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Mercedes pays record fee to enter 2015 season

Mercedes is paying the highest ever fee to enter the 2015 world championship.

Nico Rosberg, Mercedes AMG F1 W05

XPB Images

(L to R): Toto Wolff, Mercedes AMG F1 Shareholder and Executive Director; Paddy Lowe, Mercedes AMG F1 Executive Director and Niki Lauda, Mercedes Non-Executive Chairman celebrate winning the 2014 Constructors Championship with the team
FIA logo
Mercedes AMG F1 celebrate winning the 2014 Constructors Championship
(L to R): Paddy Lowe, Mercedes AMG F1 Executive Director, and Nico Rosberg, Mercedes AMG F1 celebrate winning the 2014 Constructors Championship with the team
Carlos Sainz Jnr, Red Bull Racing RB10 Test Driver
Mercedes AMG F1 celebrate winning the 2014 Constructors Championship
Max Chilton, Marussia F1 Team MR03 and Marcus Ericsson, Caterham CT05

The German team may have triumphantly dominated last year's titles, but one unpleasant consequence is a hefty FIA bill to the tune of almost $5 million.

The cost of merely entering the world championship was changed in recent years, when instead of a flat fee teams were also asked to pay per point scored in the previous season.

But the cost just got even higher. Last year, the flat fee was $508,000, while now it is $516,000, the German specialist publication Auto Motor und Sport repored.

And the variable performance element of the entry cost has also gone up for 2015, with each point now costing teams $5,161, up from $5,080 just a year ago.

New tariffs

The champion team, meanwhile, now pays a hefty $6,194 per point scored, meaning that Mercedes' bill for simply entering the 2015 world championship is nearly $4.9 million.

It is significantly more than the $2.6 million entry fee payable by runner-up Red Bull.

But the good news for Mercedes is that the team's official prize money haul has also significantly increased, after receiving $87 million for finishing the 2013 championship as runner-up.

The 2014 prize for winning the constructors' title, on the other hand, is a cool $102 million, the German report added.

In addition to Mercedes and Red Bull's nearly $8 million in fees, the FIA will receive a further combined total of almost $16 million from the other teams on the 2015 grid.

As it is likely Caterham and Marussia will not be in Melbourne or beyond, however, the governing body will ultimately lose their extra million in fees.

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