The window for asking for a review after an event will be shortened from the current 14 day period to four days, or 96 hours.
In addition a fee will be introduced, whereas currently there is no charge.
The plan for change was discussed before the recent request for a review from Haas regarding track limits offences committed by rivals at the US GP that was rejected last week.
However, that case highlights the fact that review requests are more common than they used to be, and the FIA is keen to make teams think twice about pursuing them.
In addition to the Haas example, this year has also seen requests submitted by Aston Martin (Jeddah), Ferrari (Australia) and McLaren (Austria). Only the first of these was successful, as Aston overturned a penalty handed out to Fernando Alonso.
The FIA now intends to tweak both the International Sporting Code and its own judicial rules for 2024, pending approval at the Annual General Assembly in December. The changes will apply to all FIA competitions, and not just F1.
Originally, there was no time limit on a right of review request, so a team could in theory challenge the result of a race that took place months earlier.
That was subsequently changed to 14 days, a limit that Haas took full advantage of when collating its evidence.
The plan is to change that to 96 hours from the end of the competition, although in exceptional circumstances the stewards will be able to extend the deadline to 120 hours.
Source: Autosport