FIA proposal to end presidency term limits approved

Mohammed Ben Sulayem has been FIA president since December 2021
- Published
Formula 1's governing body the FIA has passed a proposal to end term limits for its president by a majority of more than 90%.
The move to end the previous limit of three four-year terms was put forward by FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem.
A vote of FIA member clubs at the organisation's general assembly in Macau on Thursday approved the proposal by a majority of 90.71%, sources have told BBC Sport.
An FIA spokesperson said: "The FIA statutes have been updated to establish a consistent approach to term limits across all FIA bodies, in line with the world councils and the senate.
"The proposed amendments were approved by a supermajority at the extraordinary general assemblies. FIA bodies retain full authority to democratically elect officeholders they deem appropriate."
They declined to explicitly confirm the voting numbers.
The move allows Ben Sulayem, 64, to continue as president beyond the 12-year limit.
Currently, there is an age restriction of 70 for anyone standing for FIA president, but sources with knowledge of Ben Sulayem's intentions say he plans to make a subsequent move to eradicate that as well.
His intention, they say, is to serve as president for life.
The FIA has been approached for comment on that issue.
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Other FIA roles that formerly had term limits included the president of the anti-doping committee, and the head of the F1 cost-cap committee.
The FIA has not provided a specific answer to a question as to why it was decided to abolish term limits for all posts, rather than instate them for those that did not currently have them.
However, a spokesperson pointed to the NFL in the US, saying Roger Goodell had been commissioner since 2006 and had "transformed the sport into a global brand and it has an outstanding governance record".
In 2024, the then president of the International Olympic Committee, Thomas Bach, rejected the chance to stay on longer than 12 years - a move that would have required a change of the IOC's statutes - saying "our organisation is best served with a change in leadership; new times are calling for new leaders".
The current three-term limit was put in place by Ben Sulayem's predecessor Jean Todt. The Frenchman replaced Max Mosley, who served as FIA president from 1993 until agreeing not to stand again following a dispute with F1 teams in 2009.
Other proposed changes have also passed, including making stricter the rules for presidential candidates.
A requirement for candidates to "demonstrate sufficient experience within an FIA member or an FIA body" has been added.
And the time by which prospective presidential candidates have to submit the list detailing their support team of vice-presidents has more than doubled from 49 days to 100 days before the date of the election.
Both would make it more difficult for someone to challenge Ben Sulayem at a subsequent election.
Ben Sulayem said in a statement: "The decisions approved by our members here today reflect the continued progress we are making together as a federation.
"Through stronger governance, financial discipline and a clear long-term vision, we are building an FIA that is better equipped to support our members, strengthen our championships, and deliver for motorsport and mobility worldwide."
Robert Reid, who resigned as FIA vice-president for sport last year citing a "standards breakdown", this week said the moves "changed how authority is challenged, renewed and handed on".
Writing in a post on LinkedIn,, external the Scot said: "Term limits are not a perfect safeguard. They do not guarantee good governance. They do not prevent poor judgement. But they do create a point at which renewal must happen.
"They also remind an institution that office is temporary, that legitimacy must be refreshed, and that no individual should become structurally indispensable."
On the stricter rules governing elections, Reid added: "Of course a presidential candidate should understand the FIA. Of course credibility, seriousness and relevant experience matter.
"But the wording of eligibility rules matters. If the standard is not clearly defined, power shifts to those applying it. A requirement for experience can become a judgement of acceptability. A safeguard against unserious candidates can become a barrier against inconvenient ones.
"That is the concern here. The judgement of what is sufficient remains within the FIA's own structures. In an organisation where recent election processes have already been challenged, that is not a small drafting point. It is the point at which process and power meet."
The FIA also reported an operating profit of 6.7m euros (£5.8m) in 2025, up 43% year-on-year.
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The moves follow a period of controversy surrounding the conduct of Ben Sulayem and the governance of the FIA.
Three rival candidates were barred from standing against Ben Sulayem in last year's presidential election because of a rule that dictates candidates must submit a list of their prospective vice-presidents for sport, which must be selected from each of the FIA's six global regions.
The published list last year contained only one candidate from South America, Brazilian Fabiana Ecclestone - wife of former F1 boss Bernie. She was already a member of Ben Sulayem's team.
That prevented any other candidate from naming a potential vice-president for sport from South America, which meant no-one else could enter the election.
One of the prospective presidential candidates, Laura Villars, is suing the FIA in the French courts challenging its election process.
Prior to that, Ben Sulayem changed statutes in a manner that a critic said risked "further contributing to the erosion of the FIA's reputation for competent and transparent governance".
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