Olivier Panis, born September 2, 1966, is a French driver who was raced Formula One for 10 seasons.

Panis, like most drivers, raced karts early in his career. After graduating from karts, Olivier raced several years in a number of "junior" series before racing in French Formula 3. He won a championship in that series in 1991. He eventually found himself in Formula 3000, and he won the series' championship there in 1993.

The 27-year old Panis earned an F1 drive in 1994 for the French-based Ligier team. He earned a surprise second place that season at Hockenheim, and finished 11th in the standings for the marque. The following year, he earned another surprise second place at the Australian Grand Prix, in spite of being two laps behind the leader, and added a handful of fourths to his resume, giving him an 8th place finish in the championship.

Undoubtedly, though, his biggest surprise came in 1996 in Monaco. Under a virtual monsoon, Panis expertly managed to drive through the conditions and drove his way to victory. He was one of only 4 cars to finish the race. Panis' victory was Ligier's first in 15 years (and their last one ever), and it was the first French victory in a French car at Monaco in 66 years. However, it was only highlight to his 1996 season, and he otherwise failed to do any better than 5th place.

Panis had the potential for a big season in 1997 while driving for Alain Prost, who had purchased Ligier. After 6 races, he stood third in the championship thanks to a second place in Spain and a third place in Brazil. But in Canada, he had his leg broken in an accident, causing him to miss 8 races. He returned for the final three races of the season, and appeared to show he was okay, as he drove like he'd done before the crash. Considering that he missed half of the year, he still managed 9th in the championship.

In 1998, though, it all fell apart for Olivier. After managing to be in the top 10 in points, Olivier failed to score a single point for Prost, partially due to an unreliable car. A single point was all he could manage for his team the following season, and afterwards he ended his relationship with Alain.

Despite his struggles, Panis was a consideration to drive for Williams, a team that was in a state of flux at the time, but turned it down to test for McLaren. The gig helped showcase Panis to other top teams in F1, and he landed with BAR in 2001. But BAR wasn't the top team he had hoped they'd be, and he finished in 14th place during both of the years he was there.

Panis left for Toyota's racing team in 2003. He was signed to drive and provide the second-year team his knowledge, as well as help his teammate, Cristiano Da Matta, learn the ropes of F1. The end result wasn't any different from previous seasons, as he was 14th again, but the beginning results were not, as was excellent in one-lap qualifying.

The oldest active driver in F1 at the age of 37, Panis is still with Toyota for 2004.