IMSA

Capacity Grid Set Again for 64th Rolex 24 At Daytona

IMSA
9 Dec. 2025 • 21:21
by
EI
Full Field Set for Fifth Straight Year to Open 2026 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship Season.
© Courtesy of IMSA

For the fifth consecutive year, the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship will open its new season with a capacity grid set to run the Rolex 24 At Daytona. The full field of 61 cars set to contest the 64th running has been revealed with roughly six weeks to go until cars hit the track for the mandatory Roar Before the Rolex 24 test January 16-18, then Rolex 24 At Daytona race weekend January 22-25.

 

There are 11 Grand Touring Prototype (GTP), 14 Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2), 15 Grand Touring Daytona Pro (GTD PRO) and 21 Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) cars making up the 61 entries. A total of 12 of the 18 participating OEMs in IMSA are part of the Rolex 24 lineup (Acura, Aston Martin, BMW, Cadillac, Chevrolet, Ferrari, Ford, Lamborghini, Lexus, McLaren, Mercedes-AMG, Porsche).

 

Included as always are a mix of IMSA champions blended with open-wheel and NASCAR stars. The pursuit of a custom Rolex timepiece and the points to start the season off on the right foot remain the goal ahead of North America’s annual January endurance racing classic to kick off the global motorsports calendar. 

 

Grand Touring Prototype (11 Cars, 5 Manufacturers: Acura, Aston Martin, BMW, Cadillac, Porsche)

 

The GTP grid for the fourth year of the class sees all four of the LMDh specification manufacturers – all except Aston Martin – set to debut some degree of car and aerodynamic updates at the race. The drivers gracing the 11 cars in class have strong backgrounds and resumes across all forms of motorsport.

 

Fittingly, there are 11 full-season IMSA champions in the class (Laurens Vanthoor, Matt Campbell, Felipe Nasr, Laurin Heinrich, Earl Bamber, Ricky Taylor, Jordan Taylor, Colin Braun, Tom Blomqvist, Renger van der Zande and Roman De Angelis) with nine of them looking to add another full-season crown this year. Campbell and Heinrich are IMSA Michelin Endurance Cup extras for two-time IMSA and Rolex 24 defending winners Porsche Penske Motorsport in the Nos. 6 and 7 Porsche 963s, respectively.

 

Beyond the IMSA champions, GTP also includes marquee 24-hour race overall or class winners at either Daytona or Le Mans featuring Filipe Albuquerque (both); previous Daytona winners Rene Rast, Philipp Eng; and Le Mans winners Kevin Estre, Julien Andlauer, Louis Deletraz and Nick Yelloly.

 

The endurance extras for Daytona also feature prominently with six-time IndyCar champion Scott Dixon and four-time IndyCar champion Alex Palou split between the Nos. 60 and 93 Acura Meyer Shank Racing w/Curb Agajanian Acura ARX-06 entries, NASCAR star AJ Allmendinger in the No. 60 Acura, Formula 1 reserves Frederik Vesti (Mercedes-AMG) and Colton Herta (Cadillac) in the No. 31 Whelen and No. 40 Wayne Taylor Racing Cadillac V-Series.Rs, respectively, and past F1 driver Kevin Magnussen back with BMW in the No. 25 BMW M Team WRT BMW M Hybrid V8. Dixon, Allmendinger and Herta all have Rolex 24 overall or class wins on their résumés.

 

For nearly a decade, the Rolex 24 overall winner has been on a series of “streaks.” Cadillac won four straight from 2017 to 2020, with Acura winning the next three from 2021 to 2023, and Porsche winning the last two in 2024 and 2025. BMW last won the Rolex 24 overall as an engine provider in 2013, a Riley DP chassis with Chip Ganassi Racing, while Aston Martin has never won overall and most recently won in the GTD class with Heart of Racing Team in 2023.

 

Le Mans Prototype 2 (14 Cars, All ORECA LMP2 07)

 

LMP2 can be one of the toughest classes to predict at the Rolex 24 with four different team winners in the last four years. United Autosports USA enters as defending winners and is one of two teams in the class with two cars, the other being Inter Europol Competition. Daniel Goldburg, Paul Di Resta, Rasmus Lindh and newcomer Gregoire Saucy are set to race the No. 22 car while its refreshed No. 2 lineup includes two-time defending Michelin Endurance Cup LMP2 champs Mikkel Jensen and Hunter McElrea alongside Phil Fayer and Ben Hanley.

 

AO Racing is keen to add its first Rolex 24 for “Spike,” the LMP2 Dragon with an unchanged quartet of Dane Cameron, PJ Hyett, Jonny Edgar and Christian Rasmussen in the team’s No. 99 car. This entry nearly won in 2025 but for late-race mechanical woes; alas, they went on to win the LMP2 Pro/Am class at Le Mans, two straight IMSA races and the LMP2 title.

 

Strong lineups also feature from Tower Motorsports, CrowdStrike Racing by APR, TDS Racing, Inter Europol Competition and Af Corse USA, teams which have all won marquee IMSA endurance rounds but not yet won at Daytona. Era Motorsport has two Rolex 24 wins but a new lineup including ex-F1 driver Logan Sargeant set for his Rolex 24 debut. Pratt Miller Motorsports will look to translate its GT success into LMP2 form ahead of its second season, and features brothers Pietro and Enzo Fittipaldi – grandsons of F1 and IndyCar champion Emerson Fittipaldi – sharing its No. 73 car.

 

PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports has several Rolex 24 wins but goes for a new one this year partnered with Bryan Herta Autosport as the multi-time IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge Touring Car (TCR) champions with Hyundai stepping into prototype racing in 2026. Intersport Racing and Team Tonis complete the entries, both new-for-2026 WeatherTech Championship teams but both featuring a mix of past experience across other sports car series in previous years.

 

Grand Touring Daytona Pro (15 Cars, 9 Manufacturers: BMW, Chevrolet, Ferrari, Ford, Lamborghini, Lexus, McLaren, Mercedes-AMG, Porsche)

 

The first four years of GTD PRO at the Rolex 24 have also produced parity, with four different brands having taken the checkered flag. Porsche won the first go-around in 2022, with Mercedes-AMG winning in 2023, Ferrari in 2024 and Ford in 2025. Each of those four has a contender or two competing in 2026.

 

Porsche comes with AO’s “Rexy,” the green dinosaur now driven by Nick Tandy, Harry King and Alessio Picariello and a second striking livery in the “Grello” yellow and green Manthey entry. Defending winners Ford are back with its two Ford Multimatic Motorsports Mustang GT3s, albeit with revised driver lineups. Mercedes-AMG has three customer-run entries from Winward Racing, GetSpeed by Bartone Bros. Racing and 75 Express. Ferrari sees Risi Competizione back on its own after a year in a technical alliance with DragonSpeed, along with Triarsi Competizione stepping up to GTD PRO.

 

That leaves five other manufacturers looking for their first GTD PRO Rolex win.

 

Chevrolet won in GTD in 2025 but has not tasted top-class GT spoils at Daytona since 2021. Its two Corvette Racing by Pratt Miller Motorsports Corvette Z06 GT3.Rs are up for the task, including defending WeatherTech Championship GTD PRO champions Antonio Garcia and Alexander Sims joined by Marvin Kirchhoefer in the No. 3 Corvette Z06 GT3.R. Lamborghini, a three-time Daytona winner in GTD, is giving its venerable Huracán GT3 Evo2 one final GTD PRO run before the anticipated debut of its new Temerario GT3 at Sebring. Pfaff Motorsports won that 2022 race with Porsche in GTD PRO’s debut and now looks to give the Huracán one more big 24-hour race win.

 

Lexus’ RC F GT3 has won major enduros at Sebring, Watkins Glen and Michelin Raceway Road Atlanta but not at Daytona. BMW earned back-to-back GTLM victories in the Rolex 24 in 2019 and 2020, but is still looking for a win with its GT3 race car. Could partner team Paul Miller Racing deliver the BMW M4 GT3 EVO a win?

 

Lastly, a mashup of Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing and McLaren sees a new McLaren 720S GT3 EVO back in GTD PRO for the first time in three years. RLL knows how to find its way to victory lane at Daytona having gone back-to-back in GTLM in 2019 and 2020.

 

With primarily sports car stars in this category, the extras of note include two-time IndyCar champion Will Power set for his Rolex 24 debut with 75 Express and five-time IndyCar race winner Kyle Kirkwood in Vasser Sullivan’s Lexus.

 

Grand Touring Daytona (21 Cars, 9 Manufacturers: Aston Martin, BMW, Chevrolet, Ferrari, Ford, Lamborghini, Lexus, Mercedes-AMG, Porsche)

 

Since the merger of GRAND-AM and the American Le Mans Series created what we know now as the WeatherTech Championship in 2014, the Grand Touring Daytona (GTD) class has been the most voluminous of entries at the Rolex 24 with anywhere from 18 to 29 entries. That stays true once more in 2026 with another 20-plus car grid set to compete in this year’s race.

 

Similar to GTD PRO, there’s been recent parity among class winners the last four years. Porsche won in 2022, Aston Martin in 2023, Mercedes-AMG in 2024 and Chevrolet in 2025.

 

Defending class winners AWA will seek to defend under a rebranded name of 13 Autosport with three of the four drivers it won with last year: Orey Fidani, Matt Bell and Lars Kern with newcomer Ben Green in the No. 13 Corvette Z06 GT3.R. Winward Racing, the 2021 and 2024 winners, begin their pursuit of their third straight GTD title with Russell Ward and Philip Ellis anchoring the No. 57 Mercedes-AMG GT3 they share with Indy Dontje and Lucas Auer.

 

Beyond those four brands, entries from BMW, Ferrari, Ford, Lamborghini and Lexus ensure there’s also nine manufacturers in this class too as there are in GTD PRO. Ford’s new-look No. 16 Myers Riley Motorsports Ford Mustang GT3 includes ex-F1 and IndyCar driver Romain Grosjean among its drivers.

 

Among the 21 entries, no one manufacturer has more than four cars (Ferrari and Porsche have four apiece), so no one manufacturer’s deck is too stacked.

 

On-track action begins with the Roar test January 16-18, with the Rolex 24 track activity January 22-25.

Entry List is HERE

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