Bio Excerpt: Michalina Sabaj is building her racing career the Polish way—methodically, quietly, and without fanfare. The Krakow native won the 2019 FIA Women in Motorsport Girls On Track Karting Challenge and claimed the 2021 ROK Cup Poland Master category title before graduating to cars in 2024. Her... (full bio below ↓↓)
Michalina Sabaj
Formula racer
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It is important to me that there are more women racing
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(last updated 2026-01-25
Michalina Sabaj is a Polish racing driver from Krakow who’s quietly making her way through the motorsports ladder, transitioning from a successful karting career into single-seaters and sports prototypes with the kind of methodical focus that suggests she’s in this for the long game.
EARLY YEARS
Not much is publicly known about Sabaj’s childhood or family background. What we do know is that she hails from Krakow, Poland, and found her way into motorsport through karting at age 10. Whether it was a family passion, a chance encounter at a local track, or pure childhood determination, the details remain private. What matters is that she stuck with it—karting became her foundation, and she spent her formative racing years primarily in Poland, with occasional forays to Italy, Belgium, and Hungary to sharpen her skills against international competition.
OTHER INTERESTS
Sabaj keeps her personal life largely out of the spotlight. There’s no public record of hobbies, other sports, creative pursuits, or what she does when she’s not at the track. In an era where many drivers cultivate carefully curated social media personas, her silence on these fronts is almost refreshing—or perhaps it’s simply that she’s too busy learning braking points on the simulator.
EARLY SUCCESS
Sabaj’s karting career built steadily over the years, culminating in some genuinely impressive results. In 2019, she won the FIA Women in Motorsport Girls On Track Karting Challenge, a program designed to identify and support talented female racers. That same year, she competed in the ROK Cup Superfinal in the Senior ROK category at Lonato, driving for Ckt Racing on a Kosmic chassis with a Vortex engine and Bridgestone tires—she finished 19th with zero points, but the experience at such a competitive international level was invaluable. By 2021, she’d hit her stride, winning the ROK Cup Poland in the Master category and becoming a front-runner at the ROK Cup World Final in Lonato. These weren’t just participation trophies; they were real wins against serious competition, proof that she had the talent to compete at higher levels.
The transition from karting to cars is where many promising drivers stumble, but Sabaj approached it with patience and preparation. She graduated from karting in 2024 and entered the F4 Central European Zone Championship (F4 CEZ) with AS Motorsport. Her first season was a learning curve—she finished 13th overall and 5th in the Rookie class with 84 points, recording no wins, podiums, poles, or fastest laps across 18 races. But stats don’t tell the whole story. At Slovakia Ring, she cracked the top five in two races, earned a pole position in the third sprint, and won the Rookie Rocket Cup category. Her approach to learning tracks is admirably systematic: one to two days on the simulator before each race weekend, mastering lines and gears so that by the time she hits the first session, she’s already familiar with the circuit. “I really like the Slovakia Ring track; it’s really fast and long, with a lot of straights,” she said in an F4 CEZ interview. “By the time I get to the first session on track, it’s much easier for me because I already know the track well. From the second session onward, I can start pushing the braking points and working on ideal racing line.”
Her second F4 CEZ season showed incremental progress—two top-ten finishes at Salzburgring, with some reports noting three top-five finishes overall in her debut season. She also participated in F1 Academy in-season rookie testing, posting a fastest lap time of 1:48.436 over 96 laps and finishing 15th. Not spectacular, but solid. And importantly, she’s one of three women in the F4 CEZ field, continuing to chip away at the sport’s gender imbalance without making a big deal about it. When asked about comparisons with other female drivers, she doesn’t lean into the narrative—she just focuses on her own progression.
In 2024, Sabaj took an interesting sidestep into the Italian Sport Prototype Championship, driving the Wolf GB08 Raiden—a car featuring increased downforce, an Aprilia 1.1 engine, and Halo safety technology. She became the third female driver to compete in the series in recent years, following Kaka Magno in 2021 and Sonia Roussel in 2023. Before that debut, she’d tested the first-generation F4 Tatuus, the T421, and the Wolf GB08 Thunder with Avelon Formula, methodically building her car racing toolkit.
NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENTS
- 2019: Winner, FIA Women in Motorsport Girls On Track Karting Challenge
- 2021: Winner, ROK Cup Poland, Master category
- 2021: Front-runner, ROK Cup World Final, Lonato
- F4 CEZ (first season): 13th overall, 5th in Rookie class (84 points); top five in two races at Slovakia Ring; pole position in third sprint at Slovakia Ring; winner, Rookie Rocket Cup category
- 2024: Debut in Italian Sport Prototype Championship (Wolf GB08 Raiden); third female driver in the series in recent years
INSPIRATIONS
Sabaj hasn’t publicly named the drivers, mentors, or influences who shaped her career. No childhood posters on the wall, no heartfelt tributes to racing heroes, no mention of family members who sparked the passion. Either she’s exceptionally private, or she’s simply letting her driving speak for itself.
REPUTATION
Media coverage of Sabaj has been positive, if sparse—she’s noted as an established karter making a solid transition into cars, with visible improvements over her first F4 season. There’s no drama, no controversies, no public feuds or headline-grabbing moments. She’s building her reputation the old-fashioned way: through consistent work, measurable progress, and staying focused on the track rather than the spotlight. Her methodical approach—simulator prep, step-by-step learning, incremental gains—suggests someone who understands that racing careers are marathons, not sprints. “So far, I’m really happy,” she said after her first F4 CEZ season. “It’s my first season in Formula 4, so there’s a lot of work and study involved. We’ve seen the improvements I’ve made throughout the season, and I’m really happy about that.” It’s not flashy, but it’s honest.
FUTURE GOALS/PLANS
As of now, there’s no publicly available information about Sabaj’s plans for 2025 and beyond. Her 2024 calendar included the Italian Sport Prototype Championship and continued development in F4 CEZ, but whether she’ll pursue further single-seater progression, stick with prototypes, or explore other racing categories remains to be seen. What’s clear is that she’s building her career brick by brick, learning each track, mastering each braking point, and steadily improving her racecraft. The next chapter? She’ll let you know when she’s ready.
References:
Racers Behind the Helmet – Michalina Sabaj Italian Prototype Championship Announcement
F4 CEZ Official Interview – Michalina Sabaj
DriverDB – Michalina Sabaj Career Statistics
Females in Motorsport – Michalina Sabaj F1 Academy Testing
Erasmus+ Newsletter – FIA Women in Motorsport
ACI Sport – Italian Sport Prototype Championship 2024 Announcement

















