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Formula 1 1967 season

The 1967 Formula 1 season ran 11 races and ended with the title going to Denny Hulme, driving for Brabham-Repco. Below, every GP with circuit and winner, plus the drivers championship top 10.

The 11 races of 1967

GPCircuitCountryWinner
South African Grand PrixKyalamiSouth AfricaPedro Rodríguez (Cooper-Maserati)
Monaco Grand PrixCircuit de MonacoMonacoDenny Hulme (Brabham-Repco)
Dutch Grand PrixCircuit Park ZandvoortNetherlandsJim Clark (Lotus-Ford)
Belgian Grand PrixCircuit de Spa-FrancorchampsBelgiumDan Gurney (Eagle-Weslake)
French Grand PrixLe MansFranceJack Brabham (Brabham-Repco)
British Grand PrixSilverstone CircuitUKJim Clark (Lotus-Ford)
German Grand PrixNürburgringGermanyDenny Hulme (Brabham-Repco)
Canadian Grand PrixMosport International RacewayCanadaJack Brabham (Brabham-Repco)
Italian Grand PrixAutodromo Nazionale di MonzaItalyJohn Surtees (Honda)
United States Grand PrixWatkins GlenUSAJim Clark (Lotus-Ford)
Mexican Grand PrixAutódromo Hermanos RodríguezMexicoJim Clark (Lotus-Ford)

1967 championship top 10

#DriverTeamWinsPoints scored
1Denny Hulme (champion)Brabham-Repco251
2Jack BrabhamBrabham-Repco248
3Jim ClarkLotus-BRM / Lotus-Climax / Lotus-Ford441
4John SurteesHonda120
5Chris AmonFerrari020
6Pedro RodríguezCooper-Maserati115
7Graham HillLotus-BRM / Lotus-Ford015
8Dan GurneyEagle-Climax / Eagle-Weslake113
9Jackie StewartBRM010
10Mike SpenceBRM09

The year in numbers

The season packed 11 races across 11 countries, with 6 different winners over 1967: Jim Clark (4), Denny Hulme (2), Jack Brabham (2), Pedro Rodríguez (1), Dan Gurney (1), John Surtees (1). Jim Clark won more than anyone, 4 of the 11 races. The title went to Denny Hulme (New Zealand), driving for Brabham-Repco, the first of the driver's career. On the raw sums of the table, Denny Hulme closed the year on 51 points, 3 more than Jack Brabham. A note for anyone checking official records: until 1990 the rules dropped each driver's worst results, so the raw sums in the table can differ from the official 1967 scores.

To follow the championship thread, see the 1966 season and the 1968 season, or the full list of Formula 1 world champions.

Source: jolpica-f1 historical archive (Apache 2.0 license), successor to Ergast, snapshot of 2026-07-09. This site is independent and not affiliated with Formula One or any team, driver or circuit mentioned.

Last updated: · Methodology and sources