The FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC) is the premier series for endurance racing globally and features eight races, including the legendary Le Mans 24 Hours.
WEC tests drivers, cars and teams to the limit in long distance races of at least six hours on some of the world’s most famous and demanding circuits. Due to the length of race, two or three drivers share each car, depending on team preference.
Although the current WEC series was launched in 2012, World Championship endurance racing has a long and iconic history. The Le Mans 24 Hours was first contested in 1923, making it one of the oldest races in the world, while the World Sportscar Championship (the precursor to today’s WEC) was introduced in 1953.
The series attracts iconic car manufacturers and drivers who choose to test their skills at the highest level. In 2026, 14 manufacturers will be present on the WEC grid, including Toyota and Lexus.
WEC races feature two different categories of car – Hypercar and LMGT3 – whilst the Le Mans 24 Hours also includes LMP2 cars. Hypercar is the pinnacle of endurance racing, and this is where the Toyota TR010 HYBRID competes.
Hypercars are prototypes with a closed cockpit, an overall length of less than 5,000mm, a maximum overall width of 2,000 mm and a minimum height of 1,150mm. There are no limits on engine type and hybrid systems are permitted.
A Balance of Performance system is implemented in Hypercar, which means the weight and power of each competitors’ car is adjusted for each race. The baseline weight is 1,030kg and the power of engine and hybrid system is 520 kW. All Hypercars competed on Michelin tyres.
| Position | 6-hour races | 8 or 10-hour races (including Qatar) | Le Mans 24 Hours |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | 25 points | 38 points | 50 points |
| 2nd | 18 points | 27 points | 36 points |
| 3rd | 15 points | 23 points | 30 points |
| 4th | 12 points | 18 points | 24 points |
| 5th | 10 points | 15 points | 20 points |
| 6th | 8 points | 12 points | 16 points |
| 7th | 6 points | 9 points | 12 points |
| 8th | 4 points | 6 points | 8 points |
| 9th | 2 points | 3 points | 4 points |
| 10th | 1 point | 2 points | 2 points |

The traditional pre-season Prologue takes place over two days on 21-22 March at Lusail International Circuit, shortly before the opening race of the campaign, the Qatar 1812KM.
Qatar hosts the Prologue for the third time and is the sixth circuit to do so, following the introduction of the pre-season test in 2013. Paul Ricard, Monza, Barcelona, Spa-Francorchamps and Sebring have also held Prologue tests.
Two days of testing represent the first time for all Hypercar competitors to be on track at the same time since the 2025 season finale in Bahrain. A total of 14 hours of track time is split into four sessions, with two taking place in daylight, and two under lights to replicate the temperature and environmental conditions teams will face during the 10-hour race on 28 March.
Drivers and engineers can therefore fine-tune the settings of the TR010 HYBRIDs specifically to the demands of the 5.418km Qatar circuit and its 16 corners, whilst comparing the Michelin tyre compounds for performance and durability.
The two days also offer WEC officials an opportunity to check race control systems prior to the first race. The two days are likely to feature simulated full course yellow and safety car periods to ensure all equipment is ready.


Lusail International Circuit opens the FIA World Endurance Championship season for the third time in 2026, kicking off an eight-race campaign with a 10-hour contest.
Named the Qatar 1812KM to mark Qatar’s unification on 18 December 1878, the race starts in daylight and runs through sunset into the night. That creates ever-changing conditions as the track
temperatures drop, making tyre strategy particularly important.
The Lusail track was opened in 2004, initially for motorcycle racing. It is characterised by a 1km start-finish straight before a sequence of medium to high-speed corners. That combination requires a balance of straight-line speed and aerodynamic grip to generate optimum lap times.
With minimal elevation changes, changing wind direction can affect car performance at Lusail. A head or tail wind under braking for turn one impacts top speed and braking distance, while side winds through the flowing infield section further challenges drivers.
Qatar has yet to see a Toyota on the podium, although Nyck de Vries earned a front-row starting spot for the inaugural race in 2024. However, the team has a 100% points-scoring record at Lusail International Circuit, with a best result of fifth in each of the two races so far.


The Autodromo Internazionale Enzo e Dino Ferrari in Imola has become one of motorsport’s most recognisable circuits since its opening in 1953. It has hosted World Championship endurance racing seven times, most recently as the WEC’s Italian round since 2024.
Located just 90km from Maranello, Imola is a home track for Ferrari – it is named after the company’s founder and his son – and WEC races there attract a large, passionate local crowd.
It has been a successful venue for Toyota, with an inspired strategy bringing victory in changeable conditions in 2024, followed by a strong double points finish last year.
The circuit remains one of the most scenic in motorsport, set in green countryside and featuring picturesque elevation changes around its challenging 4.909km layout.
A significant percentage of the lap is driven at full throttle but the challenging medium and high-speed corners require relatively high levels of downforce. Meanwhile, the various chicanes require a car to be stable over the kerbs to achieve the optimum racing line.
The track is narrow which makes overtaking difficult, as Sébastien Buemi proved last year when he heroically held off the faster #50 Ferrari for several laps before the home favourite made a mistake.


Spa-Francorchamps is a favourite for drivers and spectators alike thanks to its high-speed and uncompromising layout through Belgium’s Ardennes forest.
Spa-Francorchamps is an iconic circuit with a rich endurance racing heritage, and it was part of the very first World Championship calendar in 1953, with a 24-hour race. It hosted its first 1,000km race – the predecessor to the modern six-hour WEC contests – in 1966.
At 7.004km it is the second longest circuit in WEC after Le Mans, and arguably the most spectacular thanks to legendary corners such as the Eau Rouge-Raidillon sequence, Pouhon and Blanchimont.
As well as being an iconic race in its own right, the 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps is also an important step in the team’s preparations for the Le Mans 24 Hours. The high-speed first and third sectors of Spa require similar characteristics from a Hypercar, adding significance to the weekend.
Of its 13 races at Spa in the modern WEC era, Toyota has won eight times, including an unprecedented run of seven consecutive victories from 2017.
Spa-Francorchamps is also one of two home races for TOYOTA RACING, alongside Fuji Speedway, due to its proximity to the team’s base in Cologne, Germany, which is only 120km away.


The undisputed highlight of the global endurance racing calendar, the Le Mans 24 Hours challenges drivers, team members and cars like no other race in the world.
A unique circuit consists partly of permanent circuit and partly of public roads. These sections, particularly on the high-speed Mulsanne Straight, are bumpier with unforgiving barriers in close proximity.
Since the first Le Mans 24 Hours in 1923, the race has been a showcase for the latest automotive technologies and pioneering road-relevant innovations. Toyota advances its technology at Le Mans and, since returning in 2012, it has competed exclusively with a hybrid powertrain.
As the only twice-round-the-clock race on the WEC calendar, Le Mans is a true endurance test, which begins with the spectacular night qualifying sessions on Wednesday and Thursday. It is not only the on-track action which stands out at La Sarthe; the Friday drivers’ parade brings fans into direct contact with the stars of the show in a festival atmosphere.
This year’s race will take Toyota to 28 appearances since its Le Mans debut in 1985. A total of 63 Toyota cars have competed at La Sarthe, in 26 editions of the Le Mans 24 Hours, earning five wins, 18 podiums and eight pole positions, whilst also setting the fastest-ever lap of the Circuit de la Sarthe, achieved by Kamui Kobayashi in 2017.
As well as the prestige of a Le Mans win, the race also offers double points, which can accelerate a World Championship challenge.


The second half of the WEC season begins in South America in front of the famously passionate Brazilian fans, at the evocative Interlagos track in São Paulo.
The anti-clockwise 4.309km circuit, officially named the Autódromo José Carlos Pace after the São Paulo-born former Le Mans and Formula 1 driver, is the spiritual home of Brazilian motorsports and has held five WEC races since the series returned in 2012.
Its compact layout is located in a uniquely urban setting among the colourful residential streets of the Interlagos suburb.
An undulating and twisty track, Interlagos is unrelenting with corners coming in quick succession. Even the start-finish straight is split by the flat-out turn 15. One of the main overtaking opportunities comes through the downhill turn one section.
As an old-school circuit, and with 15 corners squeezed into its 4.309km, traffic is a major factor, particularly through the tight sector two, where precious time can be lost behind LMGT3 cars in the low-speed corners.
Interlagos has witnessed significant milestones in Toyota’s WEC history, from its maiden victory in 2012, to securing the manufacturers’ World Championship title for the first time two years later. The team has two poles and two wins to its name in Brazil.


The vibrant city of Austin, Texas hosts WEC’s only visit to North America on a spectacular circuit which evokes memories of the world’s most famous corners.
The 5.513km Circuit of the Americas is an anti-clockwise track, characterised by a steep hill up to turn one followed by a sequence of sweeping, fast corners which create a thrilling opening sector, before tighter, more technical corners later in the lap.
In creating the circuit prior to its 2012 opening, designers took inspiration from some of motorsport’s most familiar corners, including the Maggotts-Becketts sequence at Silverstone, the triple-apex turn eight of Istanbul Park, and the stadium section of Hockenheim.
Finding the right car set-up is particularly challenging in Austin due to this mix of different corners, as well as one of the heaviest braking zones of the season, when cars decelerate from over 300km/h to around 60km/h for the tight turn 12.
Austin is one of only two circuits on the current WEC calendar – alongside Qatar – where Toyota has not yet stood on the top step of the podium. The team achieved its best result of second place in 2013, 2020 and 2024, while its only Austin pole came in 2014.


Fuji Speedway is truly the home circuit for TOYOTA RACING, making the 6 Hours of Fuji a special and high-priority race for the team.
The track, located around 100km west of Tokyo, is close to the Higashi-Fuji Technical Center, where the high-performance hybrid powertrain in the TR010 HYBRIDs is designed, developed and built.
Historically, Fuji Speedway has played a significant role in Toyota’s endurance racing development. The iconic 2000GT sportscar showed its speed with wins in the 1967 24-hour and 1000km races, whilst the Toyota 7 wrote itself into legend with fearsome performances there, including victories in the Fuji 1000km in 1968 and 1969.
The All-Japan Sports Prototype Championship, a national series for Le Mans-style cars, brought Toyota back into front-line sportscar competition in the 1980s and it became a regular winner at Fuji Speedway, which also hosted Japan’s first World Sportscar Championship race in 1982.
The circuit is characterised by a 1.475km start-finish straight where cars exceed 320km/h, and this demands strong top speed plus braking stability into turn one. In contrast, the tight and technical third sector requires aerodynamic and mechanical grip, as well as strong traction out of the corners.
Toyota has an impressive record at Fuji Speedway, with nine victories contributing to 15 podiums from the 12 WEC races there since the series returned in 2012.


A day-night race in the desert brings the curtain down on the 2025 WEC campaign. The 5.412km Bahrain International Circuit is the traditional venue for the last race of the season, having hosted it in 10 of the 13 seasons since WEC’s return in 2012.
The circuit, located around 35km south of the capital Manama, was the first modern Middle East motorsport venue and made history by bringing Formula 1 to the region in 2004.
Its 15-turn layout features a mix of high-speed and slower corners and is renowned for being abrasive with high grip levels, creating a particular challenge in terms of tyre management.
Toyota has a formidable record in Bahrain, having won the last nine WEC races there. In total it has won nine of its 13 races in the island kingdom, earning eight pole positions and a remarkable 19 podiums.
Although the 8 Hours of Bahrain brings closes the competitive action this season, there remains a final date in the diary. The annual WEC Rookie Test takes place the day after the race and gives teams a chance to offer track time to promising young drivers.


Kamui Kobayashi
Team Principal

Kazuki Nakajima
Team Director

David Floury
Technical Director
The TR010 HYBRID is an updated vehicle to take on the Hypercar class of the 2026 FIA World Endurance Championship. It is powered by a 3.5litre, V6 twin turbo engine and based on the GR010 HYBRID which broke new ground when it was unveiled as the first-ever WEC Hypercar in 2021.
For 2026, the car has been updated via changes to the front and rear bodywork, earning it a new name and identity as the TOYOTA RACING TR010 HYBRID. It will carry the team’s hopes during another intense season of Hypercar competition, when TOYOTA RACING aims to reclaim the World Championship and win Le Mans for the first time since 2022.
The TR010 HYBRID emphasises the international cooperation which underpins TOYOTA RACING’s WEC challenge. The beating heart of the TR010 HYBRID – its racing hybrid powertrain – is developed and built in Higashi-Fuji Technical Center before being sent to Cologne, Germany, where the chassis is engineered. In Cologne, a multi-national team of dedicated professionals, including powertrain engineers from Higashi-Fuji, assemble the complete car and prepare it to take on the world.
Toyota gave a debut to the new TS030 HYBRID at the Le Mans 24 Hours, the third round of the WEC season with two cars but reduced to one from the fourth round onwards. The TS030 HYBRID led Le Mans in the early stages but neither car finished, however soon after Toyota achieved its first victory in Brazil, and followed that with wins at Fuji and Shanghai, collecting pole position in these events as well. The team demonstrated the power of Toyota’s hybrid system in its first full season of WEC.
Drivers: Alex Wurz, Nicolas Lapierre, Kazuki Nakajima, Anthony Davidson, Stéphane Sarrazin, Sébastien Buemi
Races: 6
Wins: 3
Manufacturers’ Championship: 2nd
Drivers’ Championship: 3rd (Wurz, Lapierre)
An evolution of the TS030 HYBRID was introduced for 2013, with the biggest change being an improved Nisshinbo super capacitor. Total power output of 830hp was achieved by squeezing out 530hp from engine and 300hp from hybrid system. Although a Le Mans 24 Hours victory was elusive, the team earned a creditable second place and achieved wins in Fuji and Bahrain towards the end of the season.
Drivers: Alex Wurz, Nicolas Lapierre, Kazuki Nakajima, Anthony Davidson, Stéphane Sarrazin, Sébastien Buemi
Races: 8
Wins: 2
Manufacturers’ Championship: 2nd
Drivers’ Championship: 3rd (Davidson, Sarrazin. Buemi)
The all-new TS040 HYBRID was developed with bigger 3.7litre engine and 520hp output, despite a 20% reduction in fuel consumption. The hybrid system employed a Denso motor/generator on the rear and Aisin motor/generator at the front to provide power to all four wheels. This hybrid system produced 480hp, which contributed to a total of 1000hp. This year, the team won five of the eight races to win both the Manufacturers’ and Drivers’ World Championships. At Le Mans, the team earned third place with one car, while the pole position #7 retired after leading for 14 hours.
Drivers: Alex Wurz, Stéphane Sarrazin, Kazuki Nakajima, Anthony Davidson, Sébastien Buemi, Nicolas Lapierre, Mike Conway
Races: 8
Wins: 5
Manufacturers’ Championship: 1st
Drivers’ Championship: 1st (Davidson, Buemi)
Toyota fought the 2015 season with an evolved version of its 2014 title winner, the TS040 HYBRID, but achieved only two podium finishes, in the first and final races of the season at Silverstone and Bahrain. For the World Champions, 2015 turned out to be the hardest season since the start of its WEC challenge as its LMP1 rivals made significant performance gains. The 2015 season was notable for the introduction of the TOYOTA GAZOO Racing identity in all Toyota’s motorsport activities, including WEC.
Drivers: Alex Wurz, Stéphane Sarrazin, Mike Conway, Anthony Davidson, Sébastien Buemi, Kazuki Nakajima
Races: 8
Wins: 0
Manufacturers’ Championship: 3rd
Drivers’ Championship: 5th (Davidson, Buemi)
A newly designed TS050 HYBRID was introduced, with a direct injection V6 2.4litre engine employing turbo charging, with a twin turbo, for the first time. Total output including engine and hybrid system was again 1000hp. To store the hybrid energy, Toyota switched to a high-powered lithium-ion battery, replacing the previous super capacitor. Le Mans proved to be heart-breaking, with the leading TS050 HYBRID suffering a technical problem on the penultimate lap with Kazuki at the wheel when victory was within reach. The other car finished second. The team did stand on the centre step of the podium later in the year, however, with a home victory at Fuji Speedway.
Drivers: Mike Conway, Stéphane Sarrazin, Kamui Kobayashi, Anthony Davidson, Sébastien Buemi, Kazuki Nakajima
Races: 9
Wins: 1
Manufacturers’ Championship: 3rd
Drivers’ Championship: 3rd (Conway, Sarrazin, Kobayashi)
TOYOTA GAZOO Racing kicked off the new season with a significantly-improved TS050 HYBRID, three of which would target victory at Le Mans. But they suffered technical trouble and other incidents, meaning the wait for a Le Mans win would go on. However, Kamui Kobayashi’s fastest-ever lap for pole position, 3:14.791, put the TS050 HYBRID in the record books. It proved the car’s significant potential, as did the three consecutive victories in the final three rounds of the season, making a total of five against Porsche’s four over the season.
Drivers: Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi, José María López, Anthony Davidson, Sébastien Buemi, Kazuki Nakajima, Stéphane Sarrazin, Yuji Kunimoto, Nicolas Lapierre
Races: 9
Wins: 5
Manufacturers’ Championship: 2nd
Drivers’ Championship: 2nd (Davidson, Buemi, Nakajima)
For the transitional Super Season, which spanned two calendar year, TOYOTA GAZOO Racing was the only competitor using hybrid, therefore a single LMP1 class was introduced, with revised regulations to reduce the lap time difference to non-hybrid cars. TOYOTA GAZOO Racing focused on reliability and endurance for its TS050 HYBRID, which went on to dominate the season. As a result of continuous improvement, Sébastien Buemi, Kazuki Nakajima and Fernando Alonso completed 388 laps to earn Toyota’s first Le Mans victory in its 20th appearance. A year later, the team defended its Le Mans 24 Hours title in the final round of the season. Toyota also secured the manufacturer's title with seven wins from eight races, while Sébastien, Kazuki and Fernando became World Champions following five wins in their #8 TS050 HYBRID.
Drivers: Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi, José María López, Sébastien Buemi, Kazuki Nakajima, Fernando Alonso
Races: 8
Wins: 7
Manufacturers’ Championship: 1st
Drivers’ Championship: 1st (Buemi, Nakajima, Alonso)
For the final season of LMP1 regulations, the outgoing TS050 HYBRID featured improved aerodynamics while performance of the high-power lithium battery was enhanced. In addition to the familiar Equivalence of Technology, a success handicap system was introduced to promote close competition. At Le Mans, car #8 took victory for the third successive year after the #7 lost time due to exhaust manifold issue, finishing third. But victory in the final race earned Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and José María López the World Championship while TOYOTA GAZOO Racing took the teams’ title after another dominant campaign.
Drivers: Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi, José María López, Sébastien Buemi, Kazuki Nakajima, Brendon Hartley
Races: 8
Wins: 6
Manufacturers’ Championship: 1st
Drivers’ Championship: 1st (Conway, Kobayashi, López)
The newly-developed GR010 HYBRID Hypercar made its debut. The four-wheel drive car delivered 680 horsepower by combining a 272hp motor generator unit on the front wheels and a 3.5-litre V6 twin turbo engine, although race-specific output would be controlled by a Balance of Performance. A dramatic Le Mans 24 Hours saw fuel system problems on both cars, but the team worked quickly to implement countermeasures and was rewarded with a one-two finish, achieving its fourth consecutive Le Mans win and a long-awaited first triumph for Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and José María López. They also retained the drivers’ title, as did TOYOTA GAZOO Racing, which became the first team to win all races in a WEC season.
Drivers: Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi, José María López, Sébastien Buemi, Kazuki Nakajima, Brendon Hartley
Races: 6
Wins: 6
Manufacturers’ Championship: 1st
Drivers’ Championship: 1st (Conway, Kobayashi, López)
With technical development tightly controlled by Hypercar regulations, development of the GR010 HYBRID was restricted to a change of wheel size, and associated bodywork modifications, while WEC introduced 100% biofuel for the first time. Competition within Hypercar was closer than ever, particularly with the mid-season arrival of Peugeot. A retirement for each car early in the season was a setback but a faultless Le Mans saw car #8, in which rookie Ryo Hirakawa joined Sébastien Buemi and Brendon Hartley, lead home another one-two for the team’s fifth successive win. The title contests went to the final race, with the #8 crew level with their counterparts from Alpine, which also had a chance of the manufacturers’ crown. A masterclass from TOYOTA GAZOO Racing in Bahrain secured both World Championships for the fourth consecutive time.
Drivers: Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi, José María López, Sébastien Buemi, Brendon Hartley, Ryo Hirakawa
Races: 6
Wins: 4
Manufacturers’ Championship: 1st
Drivers’ Championship: 1st (Buemi, Hartley, Hirakawa)
An updated GR010 HYBRID took on the challenge of Hypercar newcomers Cadillac, Ferrari, Porsche and Vanwall as part of the WEC’s biggest-yet grid in the top category. TOYOTA GAZOO Racing exploited its experience with the GR010 HYBRID, the Michelin tyres and the WEC circuits to dominate, winning six of the seven races. Le Mans proved pivotal for the title race. Second place for Sébastien Buemi, Brendon Hartley and Ryo Hirakawa, after the #7 car retired when it was hit by another car, gave them an advantage they held until the end of the season, despite four wins from Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and José María López. TOYOTA GAZOO Racing wrapped up the manufacturers’ crown with a race to spare, on home ground at Fuji Speedway.
Drivers: Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi, José María López, Sébastien Buemi, Brendon Hartley, Ryo Hirakawa
Races: 7
Wins: 6
Manufacturers’ Championship: 1st
Drivers’ Championship: 1st (Buemi, Hartley, Hirakawa)
An all-new matt black livery for 2024 represented TOYOTA GAZOO Racing’s commitment to making ever-better motorsports-bred cars and continuous evolution. Under the skin, the GR010 HYBRID was optimised for reliability via detailed modifications to various components, although the most visible change concerned the front headlights. which used a revised LED specification to reduce glare. The biggest Hypercar grid so far – featuring nine manufacturers – created a thrilling season. After a near-miss at Le Mans, when José María López replaced the injured Mike Conway, the title was decided in the closing minutes of the Bahrain finale after a spectacular comeback drive from the #8. A fuel pump issue forced the #7 into retirement in that race, ending the title chances of Kamui and Nyck.
Drivers: Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi, Nyck de Vries, José María López, Sébastien Buemi, Brendon Hartley, Ryo Hirakawa
Races: 8
Wins: 3
Manufacturers’ Championship: 1st
Drivers’ Championship: 3rd (Kobayashi, de Vries)
For 2025, the proven GR010 HYBRID package underwent no significant technical changes. The only visible update was the addition of new mandatory LED panels on the sidepod to indicate position and pit stop timing. With other Hypercar competitors updating their cars and gaining more experience in the category, the 2025 season proved to be a challenging one. Exceptional team performances earned valuable points despite difficult circumstances in Qatar, Imola and Spa-Francorchamps and this would prove important later in the season. A frustrating Le Mans started a run of extremely disappointing races in which the GR010 HYBRIDs were unable to compete. Heading into the season finale in Bahrain without a podium all season, the team turned around their fortunes. A stunning one-two victory also earned an unexpected second place in the manufacturers’ World Championship.
Drivers: Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi, Nyck de Vries, José María López, Sébastien Buemi, Brendon Hartley, Ryo Hirakawa
Races: 8
Wins: 1
Manufacturers’ Championship: 2nd
Drivers’ Championship: 6th (Conway, Kobayashi, de Vries)

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