Reigning World Champion Lewis Hamilton collected his third pole position of the season in a Mercedes front-row lockout at the French Grand Prix.
Hamilton led the way through all three segments of qualifying and laid down a benchmark with a time of 1:30.222, a tenth clear of Mercedes team-mate Valtteri Bottas.
Bottas inched ahead of Hamilton on his final Q3 push lap but the Briton responded, coming across the line with a time of 1:30.029, 0.118s quicker.
Points leader Sebastian Vettel was third as his attempt at denying Mercedes a front-row lockout proved fruitless, running wide through Sainte Baume on his final effort.
Red Bull took fourth and fifth, Max Verstappen in front of Daniel Ricciardo, while Kimi Raikkonen was a subdued sixth after another lacklustre Q3 display.
The leading six drivers split tyre strategies for Q2, with Mercedes and Red Bull taking Supersofts, and Ferrari opting for Ultrasofts, meaning they will start the race on those compounds, assuming dry conditions prevail.
Carlos Sainz Jr. spearheaded the midfield battle for Renault as he took seventh, as Charles Leclerc again starred for Sauber, making it through to Q3, where he placed eighth.
It marked Sauber’s first Q3 appearance in three years.
Haas rounded out the top 10, with Kevin Magnussen ninth and Romain Grosjean without a time, after he crashed out of the shootout when he spun through Virage de L’Hotel.
Esteban Ocon missed out on a Q3 spot on home turf by just 0.020s as he wound up 11th, in front of Renault’s Nico Hulkenberg and Force India team-mate Sergio Perez.
Toro Rosso’s Pierre Gasly was 14th, while Marcus Ericsson made it through to Q2 but finished slowest in the session, unable to replicate the heroics of team-mate Leclerc.
McLaren’s dismal run of form continued as it endured its worst qualifying result of the season, with neither Fernando Alonso nor Stoffel Vandoorne making it out of Q1.
Alonso, fresh from his victory at the Le Mans 24 Hours, was 16th, with Vandoorne two positions further back, meaning the Belgian has still yet to edge his team-mate over one lap in 2018.
Alonso and Vandoorne sandwiched Toro Rosso’s Brendon Hartley, though he will drop to the back of the grid on account of incurring the maximum 15-place grid penalty due to taking on a new power unit.
Williams’ lacklustre campaign showed no sign of improving as Sergey Sirotkin and Lance Stroll qualified comfortably slowest, half a second adrift of Vandoorne.
Sirotkin edged Stroll by a tenth of a second, the Canadian having briefly caught air after running wide onto the yellow kerbs exiting the second part of the Verrerie S.
Sunday’s 53-lap French Grand Prix is scheduled for 16:10 local time.