Andrea Margutti Trophy

Andrea Margutti Trophy
CategoryKart racing
RegionInternational
Affiliations
Inaugural season1990 (1990)
ClassesKZ2, OK-N, OKN-J, Mini Gr.3, Mini U10
Drivers' champion
Most titles Giancarlo Fisichella (4)
Official websiteOfficial website

The Andrea Margutti Trophy (Italian: Trofeo Andrea Margutti, pronounced [anˈdrɛːa marˈɡutti]), also known as the Trofeo Margutti or simply the Margutti, is a kart racing competition organised by Parma Motorsport and sanctioned by ACI Sport. Hosted annually since 1990, it is one of 11 competitions on the international kart racing calendar in CIK-FIA classes.

The event was founded in memory of the eponymous 14-year-old Italian kart racer, who died in the 1989 edition of the Torneo delle Industrie. Initially hosted at the Pista d'Oro until 1991, the Margutti soon moved to Parma, where it established itself as a world-leading competition during the "Golden Era" of the 1990s. Following the collapse of Parma in 2008, it moved to Castelletto for three editions before settling at Lonato in 2012. As of 2026, it is contested by over 300 drivers across five classes: KZ2, OK-N, OKN-J, Mini Gr.3, and Mini U10. The event was previously also contested in Italian American Motor Engineering (IAME) classes—X30 Senior and X30 Junior—as well as the primary CIK-FIA senior and junior classes.

The palmarès of the Andrea Margutti Trophy includes Formula One drivers Giancarlo Fisichella, André Lotterer (1995–1996, ICA-J), Robert Kubica (1999, ICA-J), Charles Pic (2005, ICA-J), Daniil Kvyat (2009, KF3), and Logan Sargeant (2012, 60 Mini); the former won a record four titles between 1990 and 1994 in FA and ICA. As of 2025, seven World Drivers' Champions have contested the event,[note 1] but none have finished on the podium. Lotterer is the only victor to progress to win an FIA World Championship in auto racing and Sophie Kumpen (1995, FA) is the only female driver to win a title.

History

Background (1961–1989)

The Parma Kartdrome, also known as the Pista San Pancrazio or Mondialpista di Fraore, was built in 1961 and inaugurated by the actors Fernandel and Gino Cervi, who were filming Don Camillo: Monsignor locally.[1][2] The venue soon declared bankruptcy but, in 1967, the local Pellegrini family took management of the site and invested ITL 3 million (GBP 1,740; GBP 26,530 in 2023) in upgrading the venue.[1][3] The owner and former bartender, Umberto Pellegrini, created the Torneo delle Industrie in 1971, which became one of the premier kart racing competitions in the world.[4][5]

In 1988, Andrea Margutti (22 February 1975 – 14 October 1989) of Rome finished fifth in the Cadetti (lit.'Cadet') class of the competition; he progressed to the Nazionale (lit.'National') class the following year, during which his kart rolled in free practice and he sustained fatal internal haemorrhaging after his aorta ruptured, aged 14.[6] Margutti had established himself as one of the leading talents in Italian motorsport and finished twenty-first in the CIK-FIA Junior World Cup at Zaragoza that year.[6] His death was one of the most notable moments in kart racing history and marked a turning point in driver safety, as chest and rib protectors were popularised and became mandatory in FIA competition.[7]

Now Andrea Margutti is up there, where, I'm sure, there are wonderful tracks, highly-prepared karts, and dazzling racing cars. Andrea is there, with his ever-present smile, and I'm sure he's competing for the corner entry with Villeneuve or De Angelis in a timeless race, with all those who, for this sport, have given the most precious gift granted by God to man: life...

— Luciano De Filippis, "Andrea Margutti", Vroomkart Italia (January 1990) Vol. 9

Early years at the Pista d'Oro (1990–1991)

The Andrea Margutti Trophy was founded in 1990, held as a national competition at the Pista d'Oro in Rome—the venue of the inaugural CIK-FIA World Championship—in memory of Margutti, who was local to the venue.[8][9] A race scheduled there the day following his death was annulled when every competitor abandoned the event as a display of mourning.[9] The event was organised within two months of his death by his family and several high-profile figures in the industry.[10]

Andrea Belicchi of Parma won the premier Nazionale class in its inaugural year, while local driver Giancarlo Fisichella—who was a close friend of Margutti and kept a photograph of him in his helmet—was victorious in the secondary Intercontinental A (ICA) division.[11] Fischella progressed to the Formula A (FA) class the following year, which replaced Nazionale, winning the competition for the second successive year as Calabria's Pietro Saitta claimed the ICA title.[12] With over 160 entries in each of its inaugural editions and growing international attention, the characteristics of the Pista d'Oro were eventually deemed to ill-match the ambition of the organisers.[13]

Parma (1992–2008)

1992–1993: Move to Parma under the Pellegrini family

After two editions, the event moved to Parma on request from Pellegrini and his family; Margutti's mother, Patrizia, had approached Pellegrini—who pleaded for "a chance to make up" for the 1989 accident—as Parma was one of Margutti's favourite circuits.[14] By 1992, Parma had hosted four World Championships and established itself as the leading venue in international karting, which TKART described as a "temple" and contrasted its importance to the Circuit de Monaco in Formula One, Madison Square Garden in boxing, and Wimbledon in tennis.[1]

The Junior Intercontinental A (ICA-J) category debuted that year for drivers under the age of 15, won by Bruno Balocco of Cuneo in 1992 and Ennio Gandolfi of Cremona in 1993, who both won the World Cup in those years.[15][16] Fisichella proceeded to win a record four titles across its first five editions, missing out on the 1993 title in FA to Belicchi;[17][11] he became the first champion to progress to Formula One in 1996.[18][19] ICA, which was absent from the event on its Parmense debut, was won by Ascoli Piceno's Sauro Cesetti in 1993.[20] Throughout the early years in Parma, the event grew substantially, with Vroomkart claiming its prestige had come to rival that of the World Championship.[21][10]

1994–2000: Prominence in international competition

Margutti changed my life. I am sad that the legendary Parma track disappeared, but it is good that Margutti Trophy continues in Lonato.

André Lotterer discussing his "best kart race ever", the 1996 ICA-J final, with Vroomkart in 2023[22]

The Andrea Margutti Trophy welcomed increased international competition from 1994 onwards,[21] with over 100 foreign entrants and British driver Doug Bell winning the ICA-J title that year ahead of CIK-FIA Five Continents Cup winner Giorgio Pantano,[23][24] who had been runner-up the year prior.[25] Matteo Boscolo won in ICA,[12] as Fisichella capitalised on a collision between Jarno Trulli and Risto Virtanen 200 m (660 ft) from the chequered flag to claim his fourth title in FA.[26] Belgian prodigy Sophie Kumpen became the third woman in history to win a win a major international karting title with her victory in the premier FA class in 1995,[note 2] beating the favoured two-time World Champion Jarno Trulli,[29] as Massimo Del Col and André Lotterer claimed the secondary and junior titles, respectively;[12] Jenson Button ended fifth in ICA.[30] A record 308 drivers from 20 countries entered the competition that year, including 177 foreigners.[10][23]

Up to 1996—the founding year of the South Garda Winter Cup—the Andrea Margutti Trophy had been the opening event of the international karting calendar, where chassis and engine manufacturers would debut their seasonal challengers.[31] Lotterer defended his title that year, later becoming the first victor to win an FIA World Championship in 2012,[22] as Gianmaria Bruni finished seventh for the second successive year;[32] 1994 World Champion Alessandro Manetti (FA) and Ioannis Antoniadis (ICA) won the senior divisions, the latter beating Vitantonio Liuzzi.[12][33] Antonio García and 1995 World Champion Massimiliano Orsini claimed the FA class in the 1997 and 1998 editions, respectively, alongside Steve Molini and Giorgio Evangelisti—who qualified for the final via the repêchage—in ICA, as well as Ben Benjamin and Stefano Fabi in ICA-J, the latter overcoming opposition from Marco Ardigò and Alessandro Pier Guidi.[12][13] Finnish ICA Champion Kimi Räikkönen claimed fourth and Nico Rosberg seventh in the 1998 editions of FA and ICA-J, respectively.[34][35]

Sauro Cesetti (FA), Michele Rugolo (ICA), and Robert Kubica (ICA-J) won the 1999 titles,[12] as reigning European Vice-Champion Fernando Alonso claimed fifth in the former after Cesetti passed both him and four-time World Champion Gianluca Beggio for the lead.[36][37] Lewis Hamilton made one of his first international karting starts in that year's event, later claiming he was racially abused by some French and Italian competitors.[38] Toni Vilander claimed the FA title in 2000, with eventual World Cup and European Championship winner Hamilton claiming seventh.[39] Stefano Proetto beat both Giacomo Ricci and Pier Guidi in ICA, with Pietro Ricci taking the junior crown,[12] where Sebastian Vettel finished seventh.[40]

2001–2008: Final years at Parma and start of KF era

Retaining the three-class system from 1993 into the 21st century, Cesetti claimed his second title in FA, as Jean-Philippe Guignet (ICA) and Miguel Gallego (ICA-J) claimed their first.[12] Davide Gaggianesi beat Cesetti and Pastor Maldonado to the 2002 FA title, with Jérémy Iglesias victorious in the secondary class and Andrea Todisco in junior, the latter overcoming opposition from Sébastien Buemi.[41] The 2003 edition saw a record 26 nationalities represented and the victories of: Carlo van Dam (FA) in a race of attrition; Oliver Oakes (ICA); and Dani Clos (ICA-J),[42] who beat Miguel Molina and Jules Bianchi following an engine-related disqualification for initial last-lap victor Fred Martin-Dye.[10][43][42] In 2004, FA was won by Ben Hanley ahead of two-time World Champion Davide Forè, ICA by a dominant Henkie Waldschmidt over Jon Lancaster, and ICA-J by Stefano Coletti; Bianchi repeated his third-place in the latter.[44][15]

Edoardo Mortara capitalised on a collision between Forè and Cesetti to win in FA the following year,[15] where Andrea Dalè dominated the ICA final and Charles Pic beat Roberto Merhi in ICA-J,[45][46] the fourth successive victory in the class for Birel.[12] The 2006 edition marked the final year of "Formula" regulations in international kart racing, when the victors were: reigning European Champion Marco Ardigò (FA), Marco Wittmann (ICA), and Nigel Moore (ICA-J).[47] The Commission Internationale de Karting (CIK-FIA) introduced "KF" regulations to international competition in 2007, when the three classes—FA, ICA, and ICA-J—were replaced by KF1, KF2, and KF3, respectively.[48] British driver Gary Catt proceeded to claim the KF1 title in back-to-back years, with Burkhard Maring and Zdeněk Groman victorious in KF2; the former won the title in a battle with Will Stevens and the latter after an engine failure for reigning European Champion Jack Harvey.[49][50][51] The inaugural KF3 event was won by Harvey,[52] followed by Ignazio D'Agosto in his 2008 battle with Aaro Vainio.[50]

Castelletto (2009–2011)

The Andrea Margutti Trophy became an FIA Authorised Series and moved to Circuito Internazionale 7 Laghi Kart in Castelletto di Branduzzo, Lombardy, from 2009 to 2011, upon the permanent closure of Parma amidst the Great Recession, which was sold and decommissioned for a Decathlon franchise.[10][53] TKART compared the demise of Parma to that of the original Wembley Stadium in 2000 and the Yankee Stadium in 2008.[1] The event was initially set to move to Spain, at the Kartodromo Internacional Lucas Guerrero in Valencia, championed by two-time World Rally Champion Carlos Sainz Sr.[54] The KF1 class—subjected to criticism for spiralling costs—was removed, with KF2 becoming the primary direct-drive competition.[55][56] KZ2 was introduced as a professional class, the first gearbox category to feature in the competition.[55]

Jack Hawksworth was victorious on the gearbox debut while Brandon Maïsano claimed the senior class, with Antonio Giovinazzi in third, as Daniil Kvyat beat Nyck de Vries and Raffaele Marciello in junior—where Carlos Sainz Jr. matched his 2008 result of seventh.[57][58] The 2009 edition notably saw the return of two former competitors—Fernando Alonso and 1999 ICA-J winner Robert Kubica—as chassis manufacturers with Tony Kart and Birel, respectively.[10] Persistent light rainfall hit Castelletto in 2010, when Jacob Nortoft claimed the KF2 title, with Loris Spinelli beating Esteban Ocon in KF3 and Simon Solgat victorious in KZ2.[59][60] The 60 Mini category was re-introduced by ACI Sport as a 60 cc under-12 class that year for the "60 Junior Trophy",[61] won by Alessio Lorandi.[59] The senior class was taken by Alain Valente in 2011, as Slavko Ivanovic claimed the junior title, Adam Janouš won in KZ2 with female prodigy Beitske Visser in sixth, and Marcu Dionisios in Mini.[62]

Lonato (2012–present)

2012–2019: Demise of KF regulations and the OK era

South Garda Karting in Lonato del Garda, Lombardy, became the venue of the Andrea Margutti Trophy from 2012 onwards; the organisers proclaimed it as the ideal venue to restore the prestige of the competition.[63] The debut event at Lonato had 246 entrants from 33 nations, the highest figure since 2003.[64][23] Felice Tiene won the senior class that year, as Martin Kodrić beat Lance Stroll and Álex Palou to the junior title;[65] Charles Leclerc and George Russell each claimed seventh in KF2 and KF3, respectively.[66] Reigning European Champion Fabian Federer was imperious in KZ2, while American prospect Logan Sargeant became the first non-European winner of the competition in Mini.[65] 2013 saw a dive to 180 entrants as factory-backed teams deserted the event, when Dorian Boccolacci beat Lonato-raised Luca Corberi in the renamed KF class and Dan Ticktum claimed victory in KF-Junior (KF-J) as European Champion Lando Norris ended fifth.[67] The gearbox and Mini classes were won by Kristijan Habulin and Domenico Cicognini, respectively.[67]

In 2014, class victories were claimed by inaugural Mini winner and reigning KF-J World Champion Lorandi (KF), Max Fewtrell (KF-J), Marco Zanchetta (KZ2), and Antonio Serravalle (Mini) in a four-way battle.[68] Alexander Vartanyan took the senior title in 2015, amid a further fall to 160 entrants, as Indian driver Kush Maini became the first Asian winner in KF-J; four-time World Champion Davide Forè was victorious in KZ2, alongside Leonardo Marseglia in Mini after a final-lap overtake.[69] The year marked the final appearance of KF regulations, which were replaced by OK and OK-Junior (OK-J) regulations from 2016 onwards as costs for competitors spiralled due to the presence of manually-controlled front brakes, sophisticated cable systems, and fragility of components.[56] Russians dominated the 2016 edition on an renovated Lonato circuit: Alexander Smolyar took victory in the six-entrant OK class; Ivan Shvetsov won the OK-J title in an all-Russian podium, alongside Pavel Bulantsev and Bogdan Fetisov; and Ruslan Fomin claimed the Mini class,[70][71] where nine-year-old Italian prodigy Andrea Kimi Antonelli finished eighteenth after qualifying third.[72][73] Giacomo Pollini beat Alexander Schmitz by 0.077 seconds in the KZ2 final, decided by a photo finish, after a final-lap pass.[74]

2017 saw the introduction of X30 Senior as a secondary senior class, operating as a spec series on Italian American Motor Engineering (IAME) equipment and awarding the X30 Trophy, an adaptation to retain entry figures;[75][76] Vittorio Maria Russo was the inaugural winner.[77] Callum Bradshaw claimed the OK title, as Andrea Rosso won in OK-J, Riccardo Longhi in KZ2, and Alfio Spina in Mini.[77] Vroomkart described the 2018 edition as being the "almost British Margutti Trophy" due to inclement weather conditions.[78] Reigning OK-J winner Rosso won in OK, as Marco Moretti reigned in X30 Senior over his brother Andrea; the OK-J class was won by Enzo Trulli, the son of Jarno Trulli—who was a friend of Margutti and finished fourth in the 1993 edition—ahead of Gabriel Bortoleto, while Lorandi returned from the GP3 Series claimed his third title in KZ2.[79][80] Josh Irfan beat fellow British prodigy Arvid Lindblad in Mini.[79] In 2019, Leonardo Bertini Colla beat David Liwinski and Leonardo Fornaroli in OK, Edoardo Ludovico Villa was victorious in X30 Senior, Theo Wernersson in OK-J, Emilien Denner in KZ2, and Joel Bergström in Mini.[81]

2020–2023: X30 era

The 2020 edition celebrated the thirtieth anniversary of the event, delayed to November amidst the COVID-19 pandemic in Lombardy and temporarily returned to Castelletto.[82] The OK class was removed as a result of the pandemic,[83] leaving X30 Senior as the sole senior competition, where Ludovico Villa successfully defended his title.[84] Jamaican driver Alex Powell of the Mercedes Junior Team became the first Caribbean victor in OK-J,[85] Clément Outran won in the new X30 Junior category, rising star Senna van Walstijn in KZ2, and René Lammers in Mini,[84] the latter now officially recognised by CIK-FIA.[86] OK-J was notably absent in 2021, which was again delayed due to COVID-19,[87][88] with René Lammers claiming the X30 Junior title; Cristian Comanducci won in X30 Senior, Van Walstijn successfully defended the KZ2 title, and Emanuele Olivieri led in Mini after polesitter Christian Costoya was condemned to third following an early incident.[89][90]

In 2022, Danny Carenini was victorious in X30 Senior, Mark Dubnitski in the return of OK-J, Riccardo Cirelli in X30 Junior, and Giuseppe Palomba in KZ2;[91] Dries Van Langendonck held off rival Costoya to claim the Mini crown.[92] Carenini defended the X30 Senior title in 2023, which had been exclusively won by Italians in its seven-year presence at the competition.[93] Oleksandr Legenkyi was victorious in the inaugural running of the Mini U10 class for drivers aged 8–10, the youngest age group in the history of the competition, and Bosco Arias in the ACI Sport–sanctioned Mini Gr.3.[93][94] The other victors were Romanian driver David Cosma Cristofor (OK-J), Riccardo Ferrari (X30 Junior), and Cristian Bertuca (KZ2).[93]

2024–present: Introduction of OK-N and record entry figures

For 2024, the IAME classes were replaced by the low-cost OK-National (OK-N) and OKN-Junior (OKN-J) approved by the FIA World Motor Sport Council in 2022: Italians Federico Albanese and Ludovico Mazzola were the victors in OK-N and OKN-J, respectively, on its debut.[95][96] Kilian Josseron won in OK-J—where original victor Ilia Berezkin was penalised and Ethan Lennon became the first African driver to finish on the podium—Arthur Poulain in KZ2, Alessandro Truchot in Mini, and nine-year-old Niccoló Perico in Mini U10.[96] Upon the death of Pellegrini later that year, his children—Tiziano, Donatella, and Germano—assumed ownership of the venue, which they had controlled since the early 1990s.[97][2] To-be World Cup winner Manuel Scognamiglio claimed the 2025 OK-N victory, with Berezkin achieving redemption in OK-J, Vsevolod Osadchyi-Suslovskyi holding off Nicola Stanley in OKN-J, reigning World Cup winner Bertuca winning his second gearbox title, Perico following his under-10 title with victory in the under-12 class, and Jan Ruudi Algre taking the Mini U10 class.[98]

The presence of drivers of this calibre, combined with ever larger and more competitive grids, once again confirms the central role of the Margutti Trophy on the karting calendar, and much of the credit goes to Parma Motorsport, which over the years has preserved the spirit of the event while ensuring high organisational standards. In a landscape increasingly crowded with championships and international events, it is not easy to maintain the prestige of a single race, but the Margutti Trophy continues to succeed.

— Fabio Marangon, "The Margutti is timeless", Vroomkart (12 March 2026)[99]

The 2026 edition saw record entry figures with 156 entrants in OK-N and OKN-J alone, up from 88 in 2025, surpassing the numbers present at the World Cup; reigning OK-N winner Scognamiglio said "it feels just like the 100 cc era of the 90s".[99] The senior class was won by Nicolas Marchesi and the junior class by Gioele Carrer, while KZ2 was dominated by Bertuca in his third triumph—ahead of 51-year-old, 2015 winner Davide Forè—the under-12 class was controlled by Briton Alfie Mair and under-10 by American prodigy Zayne Burgess.[100]

Format

The Andrea Margutti Trophy holds four-day weekends: free practice sessions on Thursday and Friday morning, time trials on Friday afternoon, qualifying heats on Friday afternoon and Saturday, and pre-finals/finals on Sunday.[101] In 2018, the full-service registration fees were: 460 for OK, OK-J, and KZ2; €325 for 60 Mini; and €260 for the IAME classes.[102] By 2026, the fees increased to €540 for all six planned classes: OK-J, KZ2, OK-N, OKN-J, Mini Gr.3, and Mini U10.[103]

As of 2026, the event is held over a four-day weekend composed of free practice (FP), time trials (TT), qualifying heats (QH), pre-finals (PF), and the finals:[101]

Circuits

Pista d'Oro
Parma
Castelletto
Lonato
Locations of the Andrea Margutti Trophy since 1990.
2025 venue in bold.

The Andrea Margutti Trophy has been contested at four Italian circuits throughout its history. The inaugural two editions were held at the Pista d'Oro in Rome, host of the first CIK-FIA World Championship in 1964.[8] Under request from the owner of Parma Kartdrome, Umberto Pellegrini, and his family, the event was hosted at the venue from 1992 to 2008.[14] It has been held in Lombardy since 2009: the Circuito Internazionale 7 Laghi Kart in Castelletto di Branduzzo until 2011, and South Garda Karting in Lonato del Garda—host of the South Garda Winter Cup—ever since, barring the rescheduled 2020 edition in Castelletto.[14]

Live coverage

The Andrea Margutti Trophy is broadcast on YouTube—formerly televised via Play TV, Nuvolari, Sportitalia, Rai Sport, Odeon 24, and the competition's official website—with live footage, commentary, and interviews on the finals day.[104][105][106][107] The 2024 edition had a record online viewership of over 10 thousand people, up from seven thousand the year prior.[108] LSTiming provides live timing for each event, including free practice and all competitive sessions, via their website.[109]

Palmarès

Key
Drivers
* Driver has competed in Formula One
Formula One World Drivers' Champion
FIA World Champion in an auto racing discipline
Tyres
B Bridgestone LC LeCont
C Carlisle M Maxxis
D Dunlop MG MG Tires
G Goodyear M Mojo
K Komet V Vega

Senior classes (1990–present)

Primary senior class (1990–present)

Year Champion Chassis Engine Tyres Runner-up Third place Class Stroke
Nazionale
1990 Andrea Belicchi Tony Kart Vortex V Alessandro Manetti Gennaro Piccolo 100cc
1991 Giancarlo Fisichella* PCR PCR V Cesare Balistreri Patrick Crinelli FA 100cc
1992 Giancarlo Fisichella* (2) PCR PCR V Jason Watt Olivier Fiorucci ICA 100cc
1993 Andrea Belicchi (2) Tony Kart Italsistem B Giuseppe Palmieri Gianluca Beggio FA 100cc
Internazionale
1994 Giancarlo Fisichella* (3) PCR PCR B Gianluca Beggio Daniele Dallari FA 100cc
1995 Sophie Kumpen CRG Rotax B Gert Munkholm Johnny Mislijevic FA 100cc
1996 Alessandro Manetti CRG CRG B Massimiliano Orsini Lotta Hellberg FA 100cc
1997 Antonio García Mari Kart Italsistem V Giuseppe Palmieri Massimiliano Orsini FA 100cc
1998 Massimiliano Orsini Swiss Hutless Italsistem B Rickard Kaell Ryan Briscoe FA 100cc
1999 Sauro Cesetti Kosmic Vortex B Cesare Balistreri Gianluca Beggio FA 100cc
2000 Toni Vilander PCR PCR D Rickard Kaell Marco Ardigò FA 100cc
2001 Sauro Cesetti (2) Kosmic Vortex B Ben Jamini Bruno Vroomen FA 100cc
2002 Davide Gaggianesi Birel Parilla V Sauro Cesetti Pastor Maldonado* FA 100cc
2003 Carlo van Dam Tony Kart Vortex V Michele Fanetti Michael Ammermüller FA 100cc
2004 Ben Hanley Maranello Maxter B Davide Forè Martin Plowman FA 100cc
2005 Edoardo Mortara Tony Kart Vortex V Davide Forè Marco Ardigò FA 100cc
2006 Marco Ardigò Tony Kart Vortex V Manuel Renaudie Florian Alfano FA 100cc
2007 Gary Catt Tony Kart Vortex V Marco Ardigò James Calado KF1 125cc
2008 Gary Catt (2) Tony Kart Vortex V Alessandro Bressan Marco Ardigò KF1 125cc
2009 Brandon Maïsano Intrepid TM B Matteo Vigano Antonio Giovinazzi*‡ KF2 125cc
2010 Jacob Nortoft FA Kart Vortex V Stefano Cucco Mitchell Gilbert[a] KF2 125cc
2011 Alain Valente Swiss Hutless BMB V Pascal Eberle Ivan Kostyukov KF2 125cc
2012 Felice Tiene CRG BMB V Tom Joyner Sami Luka KF2 125cc
2013 Dorian Boccolacci Energy Corse TM V Luca Corberi Egor Stupenkov KF 125cc
2014 Alessio Lorandi Tony Kart TM V Julien Fong Wei Jie Andrea Moretti KF 125cc
2015 Alexander Vartanyan Tony Kart Vortex V Leonardo Lorandi Max Fewtrell KF 125cc
2016 Alexander Smolyar Tony Kart Vortex V Emil Dose Simon Ohlin OK 125cc
2017 Callum Bradshaw CRG Parilla LC Lorenzo Travisanutto Finlay Kenneally OK 125cc
2018 Andrea Rosso CRG TM V Marius Zug Mads E. Hansen OK 125cc
2019 Leonardo Bertini Colla Kart Republic IAME V David Liwinski Leonardo Fornaroli OK 125cc
2020 Edoardo Ludovico Villa TB IAME K Valentino Baracco Brando Pozzi X30S 125cc
2021 Cristian Comanducci Tony Kart IAME K Alex Machado Leonardo Megna X30S 125cc
2022 Danny Carenini Kart Republic IAME K Andrea Barbieri Sebastiano Pavan X30S 125cc
2023 Danny Carenini (2) Energy Corse IAME K Giulio Olivieri Brando Pozzi X30S 125cc
2024 Federico Albanese Italcorse TM MG Christian Canonica Karol Pasiewicz OK-N 125cc
2025 Manuel Scognamiglio Tony Kart IAME MG Daniele Vezzelli Nicolas Marchesi OK-N 125cc
2026 Nicolas Marchesi Kart Republic TM MG Riccardo Brangero Sebastiano Pavan OK-N 125cc
Source:[12][110][111]

Secondary senior class (1990–2019)

Year Champion Chassis Engine Tyres Runner-up Third place Class Stroke
Nazionale
1990 Giancarlo Fisichella* PCR PCR V Massimiliano Orsini Patrick Crinelli ICA 100cc
1991 Pietro Saitta MRC Atomik V Bruno Balocco Nicola Gianniberti ICA 100cc
1992 No secondary senior class contested
1993 Sauro Cesetti Birel Parilla V Walter Conforti Marco Gamba ICA 100cc
Internazionale
1994 Matteo Boscolo Mari Kart Italsistem V Ennio Gandolfi Gabriele Lancieri ICA 100cc
1995 Massimo Del Col Tony Kart Italsistem B Max Russomando Simone Fumagalli ICA 100cc
1996 Ioannis Antoniadis Mari Kart Italsistem V Vitantonio Liuzzi* Antony Bertocchi ICA 100cc
1997 Steve Molini Birel Italsistem B Matteo Grassotto Martin Jensen ICA 100cc
1998 Giorgio Evangelisti Mari Kart Italsistem V Ketty D'Ambroso Andrea Tressino ICA 100cc
1999 Michele Rugolo PCR PCR V Alexio Lattanzi Marco Ardigò ICA 100cc
2000 Stefano Proetto PCR PCR D Giacomo Ricci Alessandro Pier Guidi ICA 100cc
2001 Jean-Philippe Guignet Tony Kart Vortex V Franck Mailleux Salvatore Gatto ICA 100cc
2002 Jérémy Iglesias PCR PCR V Stefano Albertini Hans Remschnig ICA 100cc
2003 Oliver Oakes Tony Kart Vortex V Nicolaj Bøllingtoft Marco Mapelli ICA 100cc
2004 Henkie Waldschmidt CRG Maxter V Jon Lancaster Andrea Todisco ICA 100cc
2005 Andrea Dalè Van Speed TM V Daniel Weber Alessandro Bosca ICA 100cc
2006 Marco Wittmann Birel TM V Burkhard Maring Giovanni Erba ICA 100cc
2007 Burkhard Maring Birel IAME V Will Stevens* Libor Toman KF2 125cc
2008 Zdeněk Groman Maranello Parilla V Giacomo Patrono Tom Grice KF2 125cc
2009

2016
No secondary senior class contested
2017 Vittorio Maria Russo Tony Kart IAME K Andrea Bristot Alessandro Brigatti X30S 125cc
2018 Marco Moretti Tony Kart IAME K Andrea Moretti Vittorio Maria Russo X30S 125cc
2019 Edoardo Ludovico Villa TB IAME K Danny Carenini Vittorio Maria Russo X30S 125cc
Source:[12][110][111]

Junior classes (1992–present)

Primary junior class (1992–present)

Year Champion Chassis Engine Tyres Runner-up Third place Class Stroke
Nazionale
1992 Bruno Balocco Rakama IAME V Massimo Del Col Gianluca Carradori ICA-J 100cc
1993 Ennio Gandolfi Kalì Comer V Giorgio Pantano* Max Russomando ICA-J 100cc
Internazionale
1994 Doug Bell Top-Kart Comer V Giorgio Pantano* Wouter van Eeuwijk ICA-J 100cc
1995 André Lotterer*‡ Tony Kart Italsistem V Antonio García Alessandro Piccolo ICA-J 100cc
1996 André Lotterer*‡ (2) Tony Kart Vortex V Francesco Basilico Ryan Briscoe ICA-J 100cc
1997 Ben Benjamin CRG CRG B Andrea Bonetti Clayton Pyne ICA-J 100cc
1998 Stefano Fabi Top-Kart Comer B Marco Ardigò Alessandro Pier Guidi ICA-J 100cc
1999 Robert Kubica* CRG CRG V Georgio Garritsen Alessandro Bonetti ICA-J 100cc
2000 Pietro Ricci Birel Parilla V Jean-Philippe Guignet Adrián Vallés ICA-J 100cc
2001 Miguel Gallego Tony Kart Vortex V Nick de Bruijn Francesco Antonucci ICA-J 100cc
2002 Andrea Todisco Birel TM V Sébastien Buemi*‡ Bradley Ellis ICA-J 100cc
2003 Dani Clos Birel Parilla V Miguel Molina Jules Bianchi* ICA-J 100cc
2004 Stefano Coletti Birel TM V Marco Zipoli Jules Bianchi* ICA-J 100cc
2005 Charles Pic* Birel Parilla V Roberto Merhi* Aleix Alcaraz ICA-J 100cc
2006 Nigel Moore BRM Parilla V Flavio Camponeschi Libor Toman ICA-J 100cc
2007 Jack Harvey Maranello MRC V Matteo Beretta Petri Suvanto KF3 125cc
2008 Ignazio D'Agosto Tony Kart Vortex D Aaro Vainio Kevin Ceccon KF3 125cc
2009 Daniil Kvyat*[b] Tony Kart Vortex D Nyck de Vries*‡ Raffaele Marciello KF3 125cc
2010 Loris Spinelli Intrepid TM V Esteban Ocon*[c] Fabio Filippo Cavallaro KF3 125cc
2011 Slavko Ivanovic Tony Kart Vortex V Robin Hansson Harrison Scott KF3 125cc
2012 Martin Kodrić FA Kart Vortex V Lance Stroll* Álex Palou KF3 125cc
2013 Dan Ticktum FA Kart Vortex V Nikita Sitnikov Gabriel Aubry KF-J 125cc
2014 Max Fewtrell FA Kart Vortex V Alexander Vartanyan Leonardo Lorandi KF-J 125cc
2015 Kush Maini Tony Kart Vortex V Lorenzo Colombo David Vidales KF-J 125cc
2016 Ivan Shvetsov Tony Kart Vortex V Pavel Bulantsev Bogdan Fetisov OK-J 125cc
2017 Andrea Rosso Tony Kart Vortex V Mattia Michelotto Leonardo Marseglia OK-J 125cc
2018 Enzo Trulli CRG TM V Gabriel Bortoleto* Mikkel Højgaard Petersen OK-J 125cc
2019 Theo Wernersson Kosmic TM V Samuli Mertsalmi Mickey Magnussen OK-J 125cc
2020 Alex Powell Kart Republic IAME V Yuanpu Cui Giovanni Trentin OK-J 125cc
2021 René Lammers Parolin IAME K Giulio Olivieri Paul Alberto X30J 125cc
2022 Mark Dubnitski Kart Republic TM V Nando Weixelbaumer Jakub Kameník OK-J 125cc
2023 David Cosma Cristofor Kart Republic IAME V Simon Rechenmacher Lev Krutogolov OK-J 125cc
2024 Kilian Josseron Righetti Ridolfi IAME V Kosei Oguma Ethan Lennon OK-J 125cc
2025 Ilia Berezkin Kalì TM V Matyas Vitver Noah Antonsen OK-J 125cc
2026 Gioele Carrer EKS Modena MG Mattis Brageot Victor Gorun[d] OKN-J 125cc
Source:[12][110][111]

Secondary junior class (2020–2025)

Year Champion Chassis Engine Tyres Runner-up Third place Class Stroke
2020 Clément Outran Kart Republic IAME K Oleksandr Bondarev Manuel Scognamiglio X30J 125cc
2021 No secondary junior class contested
2022 Riccardo Cirelli Tony Kart IAME K Riccardo Ferrari Vilmer Svahn X30J 125cc
2023 Riccardo Ferrari Tony Kart IAME K Alberto Fulgori Jr. Fabio Reale X30J 125cc
2024 Ludovico Mazzola Exprit Vortex MG Nikolaos Karagiannis Wiktor Stalmach OKN-J 125cc
2025 Vsevolod Osadchyi-Suslovskyi Monster TM MG Nicola Stanley Cristian Blandino OKN-J 125cc
Source:[12][110][111]

Gearbox class (2009–present)

Year Champion Chassis Engine Tyres Runner-up Third place Class Stroke
2009 Jack Hawksworth Energy Corse TM V Anthony Abbasse Manuel Renaudie KZ2 125cc
2010 Simon Solgat Birel TM V Jack Hawksworth Yuri Lucati KZ2 125cc
2011 Adam Janouš Intrepid TM V Massimo Aceto Alberto Cavalieri KZ2 125cc
2012 Fabian Federer CRG Maxter V Massimo Dante Paolo Bonetti KZ2 125cc
2013 Kristijan Habulin CRG Modena V Massimo Dante Douglas Lundberg KZ2 125cc
2014 Marco Zanchetta Maranello TM V Lorenzo Camplese Luca Corberi KZ2 125cc
2015 Davide Forè CRG TM V Massimo Dante Alexander Schmitz KZ2 125cc
2016 Giacomo Pollini CRG TM V Alexander Schmitz Alberto Cavalieri KZ2 125cc
2017 Riccardo Longhi Birel ART TM V Fabian Federer Giacomo Pollini KZ2 125cc
2018 Alessio Lorandi Parolin TM V Fabian Federer Törnqvist Persson KZ2 125cc
2019 Emilien Denner Sodi TM V Giuseppe Palomba William Lanzeni KZ2 125cc
2020 Senna van Walstijn Sodi TM V Filippo Berto Luca Bosco KZ2 125cc
2021 Senna van Walstijn (2) Sodi TM V Jean Nomblot Douglas Lundberg KZ2 125cc
2022 Giuseppe Palomba Birel ART TM V Riccardo Longhi Marco Tormen KZ2 125cc
2023 Cristian Bertuca Birel ART TM V Daniel Vasile Markus Kajak KZ2 125cc
2024 Arthur Poulain Sodi TM V David Liwinski Senna van Walstijn KZ2 125cc
2025 Cristian Bertuca (2) Birel ART TM V Marco Tormen Karol Pasiewicz KZ2 125cc
2026 Cristian Bertuca (3) Birel ART IAME V Davide Forè Marco Tormen KZ2 125cc
Source:[12][110][111]

Mini classes (2010–present)

Under-12 class (2010–present)

Year Champion Chassis Engine Tyres Runner-up Third place Class Stroke
2010 Alessio Lorandi Tony Kart Vortex V Alessandro Stura Robert Shwartzman 60M 60cc
2011 Marcu Dionisios Top-Kart LKE V Alexander Zhirkov Robert Shwartzman 60M 60cc
2012 Logan Sargeant* Tony Kart LKE LC Christian Cobellini Simone Mazzotti 60M 60cc
2013 Domenico Cicognini Kosmic LKE LC Lorenzo Colombo Makar Mizevych 60M 60cc
2014 Antonio Serravalle Tony Kart LKE V Dmitrii Bogdanov Christian Cobellini 60M 60cc
2015 Leonardo Marseglia CRG TM V Giuseppe Fusco Marzio Moretti 60M 60cc
2016 Ruslan Fomin Tony Kart TM V Evann Mallet Kirill Smal 60M 60cc
2017 Alfio Spina CRG TM V Nikita Bedrin Alessandro Cenedese 60M 60cc
2018 Josh Irfan Parolin TM V Arvid Lindblad* Joel Bergström 60M 60cc
2019 Joel Bergström Parolin TM V Ean Eyckmans Rashid Al Dhaheri 60M 60cc
2020 René Lammers Parolin IAME V Kimi Tani Maciej Gładysz 60M 60cc
2021 Emanuele Olivieri IPK TM V David Cosma Cristofor Christian Costoya 60M 60cc
2022 Dries Van Langendonck Parolin TM V Christian Costoya Iacopo Martinese 60M 60cc
2023 Bosco Arias Kart Republic IAME V Ilie Tristan Crisan İskender Zülfikari Gr.3 60cc
2024 Alessandro Truchot[e] Parolin IAME MG Oliveri Sini Julian Frasnelli Gr.3 60cc
2025 Niccoló Perico Kart Republic IAME MG Tiberius Müller Mason Robertson Gr.3 60cc
2026 Alfie Mair Tony Kart Vortex MG Abraham Schelvis Andreas Papageorgiou[f] Gr.3 60cc
Source:[12][110][111]

Under-10 class (2023–present)

Year Champion Chassis Engine Tyres Runner-up Third place Class Stroke
2023 Oleksandr Legenkyi[g] Kart Republic IAME V Albert Tamm Andrii Kruglyk U10 60cc
2024 Niccoló Perico Energy Corse TM MG Mark Loomets Lorenzo Di Pietrantonio U10 60cc
2025 Jan Ruudi Algre Kart Republic IAME MG Andreas Papageorgiou[f] Josh Bergman U10 60cc
2026 Zayne Burgess[h] Parolin LKE MG Oliver Weytjens[i] Sten Mihailov U10 60cc
Source:[12][110][111]

Records and statistics

Most titles by drivers

# Driver Titles Category Span Age
1 Giancarlo Fisichella* 4 ICA, FA 1990–1994 17–21
2 Sauro Cesetti 3 ICA, FA 1993–2001 17–25
Alessio Lorandi 60M, KF, KZ2 2010–2018 11–19
Cristian Bertuca KZ2 2023–2026 16–19
4 Edoardo Ludovico Villa 2 X30S 2019–2020 15–16
Senna van Walstijn KZ2 2020–2021 17–18
René Lammers 60M, X30J 2020–2021 12
Danny Carenini X30S 2022–2023 20–21
Niccoló Perico U10, Gr.3 2024–2025 9–10
Source:[112][12]

Most titles by chassis manufacturers

# Chassis Titles Span
1 Tony Kart[A] 33 1990–2026
2 Birel / Birel ART[B] 16 1993–2026
3 CRG[C] 15 1995–2018
4 Kart Republic[B] 11 2019–2026
5 PCR 8 1990–2002
Parolin 2018–2026
7 Mari Kart 4 1994–1998
Maranello[C] 2004–2014
FA Kart[A] 2010–2014
Kosmic[A] 1999–2019
Energy Corse 2009–2024
Sodi 2019–2024
Source:[12][110]
Notes
  1. ^ a b c Brand of OTK Group.
  2. ^ a b Brand of Korus Group since 2026.
  3. ^ a b Brand of CRG Srl.

Notes

  1. ^ Seven World Drivers' Champions have contested the Andrea Margutti Trophy, as of 2025:
  2. ^ Sophie Kumpen became the third woman in history to win a major international karting title, after:
  1. ^ Mitchell Gilbert is Australian and Malaysian but competed under a British licence.
  2. ^ Daniil Kvyat is Russian but competed under an Italian licence.
  3. ^ Esteban Ocon is French but competed under an Italian licence.
  4. ^ Victor Gorun is Romanian but competed under an Italian licence.
  5. ^ Alessandro Truchot is French and American but competed under an Italian licence.
  6. ^ a b Andreas Papageorgiou is Cypriot but competed under an Italian licence.
  7. ^ Oleksandr Legenkyi is Ukrainian but competed under an Italian licence.
  8. ^ Zayne Burgess is American but competed under an Italian licence.
  9. ^ Oliver Weytjens is Spanish but competed under an Italian licence.

See also

References

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