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Meet Bianca Bustamante: F1 Academy Driver Turned TikTok Star


Bianca Bustamante was 3 years old when she got her first go-kart. In Manila, Philippines, where she was born and raised, racing cars wasn’t a career path that existed in the minds of the people around her. But her father Raymund’s love of Formula 1 sparked something in her at a young age. “Growing up, it’s all I ever really knew, ever since I was a year old,” she tells me on media day for the Miami Grand Prix. “Before I could speak, I already knew racing lines, breaking points, all that stuff.” Their combined passion for motorsport, mixed with a great deal of sacrifice and hard work, got Bustamante to where she is today, doing what, as a child in the Philippines, felt like an impossibility. That is, racing on the same tracks during the same race weekends as her idols in F1. “There was like a 2% chance that I would make it—that I would be in this position,” she says. “It’s… it’s quite something.”

On the Sunday after our conversation, otherwise known as race day, Bustamante—who drives for ART Grand Prix in F1 Academy, a single-seater all-female racing series that launched in 2023 and is part of McLaren’s Driver Development Program—stood on the podium after finishing second in her second of two races in Miami. She celebrated her first trophy of the 2024 season alongside competitors Abbi Pulling and Doriane Pin. Afterward, she took to Instagram to shout out the people who made the achievement possible. “This is a special thank you to my team, engineer, mechanics, coach, teammates, and most importantly, all of you!!! It’s been a surreal moment, but I want to thank everyone who stayed and waited by my paddock after my stall in Race 1 just to cheer me up,” she captioned an Instagram video of the team’s celebration. “You all inspire me to be better.”

Bianca Bustamante wearing an orange and white fleece McLaren jacket in Woking, Britain.

(Image credit: Courtesy of McLaren)

Bustamante is one of 15 female drivers in F1 Academy, a championship under the F1 umbrella that was designed to prepare and develop up-and-coming women in motorsport to help them reach higher racing categories like F3, F2, and eventually, F1, the pinnacle of motorsport. The series is led by Susie Wolff, MBE, a former race car driver herself who made history when, at the 2014 British Grand Prix, she became the first woman to take part in an F1 race weekend in 22 years. Since her retirement from racing in 2015, Wolff has made it her mission to open doors for other women to get into F1 and motorsport, first with Dare to Be Different, a call-to-action designed to inspire the next generation of female drivers, and now as the managing director of F1 Academy. In her short tenure, she’s helped to bring unprecedented partnerships to the championship, including a sponsorship deal with Charlotte Tilbury as well as a TV deal with Reese Witherspoon’s production company, Hello Sunshine. (The Drive to Survive–esque series will premiere in 2025.)