Toolverse
Budget Boost

Predict which F1 Fantasy drivers and constructors are set for a price rise after this weekend. Built on the official price-change algorithm — so you can lock in rising picks before the deadline and stretch your budget further.

Price RisePrice DropxPts = expected ptsxΔ$ = expected price change
Δ$ = price change · rPts = pts needed this race · R‑1 = last race pts · R‑2 = 2 races ago pts
LEC#16
Charles Leclerc
$23.3M
0.00
R-2: 9R-1: 54xPts 0.0
Price Drop 95%5% Price Rise
RUS#63
George Russell
$28.1M
0.00
R-2: 35R-1: 44xPts 0.0
Price Drop 95%5% Price Rise
ANT#12
Kimi Antonelli
$25.3M
0.00
R-2: 35R-1: 23xPts 0.0
Price Drop 95%5% Price Rise
NOR#4
Lando Norris
$25.7M
0.00
R-2: 11R-1: 38xPts 0.0
Price Drop 95%5% Price Rise
HAM#44
Lewis Hamilton
$24.8M
0.00
R-2: 27R-1: 33xPts 0.0
Price Drop 95%5% Price Rise
VER#1
Max Verstappen
$27.8M
0.00
R-2: 43R-1: -3xPts 0.0
Price Drop 95%5% Price Rise
PIA#81
Oscar Piastri
$24.8M
0.00
R-2: 23R-1: 19xPts 0.0
Price Drop 95%5% Price Rise

How Budget Boost price predictions work

Budget Boost shows the probability that each driver and constructor's price will rise, fall, or hold at every stage of the weekend — FP1 through the race itself — so you can see a move coming before the game applies it.

Prices change after each race based on Points Per Million (PPM) averaged over the last three races. We simulate thousands of possible race outcomes from a driver's recent form, qualifying pace, and track history, then turn those outcomes into the probability bars you see for each price bracket. No result is ever shown as 0% or 100%, because a crash, a DNF, or a safety car can always change what happens.

Team value matters because it compounds. Catching a rise early, or selling before a fall, keeps more of your $100M working for you — money that grows into stronger lineups later in the season instead of getting stuck in a driver whose price has already peaked.

Why do driver prices change in F1 Fantasy?
Prices move based on Points Per Million (PPM), averaged over a driver or constructor's last three races. Score well relative to your price and it tends to rise; underperform it and it tends to fall. The game applies these changes automatically after each race, rewarding form rather than reputation alone.
When do price changes happen?
Prices update after every race, based on the last three races' PPM. Budget Boost's probabilities refresh at each stage of the weekend — FP1, FP2, FP3, qualifying, and the race — so the forecast gets sharper as more session data comes in, right up until the official change lands after the chequered flag.
Should I take a points hit to catch a price rise?
Usually not for the rise alone. A price increase only grows paper value — it doesn't add points on its own. It's worth the hit when the pick you're swapping to is also projected to outscore your current one; otherwise, the points you lose taking the hit rarely get made back by team value alone.
How much team value can I realistically gain?
There's no fixed number — it depends on how many rises you catch and how early. What's consistent is the pattern: small gains from correctly called price moves early in the season compound, since a larger budget lets you afford stronger picks later without touching your $100M cap. Consistency matters more than any single big call.