. That context heightens scrutiny on standards and execution across the weekend.
Separately, stewards examine Norris’s stoppage. Further detail on that investigation is available in the team’s Monaco coverage of the McLaren-Lando Norris probe.
The episode follows recent McLaren missteps, adding pressure on processes and compliance. Coverage of earlier blunders, and a Formula E fine, underscores the wider picture across programmes.
Teams will audit procedures to ensure CDS access remains unambiguous. The message is clear: performance tweaks cannot obstruct safety mechanisms, whether in parc fermé or during live sessions.
Visual Summary
For Aerodynamic Gain in Monaco
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Monaco
2026 GP, 1000th McLaren Race
Not the first warning: Racing Bulls were fined €30,000 in Canada; teams are now on notice.
Even the smallest tape can put marshals and drivers at risk. FIA: “No more excuses.”
• Teams reminded: All rescue buttons must stay instantly accessible

Daniel Miller reports on Formula 1 Grand Prix weekends with race-day analysis, team-radio highlights, and point-standings updates. He explains power-unit upgrades, aerodynamic developments, and driver rivalries in straightforward, SEO-friendly language for a global F1 audience.





