Innovation
How AI is helping make F1 weather forecasting more reliable
by Samarth Kanal, Jon Noble
6min read

It’s meteorology, not metrology, but the science is still precise: The FIA's deal with Tomorrow.io brings satellite-backed, AI-driven forecasting to every team on the pitwall - and to the officials making the calls that affect the weekend's running.

Car, Innovation
Metrology, not meteorology – The measurement technology that has redefined precision engineering in F1
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Screenshot of a Tomorrow.io page showing weather above the Bahrain International Circuit

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What did weather forecasting in F1 look like before 2026?
What does AI actually change about forecasting?
Zlotnik is direct about the scale of the shift: "AI puts it on steroids. And in a good way, not as a buzzword."
The trajectory has shifted his view significantly: "If we had talked three years ago, I would probably say that AI will never replace things. We now see AI out-compete everything."
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A rain forecast example from Tomorrow.io’s software
What does the FIA’s weather AI actually do differently?
Tomorrow.io operates its own constellation of small satellites - the DeepSky programme - which provides sub-hourly global observation data. Rather than waiting for ground stations or weather balloons, the system pulls in near-real-time readings from orbit, including over ocean areas where most weather systems originate.
The platform also generates probabilistic forecasts: a spread of possible scenarios with associated probabilities. That matters for decision-making, because knowing there's a high chance of a dry window in 25 minutes is more useful than a binary forecast.
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Tomorrow.io’s AI software provides a summary and in-depth forecast for the days and hours ahead
Is this a ‘learning’ model?
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Data includes temperature, wind speed and humidity
What do teams get out of AI weather forecasting?

Formula 2’s Miami feature race was hit by rain in Miami - both this and the F1 Miami Grand Grix were re-scheduled due to weather
The limits of AI weather modelling
Weather modelling is a model, not reality, and the gap between the two never fully closes.



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