Callum Ilott
Callum Benjamin Ilott (born 11 November 1998) is a British professional racing driver who competes in the NTT IndyCar Series, driving the No. 90 Dallara-Chevrolet for Prema Racing.[1] Born in Cambridge, England, Ilott began his motorsport career in karting at the age of seven in 2005, quickly rising to prominence with multiple championships, including the 2012 WSK Masters Series and WSK Final Cup in the KF-Junior category, as well as the 2014 CIK-FIA European Championship and WSK Super Master Series in the KF category.[2] Ilott transitioned to single-seater racing in 2015 as part of the Red Bull Junior Team, competing in the FIA Formula 3 European Championship where he finished 12th in his debut season.[2] He improved steadily, achieving sixth place overall in 2016 with several podiums, and fourth in 2017 with six wins, 11 podiums, and a victory in the qualification race at the prestigious Macau Grand Prix.[2] In 2018, Ilott raced in the GP3 Series with ART Grand Prix, securing third in the championship with two wins and seven consecutive podiums, while also finishing eighth in the Macau Grand Prix main race.[2][3] Progressing to the FIA Formula 2 Championship in 2019 as a rookie with UNI-Virtuosi Racing, he ended the season second overall with two podiums; he repeated as vice-champion in 2020, clinching three race wins, six podiums, and five pole positions.[2] As a member of the Ferrari Driver Academy from 2018 to 2021, Ilott served as Scuderia Ferrari's Formula One test driver in 2021, participating in free practice sessions at the Portuguese and Austrian Grands Prix, and as reserve driver for Alfa Romeo Racing.[1] He conducted multiple F1 tests, including with Haas in 2020 and Alfa Romeo in 2019 and 2020.[2] Transitioning to the NTT IndyCar Series, Ilott made his debut in 2021 with Juncos Hollinger Racing, and after part-time stints in 2022 and 2023—where he achieved two fifth-place finishes, 12th at the Indianapolis 500, and led laps on road courses—he returned full-time in 2025 with Prema Racing, finishing 21st in the drivers' standings with 218 points across 17 starts, including four top-10 finishes and five laps led.[1] Beyond open-wheel racing, Ilott has ventured into endurance events, earning a third-place finish in the GTE Am class at the 2021 24 Hours of Le Mans with Iron Lynx's Ferrari 488 GTE Evo,[4] and securing overall victory in the Hypercar class at the 2024 Six Hours of Spa-Francorchamps with Team JOTA's Porsche 963.[5]Early life
Family and background
Callum Ilott was born on 11 November 1998 in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England.[1] He was raised in the Hadhams area of Hertfordshire, with no prior connections to professional motorsport.[6] Ilott attended Heath Mount School, Bishop's Stortford College, and Haileybury, all in Hertfordshire.[6][7] Ilott is the son of a motorsport enthusiast father who worked in the investments industry and played a key role in introducing him to racing.[8] His father first took him to the Rye House Kart Circuit at age seven after spotting the track during his daily train commute to London, providing early exposure to local karting events that ignited Ilott's interest in the sport.[9] His family had no prior ties to professional racing.[8]Introduction to motorsport
Callum Ilott, born in Cambridge, England, on 11 November 1998, was introduced to motorsport at a young age through his family's encouragement. Just before his seventh birthday in 2005, his father took him to Rye House Kart Raceway, a local track near their home, for his first drive in a rental kart during what was intended as a fun outing.[2][9] Ilott was instantly captivated by the experience, prompting his father to purchase a kart for him shortly thereafter, marking the beginning of his personal involvement in the sport.[9][7] Ilott's early development took place at local UK tracks, primarily Rye House, where he honed his skills through regular practice sessions that became a cherished weekend activity shared with his father.[10][9] This hands-on training was supplemented by family outings to British motorsport events, including his first live Formula 1 race at Silverstone in 2008, which further immersed him in the racing atmosphere and strengthened his growing passion.[11] Inspired by watching Formula 1 races on television with his father and observing local karting action at tracks like Rye House—the same venue where Lewis Hamilton began his career—Ilott decided to pursue racing seriously by the age of eight.[12][10] At that point, he obtained his racing licence, committing to the discipline that would define his path forward.[2]Open-wheel racing career
Karting
Callum Ilott began his competitive karting career in 2008 at the age of nine, entering UK novice classes after his father introduced him to the sport by taking him to a racetrack just before his seventh birthday.[13][14] By 2011, Ilott secured his first major victory, winning the Formula Kart Stars British Championship in the under-16s category at age 12, which highlighted his early talent in domestic competition.[2][13] In 2012, competing at age 13 in the KF-Junior category, Ilott elevated his profile internationally by winning the WSK Master Series and WSK Final Cup, while finishing as runner-up in the WSK Euro Series and the CIK-FIA World Cup; he also placed third in the German National Karting Championship and was named the youngest-ever WSK Driver of the Year.[2] Ilott's 2013 season saw him transition to the senior KF category, where he delivered strong performances in European championships, including a 15th-place finish in the CIK-FIA European Championship and a win in the WSK Final Cup.[15][16] His karting career peaked in 2014 at age 15, when he claimed the CIK-FIA European Championship in the KF category across four rounds, becoming the senior European champion; he also won the WSK Super Master Series, finished third in the WSK Champions Cup, and recovered from 32nd to fourth in the CIK-FIA World Championship.[2][17][18] These achievements traced Ilott's swift progression from British novice events to dominant results in premier international karting series, establishing him as one of the sport's top young prospects.[13]Toyota Racing Series
Callum Ilott made his single-seater racing debut in the 2015 Toyota Racing Series, New Zealand's premier open-wheel winter championship designed to prepare young drivers for the European season. Supported by the Red Bull Junior Team, the 16-year-old Briton competed for ETEC Motorsport in the 15-race series, marking his transition from a successful karting career where he had won the 2014 CIK-FIA European KF Junior Championship.[19] Ilott faced significant adaptation challenges moving from karts to the Tatuus FT-50 chassis powered by a Toyota engine, including mechanical issues and crashes that led to several retirements and retirements early in the season. Despite these setbacks, he demonstrated raw pace, setting the fastest lap at the Taupo round and achieving his best results with two fourth-place finishes—at Highlands and Taupo—while also topping multiple pre-season test sessions, including breaking the lap record during testing at Taupo.[20][21][16] Finishing 16th in the championship with 358 points, Ilott's performances in the competitive series—won by Lance Stroll—highlighted his potential and paved the way for his rookie FIA Formula 3 European Championship campaign later that year.[22][2]FIA Formula 3 European Championship
Callum Ilott began his single-seater career in the FIA Formula 3 European Championship in 2015 as a 16-year-old rookie with Carlin, transitioning directly from karting to the series using the Dallara F312 chassis powered by Volkswagen engines. Despite the steep learning curve, he adapted quickly, securing his maiden podium with a third-place finish in the opening race at the Nürburgring. Ilott concluded the season 12th in the drivers' standings with 65.5 points from 33 races, earning multiple rookie awards and demonstrating consistent pace against more experienced competitors.[23][24] In 2016, Ilott switched to Van Amersfoort Racing and fielded the Mercedes-powered Dallara F316, marking a significant step forward in his development. He claimed his first series victory in the second race at Paul Ricard, capitalizing on variable conditions from a sixth-place start, and added a second win in the opening race at the Red Bull Ring, leading from pole before a late red flag. These results contributed to seven podiums overall, including strong performances at Hockenheim and Norisring, as Ilott finished sixth in the championship with 226 points from 30 races, just behind several title contenders.[25][26][27] Ilott's progression peaked in 2017 with Prema Powerteam, driving the updated Mercedes-engined Dallara F317 and emerging as a frontrunner in a highly competitive field. He secured six race victories, starting with a dominant performance in the third race at Silverstone, followed by wins at Pau (race 2), Zolder (race 3), Hungaroring (race 2), Zandvoort (race 1), and Monza (race 2), often showcasing superior qualifying form with nine pole positions. These efforts, combined with 11 podiums, propelled him to fourth in the standings with 344 points from 30 races, trailing only the top three in a season dominated by Lando Norris. Late in the year, following his strong results, Ilott joined the Ferrari Driver Academy in October.[28][29][30][31] Over his three seasons in the championship, spanning 93 races, Ilott amassed eight wins and 19 podiums, establishing himself as one of the series' rising talents through consistent improvement and versatility across diverse circuits and conditions.[16]GP3 Series
In 2018, Callum Ilott competed in his sole season in the GP3 Series with the dominant ART Grand Prix team, marking his step up from the FIA Formula 3 European Championship.[32] His prior experience with Prema Powerteam in F3 helped him adapt quickly to ART's setup and the GP3 Dallara GP3/16 chassis.[33] Ilott made a strong debut at the Barcelona round, finishing third in the feature race behind teammate Nikita Mazepin and Anthoine Hubert, while recovering to sixth in the safety car-affected sprint race from the back of the grid.[34] Ilott's campaign featured consistent podium contention, with seven podium finishes across the eight-round season. He secured his maiden GP3 victory in the sprint race at Paul Ricard, starting from reverse-grid pole and pulling away to win by over three seconds ahead of Trident's Pedro Piquet. Later at the Red Bull Ring, Ilott took pole position and dominated the feature race to claim his second win, briefly leading the championship standings. Additional podiums came at Monaco (third in sprint), Silverstone (second in feature), Spa-Francorchamps (third in feature), and Abu Dhabi (second in sprint).[35][36][37] Despite the strong results, Ilott encountered challenges later in the season, including a dip in form that prevented him from mounting a title challenge against ART teammates Hubert and Mazepin. He concluded the year third in the drivers' standings with 167 points, behind champion Anthoine Hubert (214 points) and runner-up Nikita Mazepin (198 points), contributing to ART's teams' title victory. His performances earned him a full-time spot in the Ferrari Driver Academy, which he had joined midway through the prior year.[37][16][38]FIA Formula 2 Championship
Ilott made his debut in the FIA Formula 2 Championship in July 2017, competing in the Silverstone round for Trident Racing, where he finished 12th in the feature race and retired from the sprint race.[10] Following a strong third-place finish in the 2018 GP3 Series, Ilott stepped up to a full-time role in Formula 2 for 2019 with the Sauber Junior Team by Charouz, as part of the Ferrari Driver Academy.[39] In his rookie season, he secured two podium finishes—third in the Barcelona sprint race and third in the Sochi sprint race—along with one pole position in qualifying at Silverstone, accumulating 74 points to finish 11th in the drivers' standings.[40][41] For 2020, Ilott switched to UNI-Virtuosi Racing, continuing his Ferrari affiliation, and mounted a strong title challenge. He claimed three victories: the feature race at the Red Bull Ring, the feature race at Silverstone, and the sprint race at Monza.[42][43] Ilott added three further podiums—at Spa-Francorchamps (second in the feature race), the Red Bull Ring sprint race (third), and Bahrain (second in the feature race)—along with five pole positions, totaling 201 points and securing runner-up honors in the championship, just 14 points behind Prema Racing's Mick Schumacher after a intense battle that lasted until the final round.[44][45] Over his two full seasons in Formula 2 (2019–2020), Ilott recorded 3 wins and 8 podiums across 45 starts, demonstrating consistent pace and contributing to UNI-Virtuosi's second-place finish in the 2020 teams' championship.[41]Formula One
Following his runner-up finish in the 2020 FIA Formula 2 Championship, Callum Ilott was appointed as Scuderia Ferrari's official test driver for the 2021 Formula One season, a role that included extensive simulator work to support car development and setup optimization.[45] As part of the Ferrari Driver Academy, Ilott also served as a reserve driver for the customer team Alfa Romeo Racing ORLEN, sharing duties with Robert Kubica.[46] In this capacity, he participated in two Free Practice 1 (FP1) sessions during the 2021 season: at the Styrian Grand Prix, where he completed 25 laps and finished 16th, providing valuable feedback on the C41 car's handling at the Red Bull Ring; and at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, contributing to pre-race preparations amid the season finale's high stakes.[47][48] Ilott's involvement extended into young driver development programs, where he helped evaluate emerging talent and refine team procedures through his testing duties.[49] For 2022 and 2023, he continued as an official reserve driver for Alfa Romeo (rebranded as Stake F1 Team Kick Sauber in 2024), focusing on simulator sessions and occasional on-track activities such as tire testing at Barcelona in 2022, though he had no full race starts or additional FP1 outings.[2] His contributions emphasized car setup refinements and support for the team's transition to new regulations, drawing on his prior open-wheel experience.[50] In 2023, Ilott was released from the Ferrari Driver Academy after a "gap year" arrangement in 2022 to pursue IndyCar opportunities, ending his direct ties to the Formula One ecosystem.[51]IndyCar Series
Ilott made his NTT IndyCar Series debut in 2021 with Juncos Hollinger Racing, competing in the final three races of the season after signing with the team in September.[52] He qualified 10th at the Grand Prix of Portland but retired due to mechanical failure after 77 laps (25th), followed by a 22nd-place finish at Laguna Seca after an extra pit stop for an issue, and 18th at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway, earning 18 points with no top-10 finishes.[53][54] His experience as a Formula 1 reserve driver for Alfa Romeo aided his quick adaptation to the demands of IndyCar racing.[55] In 2022, Ilott returned to Juncos Hollinger Racing for a near full-season campaign in the No. 77 Chevrolet, making 16 starts and finishing 20th in the championship with 219 points.[56] He secured two top-10 finishes, demonstrating improved consistency on road and street courses despite challenges on ovals and leading five laps total.[14] The following year, 2023, saw Ilott run the full 17-race schedule with the team, notching three top-10 results including two top-five finishes (fifth at St. Petersburg and another), ending 16th in points with 266 points before parting ways with Juncos Hollinger in October.[57][58] Ilott's 2024 schedule was limited to three appearances with Arrow McLaren in the No. 6 Chevrolet, filling in for the injured David Malukas.[59] He started the season with a fifth-place finish at the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg after starting 22nd. At The Thermal Club $1 Million Challenge non-points exhibition, he placed 18th, while at the Indianapolis 500 he finished 11th after starting 15th, marking his best performance in the event and earning 39 points across the two points races.[14][60] For 2025, Ilott joined PREMA Racing for its IndyCar debut, driving the No. 90 Chevrolet across all 17 races.[61] The season brought steady progress for the new team, with Ilott achieving four top-10 finishes including sixth-place results at Laguna Seca and Portland. He concluded the year 21st in the standings with 218 points.[62][63][64] Throughout his IndyCar career spanning 2021 to 2025, Ilott has completed 55 starts without a win or podium, recording three top-five finishes and 10 top-10s for a total of 760 points and 19 laps led.[65] His strongest Indianapolis 500 showing remains 11th in 2024 (from four starts), underscoring his potential in single-seater racing despite team transitions and mechanical setbacks.[60]Sports car racing career
2021 season
In 2021, Callum Ilott made his debut in sports car racing with the Italian team Iron Lynx, competing in the GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup in a Ferrari 488 GT3 entered as the No. 71 car in the Pro class alongside teammates Antonio Fuoco and Davide Rigon.[66] The season marked Ilott's introduction to GT3 machinery, where he adapted to the demands of endurance racing, including longer stints and traffic management in mixed-class fields. Ilott participated in the opening rounds at Monza and Paul Ricard, achieving fourth-place finishes in the Pro class at both events despite challenging conditions such as variable weather at Monza.[67] Later rounds at Spa-Francorchamps and the Nürburgring saw retirements due to incidents, while a conservative strategy at Barcelona contributed to a lower finish, ultimately placing the No. 71 11th in the Pro drivers' standings.[4] Ilott's GT program extended to the 24 Hours of Le Mans in August, where he joined Iron Lynx's No. 80 Ferrari 488 GTE Evo in the GTE Am class with Italian drivers Matteo Cressoni and Rino Mastronardi.[68] The trio delivered a strong performance, completing 338 laps to secure third place in class and 27th overall, earning Ilott a podium on his endurance racing debut amid a race affected by rain and safety car periods. This result highlighted Ilott's quick adaptation to the GTE specification, which featured a more powerful engine and different handling characteristics compared to the GT3 car he had been racing earlier in the year. Ilott also contested two rounds of the Intercontinental GT Challenge, starting with a retirement at the season-opening 24 Hours of Spa in the No. 71 Ferrari 488 GT3 due to an early accident. He returned for the Indianapolis 8 Hour in October with AF Corse's No. 71 entry, partnering Fuoco and Alessio Rovera, but the car suffered a late-race crash while running competitively, resulting in a DNF after leading briefly in the final stages.[69] Ilott did not participate in the season finale at Kyalami, which was postponed to February 2022, as the lineup shifted to include Miguel Molina.[70] Throughout the year, Ilott balanced his GT commitments with a demanding rookie season in the IndyCar Series, where he competed for Juncos Racing and later Juncos Hollinger Racing, while also serving as Scuderia Ferrari's Formula 1 test and reserve driver. This dual program required meticulous scheduling, with GT events often overlapping potential F1 testing opportunities, testing Ilott's endurance and logistical skills across continents.[71]2024 season
In 2024, Callum Ilott made his prototype racing debut in the FIA World Endurance Championship's Hypercar class, competing full-time for Hertz Team JOTA in a Porsche 963 LMDh alongside primary teammate Will Stevens and varying co-drivers including Norman Nato and Robert Shwartzman.[72][73] The season marked JOTA's entry into the top prototype category as a privateer team, building on Ilott's prior GT experience from 2021. Ilott balanced the eight-round WEC calendar with a partial IndyCar schedule, prioritizing endurance events while managing travel demands.[74] The campaign began strongly at the Qatar 1812 km, where Ilott, Stevens, and Nato secured a second-place finish for the #12 Porsche, earning Ilott his first Hypercar podium on debut.[75] A 14th-place result at the 6 Hours of Imola yielded no points due to traffic and strategy challenges.[76] The highlight came at the 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps, where Ilott and Stevens, running as a duo, claimed an overall victory in a rain-shortened, crash-interrupted race—the first Hypercar win for a customer team and JOTA's maiden outright WEC success.[77] Challenges followed at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, where the #12, driven by Ilott, Stevens, and Shwartzman, suffered an engine failure in the 18th hour after a strong recovery from Ilott's practice crash and a full chassis rebuild, resulting in a did-not-finish.[78] The team rebounded with a seventh-place finish at the 6 Hours of São Paulo, aided by Ilott's pace in free practice.[79] A retirement at the 6 Hours of Circuit of the Americas limited points, but Ilott, Stevens, and Nato delivered a fifth-place result at the 6 Hours of Fuji—sufficient to clinch the inaugural Hypercar World Cup for privateer teams.[80] The season concluded at the 8 Hours of Bahrain with a lower finish after a late puncture dropped the #12 from contention.[81] Ilott ended the year seventh in the Hypercar drivers' standings with 70 points, contributing to JOTA's privateer title success while gaining valuable prototype experience ahead of his return to single-seaters.[82]Racing record
Karting record
Ilott began karting at the age of seven in 2005, making his competitive debut in the UK national series in 2008 and quickly progressing through the junior categories. By 2011, he had secured his first major national title in the Formula Kart Stars British Championship in the KF3 class, marking his breakthrough on the domestic scene.[2] His international profile grew in 2012, where, at age 13, he dominated the under-15 KF3 category by winning the WSK Master Series, showcasing consistent speed across multiple rounds in Italy. That year, he also claimed victory in the prestigious 41° Trofeo delle Industrie in KF3, further establishing his reputation in European karting.[83][16] In 2013, Ilott continued his ascent with a win in the 42° Trofeo delle Industrie in the KF2 class and the WSK Final Cup in KF, demonstrating adaptability as he transitioned toward senior competition. His performances earned him recognition as one of the top junior talents, culminating in a strong showing in international events.[16] Ilott's karting career peaked in 2014 at age 15, when he won the CIK-FIA European Championship in the KF class, becoming the youngest senior European champion at the time, along with the WSK Super Master Series in KF. He also finished third in the WSK Champions Cup, rounding out a dominant final season before moving to single-seaters.[17][16]Major Karting Titles
| Year | Series | Class | Position | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2011 | Formula Kart Stars British Championship | KF3 | 1st | [2] |
| 2012 | WSK Master Series | KF3 | 1st | [83] |
| 2012 | Trofeo delle Industrie | KF3 | 1st | [16] |
| 2013 | Trofeo delle Industrie | KF2 | 1st | [16] |
| 2013 | WSK Final Cup | KF | 1st | [16] |
| 2014 | CIK-FIA European Championship | KF | 1st | [17] |
| 2014 | WSK Super Master Series | KF | 1st | [16] |
Open-wheel racing summary
Callum Ilott's open-wheel racing career spans multiple junior formulae and the premier IndyCar Series, where he has demonstrated consistent competitiveness without securing a series victory. Following a strong foundation in karting, Ilott progressed through single-seater categories, achieving notable success in European junior series before transitioning to American open-wheel racing in 2021. His career highlights include runner-up finishes in the 2020 FIA Formula 2 Championship and multiple podiums across various levels.[10][1]Career Statistics Summary
| Series | Years Active | Starts | Wins | Podiums | Poles | Best Championship Finish |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toyota Racing Series (TRS) | 2015 | 16 | 3 | 7 | 2 | 3rd (2015) |
| FIA Formula 3 European Championship | 2015–2017 | 90 | 8 | 20 | 12 | 4th (2017) |
| GP3 Series | 2018 | 18 | 2 | 7 | 1 | 3rd (2018) |
| FIA Formula 2 Championship | 2019–2020 | 46 | 3 | 8 | 5 | 2nd (2020) |
| Formula One (FP1 only) | 2020–2021 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A |
| IndyCar Series | 2021–2025 | 55 | 0 | 6 | 0 | 16th (2023) |
Toyota Racing Series Results (2015)
| Round | Circuit | Race 1 Finish | Race 2 Finish | Race 3 Finish | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Taupo International | 12th | 8th | 5th | |
| 2 | Mike Pero Motorsport | 15th | Ret | 10th | |
| 3 | Teretonga Park | 6th | 3rd | 1st | First win |
| 4 | Timaru International | 4th | 1st | 2nd | Back-to-back wins |
| 5 | Manfeild | 7th | 5th | Ret | |
| 6 | Hampton Downs | 9th | 6th | 1st | Third win |
FIA Formula 3 European Championship Results
Ilott competed from 2015 to 2017, accumulating 8 wins across teams Carlin (2015), Van Amersfoort Racing (2016), and Prema Powerteam (2017). Key results include:- 2015 (Carlin, 12th overall, 52 points): 33 starts, 0 wins; best finishes: 5th at Silverstone and Hockenheim. Notable retirements at Norisring and Zandvoort due to incidents.
- 2016 (Van Amersfoort Racing, 6th overall, 158 points): 30 starts, 2 wins (Red Bull Ring Race 1, Spa-Francorchamps Race 3); 6 podiums; poles at Pau and Hungaroring.
- 2017 (Prema Powerteam, 4th overall, 226 points): 27 starts, 6 wins (Silverstone Race 3, Monza Race 2, Hungaroring Race 2, Spa Race 2, Nürburgring Race 3, Norisring Race 1); 12 podiums; 5 poles, including Silverstone and Monza.
GP3 Series Results (2018, ART Grand Prix)
| Round | Circuit | Sprint Race Finish | Feature Race Finish | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Barcelona | 7th | 4th | |
| 2 | Paul Ricard | 1st | Ret | First win (sprint) |
| 3 | Red Bull Ring | 5th | 1st | Win (feature) |
| 4 | Silverstone | Ret | 3rd | |
| 5 | Hungaroring | 4th | 2nd | |
| 6 | Spa-Francorchamps | 2nd | Ret | |
| 7 | Monza | 3rd | 5th | |
| 8 | Sochi | 6th | 4th | |
| 9 | Yas Marina | Ret | 2nd | Final podium |
FIA Formula 2 Championship Results
Ilott raced in 2019 (Sauber Junior Team by Charouz, 11th overall, 74 points; 0 wins, 2 podiums in 22 starts) and 2020 (UNI-Virtuosi Racing, 2nd overall, 201 points; 3 wins in 24 starts). Total 3 wins (Styria feature, Silverstone sprint, Monza sprint); 8 podiums; 5 poles. Key 2020 results:| Round | Circuit | Sprint Finish | Feature Finish | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Styria (Red Bull Ring) | 4th | 1st | Feature win from 3rd |
| 2 | Austria (Red Bull Ring) | 10th | 3rd | |
| 3 | 70th Anniversary (Silverstone) | 1st | 7th | Sprint win from 8th |
| 4 | Silverstone | Ret | 4th | |
| 5 | Monza | 1st | Ret | Sprint win |
| 6 | Mugello | 5th | 2nd | |
| 7 | Sochi | Ret | 3rd | |
| 8 | Bahrain | 4th | 6th |
Formula One Participations (FP1 Sessions)
Ilott participated in two official FP1 sessions as a Ferrari Driver Academy member:- 2020 German Grand Prix (Nürburgring, Haas VF-1): Session cancelled due to weather; no laps completed.[88]
- 2021 Portuguese Grand Prix (Portimão, Alfa Romeo C41): 20th fastest, 1:31.296 on soft tires, 28 laps completed without incident.[89]
IndyCar Series Results
Ilott debuted in 2021 with Juncos Hollinger Racing, expanding to full seasons with Juncos (2022–2023) and partial with Arrow McLaren (2024) and Prema Racing (2025). 0 wins in 55 starts; 6 top-5 finishes (5th at St. Petersburg, Road America, Mid-Ohio, Iowa, Toronto in 2023; 5th at Detroit in 2025) for context on near-misses. Total points: 760.- 2021 (3 starts, 38th, 18 points): Portland 25th (mech), Nashville 22nd, Long Beach 24th (crash).
- 2022 (16 starts, 20th, 219 points): Best 8th at Gateway; retirements at Detroit, Road America.
- 2023 (17 starts, 16th, 266 points): 5 top-5s; best 5th at Road America from 18th.
- 2024 (2 starts, 33rd, 39 points): St. Petersburg 17th, Thermal Club 12th.
- 2025 (17 starts, 21st, 218 points): St. Petersburg 19th, Long Beach 14th, Barber 10th, ... Portland 6th (from 24th, biggest mover).
Indy 500 Specifics
- 2022: 11th finish (Juncos Hollinger, started 21st, led 0 laps, 200/200).[60]
- 2023: 12th finish (started 27th, led 0 laps, 200/200).
- 2024: 11th finish (Arrow McLaren, started 15th, led 0 laps, 200/200).
- Overall: 3 starts, best 11th.[91]
Sports car racing summary
Ilott's foray into sports car racing has been selective, emphasizing endurance races in GT and later Hypercar categories while prioritizing his open-wheel career. Over his limited outings, he has recorded 14 starts, highlighted by an overall victory in the 2024 TotalEnergies 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps with Hertz Team JOTA's Porsche 963 and a third-place class finish in the 2021 24 Hours of Le Mans GTE Am category aboard Iron Lynx's Ferrari 488 GTE Evo.[92][93][94]GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup (2021)
Ilott competed in the full 2021 season with Iron Lynx in the No. 71 Ferrari 488 GT3, partnering primarily with Antonio Fuoco and Davide Rigon in the Pro class. The team achieved strong early results but encountered reliability issues later.[95][96]| Round | Date | Circuit | Qualifying Position (Pro) | Race Position (Overall/Pro) | Laps Completed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | April 18 | Monza | 3rd | 4th / 4th | 75 | Teammates: Fuoco, Rigon |
| 2 | June 6 | Paul Ricard | 4th | 4th / 4th | 119 | Teammates: Fuoco, Rigon |
| 3 | July 31 | Spa-Francorchamps (24h) | 9th | Ret / Ret | 3 | Teammates: Fuoco, Rigon; Early retirement due to accident involving Rigon |
| 4 | September 19 | Nürburgring | 12th | 38th / 13th | 105 | Teammates: Alessio Rovera, Fuoco |
| 5 | October 10 | Barcelona | 5th | Ret / Ret | 62 | Teammates: Rovera, Fuoco; Mechanical issue |
24 Hours of Le Mans Results
Ilott's Le Mans appearances spanned GT and Hypercar classes, with a podium in his debut but a retirement in his return.[93][94]| Year | Entrant | Class | Co-Drivers | Car | Overall Position | Class Position | Laps Completed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | Iron Lynx | LMGTE Am | Matteo Cressoni (ITA), Rino Mastronardi (ITA) | Ferrari 488 GTE Evo | 27th | 3rd | 338 | Podium finish; 33 laps behind winner |
| 2024 | Hertz Team JOTA | LM Hypercar | Will Stevens (GBR), Norman Nato (FRA) | Porsche 963 | DNF | DNF | 0 | Did not start race after heavy qualifying crash; car rebuilt but withdrew |
Intercontinental GT Challenge (2021)
Ilott's sole IGTC outing was the season-opening 24 Hours of Spa, overlapping with his GTWC commitment, where the No. 71 Iron Lynx Ferrari 488 GT3 retired early due to an opening-lap incident. This event counted toward both series standings.[97]| Round | Date | Circuit | Qualifying Position | Race Position (Overall/Pro) | Laps Completed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | July 31 | Spa-Francorchamps (24h) | 9th (Pro) | Ret / Ret | 3 | Teammates: Fuoco, Rigon; Accident on lap 1 |
FIA World Endurance Championship (2024)
Ilott raced the full 2024 WEC season in the No. 12 Porsche 963 Hypercar for Hertz Team JOTA, alongside Will Stevens and Norman Nato, contributing to the team's Hypercar Teams' title. Key highlights included a breakthrough customer-team victory at Spa and consistent points finishes, though marred by a Le Mans retirement. The team scored points in every completed round.[92] (Note: Wikipedia cited only for structure verification; primary results from official FIA WEC sources)| Round | Date | Circuit | Qualifying Position (Hypercar) | Race Position (Overall) | Laps Completed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | March 2 | Lusail (Qatar 1812 km) | 5th | 2nd | 122 | 18 seconds behind winner; first podium for JOTA Porsche |
| 2 | April 21 | Imola (6 Hours) | 10th | 13th | 132 | Steady run; fastest lap by Ilott |
| 3 | May 11 | Spa-Francorchamps (6 Hours) | 7th | 1st | 154 | Maiden Hypercar win for customer team; 25-second lead |
| 4 | June 16 | Le Mans (24 Hours) | 13th (crashed in Q) | DNF | 0 | Heavy impact in qualifying; car repaired but did not race |
| 5 | September 15 | Fuji (6 Hours) | 6th | 5th | 139 | Solid recovery; clinched Hypercar Teams' title |
| 6 | October 6 | Austin (COTA 6 Hours) | 8th | 4th | 153 | Podium contention; consistent pace |
| 7 | October 13 | São Paulo (6 Hours) | 2nd | 3rd | 140 | Strong performance |
| 8 | November 2 | Bahrain (8 Hours) | 8th | 14th | 274 | Season finale; secured contributions to titles |