Toyota clinches Le Mans 24 Hours victory, reviving its endurance racing legacy
Toyota reclaimed the Le Mans 24 Hours crown on 15 June 2026, as the No 7 TR010 driven by Mike Conway, Kamui Kobayashi and Nyck de Vries crossed the finish line after 381 laps, beating the nearest BMW by 11 seconds.
Toyota's No 7 TR010 Takes the Checkered Flag at Le Mans
The British‑Japanese‑Dutch trio secured a historic win: it was the first Le Mans victory for de Vries, a second for Conway and Kobayashi, and marked Toyota's fifth consecutive triumph since 2018. Emotions ran high in the cockpit, with Kobayashi admitting he "needed a beer" after the race.
Attendance and Participation Figures Highlight Growing Popularity
- Total attendance: 350,105 spectators
- Estimated UK fans: 120,000
- Top three finishers separated by only seven seconds after 20 hours of racing
- GT3 class won by the TF Sport Corvette crew of Jonny Edgar, Nicky Catsburg and Ben Keating
Implications for Manufacturers and the Future of Endurance Racing
The win reinforces Toyota's dominance in the Hypercar era and underscores the reliability and performance of modern prototypes, where "the tortoise is no longer in this fight". The event’s corporate polish and surge in younger fans mirror trends seen in Formula One, suggesting endurance racing is successfully adapting to contemporary audience expectations.
Looking Ahead: Hypercar Grid Expands for 2027
Next season’s World Endurance Championship will feature nine rounds, including a return to Silverstone. New entrants such as McLaren (returning to the top class for the first time since 1998) and Ford (aiming for their first outright win since 1969) will join existing manufacturers like Aston Martin, BMW, Cadillac, Peugeot, Genesis and Toyota. The expanded grid promises heightened competition and further draws for a younger, global fanbase.