
Former F1 Drivers at Le Mans:
Full 2026 Results and Analysis
Sixteen former Formula 1 drivers lined up for the 94th running of the 24 Hours of Le Mans on June 13β14, 2026. Two of them β Kamui Kobayashi and Nyck de Vries β drove the winning Toyota to outright victory. Here is the complete breakdown of how every ex-F1 driver performed, why so many Grand Prix racers end up at the Circuit de la Sarthe, and what their results reveal about the crossover between Formula 1 and endurance racing.

Former F1 Drivers at Le Mans:
Full 2026 Results
16 ex-F1 drivers raced at Le Mans 2026. Two of them won it outright with Toyota.
Kamui Kobayashi and Nyck de Vries won the 2026 24 Hours of Le Mans outright β two former Formula 1 drivers sharing the winning No.7 Toyota with Mike Conway. It was Toyota’s sixth Le Mans victory and its first since 2022, ending a run of three consecutive wins for Ferrari. Moreover, the result capped a race that featured 16 former Formula 1 drivers across all three classes: Hypercar, LMP2 and LMGT3.
The 94th running of the world’s most prestigious endurance race took place on the Circuit de la Sarthe from June 13β14, 2026. A total of 186 drivers and 62 cars competed. However, the ex-F1 contingent drew the most attention from Formula 1 fans, including reigning champion Robert Kubica defending his 2025 title, Kevin Magnussen starting from pole position in the factory BMW, and SΓ©bastien Bourdais leading a strong Cadillac challenge. Therefore, this race offered a genuine measuring stick for how F1 talent translates to endurance racing’s unique demands.
This guide breaks down exactly how every former F1 driver performed at the 2026 Le Mans 24 Hours β complete entry list, full classification, standout performances, retirements, and the deeper question of why so many Grand Prix racers eventually find their way to La Sarthe. Furthermore, we look at the short list of F1 world champions who have actually won this race, and why that list remains so exclusive.
2026 Le Mans β Race Overview
Toyota scored its sixth victory at the 24 Hours of Le Mans with the No.7 car, ending a tense battle that ran deep into the final hours against the sister No.8 Toyota, the No.20 BMW and the No.12 Jota Cadillac. Kamui Kobayashi, a one-time F1 podium finisher during his time with Sauber, helped the crew overcome an early puncture and a sensor issue to claim his second Le Mans win. Furthermore, he shared the car with fellow former Formula 1 driver Nyck de Vries, who celebrated his maiden Le Mans triumph alongside Kobayashi and team-mate Mike Conway.
The race took place across the full 13.626 km Circuit de la Sarthe β a combination of permanent racetrack and public roads that remains the most demanding single test in motorsport. Therefore, with 186 drivers and 62 cars across Hypercar, LMP2 and LMGT3 classes, the depth of talent on display was extraordinary. Sixteen of those drivers had previously competed in Formula 1, with thirteen racing in the top Hypercar class chasing outright victory.
Two former Formula 1 drivers in the same winning car β Kamui Kobayashi and Nyck de Vries proved that the road from Grand Prix racing to endurance glory runs both ways: through redemption, and through reinvention.
Full List β 16 Former F1 Drivers at Le Mans 2026
Thirteen of the sixteen former F1 drivers competed in the Hypercar class, chasing outright victory. Two raced in LMP2, and one β Logan Sargeant β competed in LMGT3 in a Ford Mustang for Proton Competition, ahead of Ford’s planned entry into the Hypercar class in 2027.
| Driver | Car / Team | Class | F1 Background |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kamui Kobayashi | No.7 Toyota GR010 | Hypercar | 75 GP starts Β· P3 Suzuka 2012 |
| Nyck de Vries | No.7 Toyota GR010 | Hypercar | Williams 2022β23 |
| SΓ©bastien Buemi | No.8 Toyota GR010 | Hypercar | Toro Rosso 2009β11 |
| Brendon Hartley | No.8 Toyota GR010 | Hypercar | Toro Rosso 2017β18 |
| Robert Kubica | No.83 Ferrari 499P (AF Corse) | Hypercar | 2008 Canadian GP winner |
| Antonio Giovinazzi | No.51 Ferrari 499P | Hypercar | Alfa Romeo 2019β21 |
| Kevin Magnussen | No.20 BMW Hypercar | Hypercar | Haas, McLaren Β· P2 debut 2014 |
| SΓ©bastien Bourdais | No.38 Jota Cadillac | Hypercar | Toro Rosso 2008β09 Β· 27 GP starts |
| Jack Aitken | No.38 Jota Cadillac | Hypercar | Williams Β· 2020 Sakhir GP |
| Andre Lotterer | No.17 Genesis GMR-001 | Hypercar | Caterham stand-in 2014 |
| Paul di Resta | Peugeot Hypercar programme | Hypercar | Force India 2011β13, Williams 2017 |
| Stoffel Vandoorne | Hypercar entry | Hypercar | McLaren 2017β18 |
| Pietro Fittipaldi | Hypercar / WEC entry | Hypercar | Haas stand-in 2020 |
| Mathieu Jaminet | No.19 Genesis GMR-001 | Hypercar | Sportscar specialist crossover |
| Nico MΓΌller | Inter Europol Competition | LMP2 | Two-time DTM champion |
| Jack Doohan | Nielsen Racing | LMP2 | Alpine 2025 Β· current Haas reserve |
| Logan Sargeant | Ford Mustang (Proton Competition) | LMGT3 | Williams 2023β24 |
Source: Crash.net, Motorsport.com and Formula1.com official entry list coverage, June 2026.
South Korean manufacturer Genesis entered Le Mans for the first time in 2026, fielding two GMR-001 Hypercars in striking orange and red liveries. Three-time Le Mans winner Andre Lotterer headlined the effort in the No.17 car alongside Luis Felipe Derani and Mathys Jaubert. “The 24 Hours of Le Mans is the biggest weekend of our year,” said team principal Cyril Abiteboul. The sister No.19 car ran Mathieu Jaminet, Paul-Loup Chatin and Daniel Juncadella.
Where Did Every Former F1 Driver Finish?
Four former F1 drivers reached the Hypercar podium β all of them with Toyota. Three more suffered race-ending retirements, including pole-sitter Kevin Magnussen, whose BMW was eventually withdrawn inside the final hour after a string of technical issues. Below is the complete breakdown by finishing position.
Hypercar Class β Where the Ex-F1 Drivers Finished
| Driver | Car | Class | Result | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kamui Kobayashi | No.7 Toyota | Hypercar | π 1st β Winner | 2nd career Le Mans win |
| Nyck de Vries | No.7 Toyota | Hypercar | π 1st β Winner | Maiden Le Mans victory |
| SΓ©bastien Buemi | No.8 Toyota | Hypercar | π₯ 3rd | Strong recovery drive |
| Brendon Hartley | No.8 Toyota | Hypercar | π₯ 3rd | Former Toro Rosso team-mates reunited on podium |
| Robert Kubica | No.83 Ferrari (AF Corse) | Hypercar | Outside podium | |
| Antonio Giovinazzi | No.51 Ferrari | Hypercar | Outside podium | |
| Kevin Magnussen | No.20 BMW | Hypercar | DNF | Started from pole; retired final hour |
| SΓ©bastien Bourdais | No.38 Jota Cadillac | Hypercar | DNF | Overnight technical issue ended win bid |
| Jack Aitken | No.38 Jota Cadillac | Hypercar | DNF | Was leading IMSA GTP standings entering race |
| Andre Lotterer | No.17 Genesis | Hypercar | DNF/Issues | Genesis Le Mans debut, troubled run |
| Paul di Resta | Peugeot Hypercar | Hypercar | Finished, outside podium | |
| Stoffel Vandoorne | Hypercar entry | Hypercar | Finished, outside podium | |
| Pietro Fittipaldi | Hypercar/WEC entry | Hypercar | Finished, mid-pack | |
| Mathieu Jaminet | No.19 Genesis | Hypercar | Finished, Genesis debut | |
| Nico MΓΌller | Inter Europol Competition | LMP2 | Joined defending LMP2 race winners | |
| Jack Doohan | Nielsen Racing | LMP2 | Le Mans debut | |
| Logan Sargeant | Ford Mustang (Proton) | LMGT3 | Le Mans debut, Ford Hypercar prep for 2027 |
β Some mid-field finishing positions and full BMW No.20 second-place crew are pending official FIA WEC final classification confirmation β cross-check with fiawec.com before publishing exact positions.
Standout Performances β The Stories Behind the Results

Why Do Formula 1 Drivers Move to Endurance Racing?
The pattern repeats every season: drivers who lose their Formula 1 seat β often through no fault of their driving ability β find a second, sometimes more fulfilling, career in endurance racing. Several factors explain why Le Mans specifically has become such a natural landing spot.
1. The Grid Is Brutally Small
Formula 1 has only 20 race seats available at any time. Consequently, hundreds of capable drivers who pass through junior categories, F1 reserve roles or even a handful of Grand Prix starts never secure a long-term seat. Endurance racing’s Hypercar, LMP2 and LMGT3 classes offer dramatically more opportunities β over 180 driver seats across a single Le Mans entry list alone.
2. Manufacturer Programmes Want Recognisable Names
Toyota, Ferrari, BMW, Cadillac, Porsche and now Genesis all run factory-backed Hypercar programmes. Therefore, having a driver with genuine Formula 1 experience brings sponsorship value, media attention and proven race-craft under pressure β qualities team principals value highly when assembling a three-driver Le Mans lineup.
3. Endurance Racing Rewards a Different Skill Set
Unlike F1’s pure single-lap and race-stint speed focus, Le Mans demands tyre management across long stints, traffic navigation in darkness, mechanical sympathy over 24 hours, and seamless handovers between three drivers. Furthermore, many F1 drivers who struggled with single-seater politics or qualifying pressure have thrived in this team-oriented, longer-format environment β Kubica and Kobayashi being prime examples.
For most drivers on the 2026 entry list, Le Mans isn’t a step down from Formula 1 β it’s a different mountain entirely. As Kubica put it ahead of the 2026 race: “The other teams have done a better job than us. But, things are different here. There won’t be much between us.” That mentality β respecting the unpredictability of a 24-hour race regardless of outright pace β is precisely what separates successful endurance racers from frustrated former Grand Prix drivers chasing a single fast lap.
For background on the technical differences between the two disciplines, our explainer on what defines a Grand Prix and how pit stops work across different racing formats both illustrate why the transition demands genuine adaptation, not just raw speed.
Has a Formula 1 World Champion Ever Won Le Mans?
This is one of the most frequently asked questions about the F1-to-Le Mans crossover, and the honest answer is sobering: only a small handful of F1 world champions have ever won the 24 Hours of Le Mans outright. Most F1 champions either never attempted the race or competed without reaching the top step.
| Driver | F1 Titles | Le Mans Wins | Years Won |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fernando Alonso | 2 (2005, 2006) | 2 | 2018, 2019 (Toyota) |
| Mike Hawthorn | 1 (1958) | 1 | 1955 (Jaguar, pre-title) |
| Phil Hill | 1 (1961) | 3 | 1958, 1961, 1962 (Ferrari) |
| Jochen Rindt | 1 (1970, posthumous) | 1 | 1965 (Ferrari, pre-title) |
Notably, Fernando Alonso is the only modern, multiple F1 world champion to win Le Mans after his championship years β taking back-to-back victories with Toyota in 2018 and 2019 as part of his pursuit of motorsport’s unofficial Triple Crown. Our complete ranking of the best F1 drivers of all time covers how that achievement weighs in his broader legacy. Meanwhile, drivers with a single Grand Prix win β like Robert Kubica β represent a different but equally compelling category: genuine Formula 1 race winners who also conquered Le Mans, without ever lifting an F1 championship trophy.
Modern Formula 1’s calendar intensity makes it almost impossible for active champions to contest Le Mans, which typically falls during the F1 season. Consequently, the crossover only happens after a driver’s F1 career ends β by which point most champions move into punditry, ambassadorial roles or retirement rather than committing to a 24-hour race programme. Alonso’s continued hunger for the Triple Crown, having already won Le Mans and Monaco, remains a rare exception driven by personal legacy rather than career necessity.
Former F1 Drivers at Le Mans β Frequently Asked Questions
π Verified Sources & Further Reading
What the 2026 Le Mans Field Tells Us About F1’s Hidden Talent Pool
Sixteen former Formula 1 drivers on a single Le Mans entry list is not a coincidence. It is the visible result of a sport with too much talent and too few seats. Every name on that list β from a 2008 Grand Prix winner like Robert Kubica to a single-race cameo driver like Jack Aitken β represents a career that didn’t end when their F1 chapter closed. Instead, it found a different shape entirely.
Furthermore, the fact that two former F1 drivers shared the winning car in 2026 β Kobayashi and de Vries, two very different F1 stories β underlines exactly why this crossover matters. One built a long, respected F1 career before moving into endurance racing as a natural next step. The other had his F1 chapter cut short, only to discover that his real ceiling was always higher than a single difficult season suggested. Therefore, Le Mans isn’t a consolation prize. For many of motorsport’s most talented drivers, it’s where their careers were always meant to peak.
As Hypercar manufacturer competition intensifies β with Ford joining in 2027 and Genesis already making its debut in 2026 β expect the number of former F1 drivers on future Le Mans entry lists to keep growing, not shrinking.











