Red Bull

- Verstappen achieved his third career grand slam (pole, victory, every lap in the lead and fastest lap), after the 2022 Emilia-Romagna GP and the 2021 Austrian GP. Among the active drivers, the Dutchman is second only to Hamilton (6 career grand slams).
- With his 40th victory, Verstappen moves within one of Ayrton Senna in fifth place ever.
- Verstappen has won the last 3 consecutive races (Miami, Monaco, Spain). This is the fifth career "hat-trick" for the number 1: before this season, it happened once in 2021 and three in 2022.
- Red Bull is only the third team to have won the first 7 consecutive races in a season, after the McLaren of Senna and Prost in 1988 and the Mercedes of Hamilton and Bottas in 2019.
- Verstappen has finished the last 26 races in a row. This is a new record for Red Bull: surpassing Ricciardo's streak of 25 races in a row between 2015 and 2016.
- Verstappen passed Nigel Mansell to move up to sixth place in the standings of drivers with the most laps led.
- Red Bull has led every lap of the last three races: the last team to do so was Mercedes in 2020 (Tuscan, Russian and Eifel GPs).
- Verstappen and Hamilton finished in the top two places for the 35th time in their career: 20 times Hamilton has won, 15 Verstappen.
- In Spain, Red Bull won the 99th race in its history. If we also count the previous name Stewart, with Johnny Herbert's victory at the 1999 European GP, we reach 100.
- Verstappen achieved two consecutive poles for the first time since 2021 (Belgian, Dutch and Italian GPs). His record is 4 consecutive poles, also in 2021 (France, Styria, Austria, Great Britain).
- Verstappen is the second Red Bull driver to get a pole in Spain after Mark Webber in 2010 and 2011. Strangely, Sebastian Vettel does not appear in this ranking.
- For the 30th time in the history of the Spanish GP (since it took place at Montmelò), one of the two drivers on the front row won the race. The three exceptions are Michael Schumacher in 1996 (P3), Fernando Alonso in 2013 (P5) and Max Verstappen in 2016 (P4).
- Perez missed Q3 for two races in a row for the first time since late 2019, when he was racing for Racing Point.
Mercedes

- Hamilton's 11th Spanish podium brings him within 1 of Michael Schumacher's record.
- Hamilton's last 7 podiums have been second places: the last third place dates back to the 2022 Austrian GP, while the last victory comes from the 2021 Saudi Arabian GP.
- For the first time in his career, Russell was beaten by his teammate in qualifying in Spain.
- Russell's third place is the first time in the hybrid era that a driver has finished on the podium starting outside the top six.
Ferrari

- Sainz (P5) remains the highest-placed rider without a podium this season.
- With fifth place on Sunday, Sainz remains the only driver on the grid to have always scored in the points in Spain since 2015. In nine appearances, however, he has never reached the podium.
- Leclerc, 19th in qualifying, recorded his worst result ever since joining Ferrari, beating his 16th place in Monte Carlo 2019 and ending his streak of 82 consecutive races at least in Q2 (the best on the grid).
- Leclerc finished a race outside the points for the first time since the 2021 Russian GP.
Aston Martin

- For the first time in 2023, Alonso earned less than 15 points in a weekend (6) and was beaten by Stroll in both qualifying and the race. In any case, it is his best result at home since 2014 (P6).
- For the second time in Spain after 2020, Stroll started fifth and finished the first lap third.
Other people's statistics
- The third place of Norris in qualifying it is McLaren's best result in Spain since Hamilton's third place in 2011 and its best result since the 2022 Italian GP (P3).
- With a 17th place finish, Norris finished outside the top 7 in a race that started in the top 3 for the first time in his career. It is also the fourth 17th place in seven races this year. In 2023, points or P17 arrive for Norris.
- Before the double penalty, Gasly's P4 was his best qualifying result since the 2021 Qatar GP (P4).
General statistics
- For the second time in the last 3 races there were no retirements, yellow flags, red flags or safety cars.
- The starting grid saw 7 different teams in the top 7 positions. A more unique than rare fact, since before the Spanish GP it had only happened twice in the last 2 years (Brazil 14 and Belgium 2009).
- For the first time since the 2012 Belgian GP, Ferrari, Mercedes and Red Bull participated in Q3 with just one car.


