Jumping in to say that what Stu said is also true for Italy now, there are very specialized and extremely competitive masters degrees with limited admissions that are focusing exactly on F1 related skills and topics, so if you want to work in F1 it’s probably the best bet. In Italy we have Ferrari, former Minardi (now Alpha Tauri) and some Haas offices both in the same region, in quite close proximity to each other, and therefore the entire ecosystem also in terms of university courses and degrees is centered around this Italian “motorvalley” area in Emilia-Romagna. I know that the university of Bologna has quite close ties with motorsport in general and even more so the university of Modena. There are also many other working opportunities in the field in this region that aren’t exactly F1, but very close in terms of what you’ll be doing (Dallara, motorbike companies, etc, you name it, it’s all quite close by, so there are so many options). Over the years many of the Ferrari employees came from these two universities. Now as I said these universities in collaboration with the F1 teams created a more specialized degree for those who really want a career in motorsport.
Check out the news here
https://scuderia.alphatauri.com/en/the- ... otorsport/ and here
https://motorvehicleuniversity.com/ for the dedicated masters degrees that will give you the best chance at landing a job at one of these companies. I don’t think not having a masters is going to be enough, so prepare for 5 years of studying, and if you manage to be admitted to one of these highly competitive masters programs (2 years) your chances might be pretty high that you end up working in the F1 industry or eventually be hired by a F1 team over your career. As far as “normal” mechanical/aerospace engineering degrees go, the best university is most definitely the Politecnico di Milano in Milan. If you take your bachelor there, and then you are admitted in one of the highly specialized masters I said before, you are pretty much set up for success. If not Politecnico di Milano for your bachelor degree, then definitely an engineering degree in the area where the F1 teams are, so either university of Bologna or university of Modena.