The championship leader set a first lap in the final stage of qualifying that was more than good enough for pole, but proved his quality further by beating his own benchmark by over a tenth to beat second-placed Oscar Piastri by 0.581s.
Red Bull's renewed vigour followed a disappointing Singapore weekend in which the team struggled to find pace and lost both cars in Q2 as Verstappen was knocked out at the end by Liam Lawson.
The team's drop-off in performance raised suspicions that it had been affected by recent technical directives, namely TD18 pertaining to flexi-wings and a revised TD39 that related to flexing floors, although the team pointed out that there was no correlation.
Verstappen reckoned that his pole had put those rumblings to bed and that he was "fired up" to atone from the previous weekend's struggles.
"We had a bad weekend. Of course, then people start talking about 'ah, it's all because of the technical directives'. I think they can go suck on an egg," Verstappen replied to a question from Autosport asking if his pole underlined a statement of intent.
"From my side, I was just very fired up to have a good weekend here and make sure that we were strong."
Verstappen had previously joked that "Singapore didn't happen" and that Red Bull had suffered "zero" recurrences of its issues at the Marina Bay circuit over the Suzuka weekend.
Source: Autosport