The FIA, governing body for Formula 1, have confirmed every driver's numbers for the highly anticipated 2025 season.
The new season will be one of the most hotly anticipated in recent memory, with half of the previous season's grid leaving their seats and Red Bull's supremacy on the wane.
Seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton has ditched the Mercedes team with whom he spent 12 highly-successful seasons, and has joined the most successful team in F1 history in Ferrari.
That move prompted a number of other team switches for experienced drivers, including Carlos Sainz moving to Williams, Nico Hulkenberg moving to Sauber and Esteban Ocon replacing Hulkenberg at Haas.
On top of this, there are a number of new faces on the grid, with youngsters Jack Doohan, Kimi Antonelli, Ollie Bearman, Gabriel Bortoleto and Isack Hadjar all being given their first full-time seats on the F1 grid.
Now, all of those youngster's numbers that they are going to use have been officially confirmed, with Doohan using 2007 champion Kimi Raikkonen's number seven, Bortoleto using the legendary Sebastian Vettel's number five, and Nico Rosberg's number six being used by Hadjar.
Whereas F1 drivers used to use the number that directly correlated with their championship standing the year before, in 2014 the rules were changed to allow drivers to pick their own number.
This was designed to try and make drivers more easily identifiable, as well as increasing the personal brand of each driver, as demonstrated by Hamilton's now iconic number 44.
The idea is for each driver to stick with their number throughout their whole career, unless they win the world championship, and then a different number becomes available to them.
Why did Max Verstappen change his race number?
That different number is the number one, a driver number that is reserved only for the world champion.
While Hamilton didn't choose to use the number one that was available when he won six championships between 2014-2020, Verstappen did opt to take on the mantle of being the number one driver, when he won his first championship in 2021.
Verstappen's previous number was 33, a number that he may have to go back to, should he lose out on the 2025 title and the new champion wants to take on the number one mantle.