German Motor Sport Federation
| Sport | Auto Racing | 
|---|---|
| Category | Various discipline of motorsport | 
| Jurisdiction | |
| Founded | 1947 | 
| Affiliation | FIA and FIM | 
| Affiliation date | 2003 | 
| Headquarters | Frankfurt, Germany | 
| President | Hans-Joachim Stuck | 
| Official website | |
| www | |
The German Motor Sport Federation[1][2] (German: Deutscher Motor Sport Bund or DMSB, formerly known as Oberste Nationale Sportbehörde or ONS) is Germany's motor racing governing body. It represents Germany at FIA and FIM.
The DMSB-Staffel, founded in 1972 by Herbert Linge as ONS-Staffel, is considered the first mobile track marshaling crew, equipped with fast cars like Porsche 914 or Porsche 911, carrying fire extinguishers and doctors in order to arrive quickly at a crash site.
Member clubs
- Allgemeiner Deutscher Automobil-Club (ADAC), founded 1903
 - Automobilclub von Deutschland (AvD), founded 1899
 - Deutscher Motorsport Verband (DMV), founded 1923
 
Racing series organized by DMSB
- F3 Euroseries
 - FIA European Formula Three Championship
 - ATS Formel 3 Cup
 - Deutsche Motorrad-Straßenmeisterschaft
 
ITR e.V.
- Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters (until 2022)
 
Motorsport Team Germany
The Motorsport Team Germany is a squad containing young up-and-coming German talents in car racing, rallying and motorcycling.[3]
Current members
| Driver | Discipline | 
|---|---|
| Formula racing | |
| Formula racing | |
| Formula racing | |
| Formula racing | |
| Formula racing | |
| GT racing | |
| GT racing | |
| GT racing | |
| GT racing | |
| GT racing | |
| Karting | |
| Karting | |
| LMP | |
| Rallying | |
| Rallying | |
| Rallying | |
| Motorcycle speedway | |
| Motorcycle speedway | |
| Motorcycle speedway | |
| Enduro | |
| Enduro | |
| Enduro | |
| Enduro | |
| Enduro | |
| Motocross | |
| Motocross | |
| Motocross | |
| Motocross | |
| Motocross | |
| Motorcycle Road Racing | |
| Motorcycle Road Racing | |
| Motorcycle Road Racing | |
| Motorcycle Road Racing | |
| Trial | |
| Trial | |
| Source:[4] | |
References
- ^ "2015 Rally Supplementary Regulations" (PDF). rallye-sulingen.de. German Motor Sport Federation (DMSB). Retrieved 2024-09-05.
 - ^ "2016 Rallye Supplementary Regulations" (PDF). thueringen-rallye.com. German Motor Sport Federation (DMSB). Retrieved 2024-09-05.
 - ^ "2022 werden 24 Fahrer aus zehn Disziplinen unterstützt". lennox-lehmann.com (in German). 2022-02-13. Retrieved 2022-10-03.
 - ^ "Motorsport Team Germany präsentiert Förderkader". dmsb.de (in German). 2024-01-16. Retrieved 2024-01-20.
 
External links