Chris Atkinson
Chris Atkinson (born 30 November 1979) is an Australian professional rally driver known for his participation in the World Rally Championship (WRC) and multiple regional titles.[1] Born in Bega, New South Wales, Atkinson began his competitive rallying career in 2001, initially with his brother Ben as navigator, before transitioning to the driver's seat.[2][3] He rose to prominence by winning the Asia-Pacific Rally Championship (APRC) Super 1600 category in both 2003 and 2004, marking him as a rising talent in international rallying.[1] Atkinson made his WRC debut in 2004 and became the first Australian to secure a full-time factory drive in 2005 with the Subaru World Rally Team, where he competed until 2008 alongside Petter Solberg.[4][1] During his Subaru tenure, he achieved six WRC podium finishes, including second places at the 2008 Rally Mexico and 2008 Rally Argentina, and secured 41 stage wins across his 77 WRC starts from 2004 to 2014.[5][1] His best overall WRC drivers' championship result was fifth place in 2008, highlighting his consistency on diverse surfaces like gravel, tarmac, and snow.[5][1] Following Subaru, Atkinson drove for teams including Proton, Citroën, MINI, and Hyundai, with his final WRC appearances in 2014 for the Hyundai Shell World Rally Team.[1][5] Beyond the WRC, he claimed the full APRC drivers' title in 2012 driving a Škoda Fabia S2000 and contributed to FAW-Volkswagen's victory in the 2015 Chinese Rally Championship.[1][5] Atkinson also ventured into rallycross, competing in the 2017 Red Bull Global Rallycross Championship with Subaru and winning events in the 2019 Americas Rallycross (ARX) series, such as the ARX of Gateway.[1][2] In recent years, he has shifted focus to media and advisory roles, joining CarExpert in 2020 as Performance Editor and shareholder, where he tests high-performance vehicles and provides expert analysis.[6][7] Additionally, in 2022, Atkinson was appointed to an official advisory position with the RSEA Safety Motorsport Australia Rally Championship (ARC), leveraging his experience to support the series' development.[8] Educated at Bond University with a degree in Commerce, Finance, and Accounting, Atkinson resides between the Gold Coast, Australia, and Monte Carlo, Monaco, and remains involved in motorsport through commentary and occasional guest appearances.[1][3]Early life and background
Childhood and introduction to motorsport
Chris Atkinson was born on November 30, 1979, in Bega, a rural town in New South Wales, Australia.[9] Growing up in this area provided early exposure to vehicles through family life, including his father's ownership of a Datsun Stanza rally car and an old Nissan ute used on local properties.[9] His father, John Atkinson, was a former motocross rider and New South Wales rally champion, whose involvement in the sport influenced Chris from a young age.[3][9] As a child, Atkinson rode in a booster seat in his father's rally car during events, an experience that immersed him in the atmosphere of motorsport during the 1990s.[10] Atkinson's passion deepened through his older brother Ben, who purchased a rally car and introduced him to the sport more directly.[11] He attended local Australian rally events with Ben as a spectator and later took on an initial co-driving role, practicing pace notes by driving slowly at night to build skills, though he admitted to being a poor navigator early on, once directing a driver up the wrong road.[3][11] This period in the 1990s laid the groundwork for his enthusiasm, leading him to attend a rally school where he first experienced driving a rally car.[3] Following high school, Atkinson pursued a commerce degree at Bond University, balancing studies with growing interest in motorsport.[3]Education and early professional pursuits
Atkinson pursued higher education at Bond University in Queensland, Australia, where he earned a Bachelor of Commerce degree, majoring in finance and accounting, in 1998.[3] Benefiting from the university's accelerated program and a scholarship, he completed the degree in just two years, graduating at the age of 19 while balancing his studies with an emerging passion for motorsport.[11] Following graduation, Atkinson entered the finance sector as one of Australia's youngest stockbrokers, working at a major Brisbane firm in his early twenties.[1] However, he grew dissatisfied with the high-pressure environment of stockbroking, prompting a career pivot away from finance toward more hands-on work.[11] To support himself during this transition, he took jobs as a laborer and truck driver, which provided the flexibility to pursue his interests outside traditional office roles.[11] This period of professional experimentation culminated in Atkinson's entry into rallying at the age of 21 in 2001, when he participated in his first event, signaling a shift from amateur enthusiast to semi-professional driver.[11][2] Unlike many peers who began competing in their teens, his later start reflected the demands of his academic and early career commitments, yet it did not hinder his rapid progression in the sport.[11]Rally career beginnings
Domestic Australian rallying
Chris Atkinson made his debut as a rally driver in December 2000, competing in a local Australian event after initially serving as a co-driver for his brother Ben during earlier attempts.[12][2] He progressed to the Australian Rally Championship (ARC) in 2001, entering a privately funded Group N Mitsubishi Lancer Evo V with Ben Atkinson as co-driver. His ARC debut came at the Subaru Rally of Canberra, where mechanical issues led to retirement.[13][5] In 2002, Atkinson contested his first full ARC season in the same Lancer Evo V, securing ninth place overall and claiming the Australian Privateers Cup for non-factory entrants. He achieved consistent top-10 finishes in the Group N class across rounds, including two second-fastest stage times that highlighted his growing pace.[1][2] Atkinson's early domestic career was marked by challenges common to privateer drivers, including limited funding—often supported by his university studies—and vehicle reliability problems in the production-derived Group N machinery.[12][13]Initial international exposure
Atkinson's transition to international rallying began in 2003 when he joined Suzuki Sport for selected rounds of the Asia-Pacific Rally Championship (APRC), driving a factory-prepared Suzuki Ignis S1600 in the Super 1600 category.[1] Co-driven by his brother Ben Atkinson, he competed in events such as the International Rally of Thailand, where he secured a strong sixth overall finish and first in class, and the Rally Japan, finishing seventh overall.[5] These outings marked his debut on diverse international stages, including Thailand's challenging tropical gravel stages and Japan's forested roads, requiring rapid adaptation to varying weather, surface conditions, and competition formats beyond Australian rallies.[5] In 2004, Atkinson continued with Suzuki Sport and Monster Sport Australia, again in the Ignis S1600, targeting the APRC's Super 1600 title while navigating the logistical demands of long-haul travel from Australia to remote venues across the Pacific.[5] Key events included the Rally of Rotorua in New Zealand, where he achieved a podium third overall, and further strong class wins in Japan and other rounds, culminating in four class victories and a fifth-place overall championship finish.[5][1] These results, building on his 2003 fifth-place overall standing in the APRC with 18 points and a Super 1600 category championship win, highlighted his consistency with multiple class victories amid mechanical issues like an accident in one event.[5][1] The brotherly partnership faced strains from the physical toll of international schedules, including jet lag and equipment shipping, but remained stable during this period without major co-driver changes.[1] Atkinson's APRC exploits, including back-to-back Super 1600 champion titles in 2003 and 2004, caught the eye of the Subaru World Rally Team, paving the way for his WRC debut.[2]World Rally Championship involvement
Factory team tenure with Subaru (2005–2008)
Chris Atkinson earned a factory seat with the Subaru World Rally Team in December 2004 for the 2005 season, following successful test sessions that impressed team management after his strong performances driving a Subaru Impreza WRX STi for Subaru Australia in 2004.[14][15] He partnered with experienced teammate Petter Solberg, the 2003 WRC champion, forming a duo tasked with challenging the dominance of Citroën's Sébastien Loeb, who won six consecutive drivers' titles from 2004 to 2009. Over his four-year factory tenure from 2005 to 2008, Atkinson competed in the majority of WRC events, securing 41 stage victories across his 77 career starts and achieving six podium finishes, highlighting his consistency and speed on diverse surfaces.[15][16] In his debut 2005 season, Atkinson adapted quickly to the Subaru Impreza WRC, scoring his first podium with third place at Rally Japan after leading stages early in the event, while also finishing fourth at his home Rally Australia.[17][18] These results contributed to a solid rookie campaign, ending 12th in the drivers' championship with 13 points despite limited prior WRC experience.[4] The following year, 2006, saw further consistency as Atkinson notched multiple top-six finishes, including leading positions in rallies like Rally Great Britain, where he held the overall lead overnight before mechanical issues dropped him back.[19] He ended the season 10th overall with 20 points, supporting Solberg's title challenge amid intense competition from Loeb and Ford's Marcus Grönholm.[4] The 2007 season brought development challenges for the Subaru team, including mechanical reliability issues with the updated Impreza WRC that hampered both drivers' performances, leading to fewer points-scoring finishes.[20] Atkinson still managed competitive runs, such as fourth at Rally Finland, but retired from several events due to car failures, concluding the year seventh in the standings with 31 points.[16] Subaru's struggles continued into 2008 with ongoing adaptation to new regulations, yet Atkinson delivered his career-best WRC performance, claiming five podiums—including runner-up spots at Rally Monte Carlo and Rally Mexico, plus thirds in Argentina, Sardinia, and Japan—that propelled him to fifth in the drivers' championship with 50 points.[2][17] These results underscored his growing prowess alongside Solberg, even as Loeb secured another title, before Subaru's withdrawal from the WRC at season's end.Privateer and manufacturer stints (2009–2011)
Following Subaru's abrupt withdrawal from the World Rally Championship at the end of 2008, Chris Atkinson faced significant sponsorship challenges that limited his participation to a single privateer outing in 2009.[21] Unable to secure a full-season factory drive despite initial discussions with Citroën, he joined the Citroën Junior Team for Rally Ireland, piloting a Citroën C4 WRC alongside co-driver Stéphane Prévot.[22] Atkinson delivered a strong performance, navigating wet and slippery conditions to secure fifth place overall, earning four championship points in what was his only WRC appearance that year.[23] This result highlighted his competitiveness but underscored the funding gaps preventing broader involvement, as he returned to Australia to seek additional backing for potential entries like Rally Australia.[24] In 2010, Atkinson's WRC opportunities remained elusive due to ongoing sponsorship shortages, leading him to pivot to a manufacturer-backed program outside the top tier. He signed with the Proton R3 Rally Team to contest the Asia-Pacific Rally Championship (APRC) in a Proton Satria Neo S2000, marking his first full-season commitment since leaving Subaru.[25] While this stint provided competitive mileage— including test sessions in Wales and strong APRC results like a win in Rally China—it did not translate to WRC starts, as private funding for World Championship events proved unattainable.[26] The arrangement offered stability but highlighted the financial barriers to maintaining a WRC presence without factory support.[27] By 2011, Atkinson pursued manufacturer tests to revive his WRC prospects amid regulatory shifts that reshaped the series. The introduction of 1.6-litre turbocharged engines and Super 2000 specifications reduced costs but intensified competition for limited seats, as teams like Citroën and emerging entrants prioritized established lineups.[28] He conducted evaluations with Citroën, building on his prior experience, and tested a Mini John Cooper Works WRC prototype, yet neither led to a full-season contract due to budget constraints and team priorities.[29] These sporadic efforts, combined with his APRC commitments in the Proton, created personal challenges, including the uncertainty of irregular racing schedules that strained work-life balance during a period of family growth.[21] Despite top-10 potential demonstrated in testing, the era's instability kept Atkinson on the sidelines for WRC rounds.[23]Return to WRC (2012–2013)
After a period of intermittent participation in the World Rally Championship following his departure from Subaru, Chris Atkinson pursued a calculated re-entry in 2012 via a privateer program with the factory-supported WRC Team MINI Portugal. As the team's lead driver, he campaigned the Mini John Cooper Works WRC across the season's final five rounds, partnering with experienced Belgian co-driver Stéphane Prévot to capitalize on the car's potential and his own asphalt expertise. This arrangement represented a strategic step to rebuild momentum in top-tier rallying without committing to a full-season factory role, allowing flexibility alongside his regional commitments.[30] Atkinson's debut with the Mini came at the ADAC Rallye Deutschland, where he delivered a strong performance on the demanding tarmac and vineyard stages, finishing fifth overall and collecting 10 WRC points—the program's best result that year.[31] He followed this with eleventh place at the Wales Rally GB, navigating the muddy forests despite a gearbox fault and handling challenges from the car's setup that limited him to no points. Reliability issues continued to hamper the campaign; for instance, during the Rallye de France Alsace, suspension problems slowed the duo, resulting in an eighth-place finish after a cautious recovery drive and four points. Atkinson then finished sixth at the Rally Italia Sardegna, adding eight points on gravel surfaces. He rebounded at the Rally de España, securing seventh overall on mixed surfaces and adding six points. These efforts netted him 28 points, placing 13th in the drivers' standings and underscoring the Mini's competitiveness amid ongoing development hurdles.[32][33][34][35][36] In 2013, Atkinson adopted a selective WRC schedule, focusing on high-impact opportunities while transitioning to the Škoda Fabia S2000 for broader regional endeavors that complemented his world-level exposure. His sole WRC outing was a one-off drive for the Abu Dhabi Citroën Total World Rally Team at Rally Mexico, where he piloted the Citroën DS3 WRC to sixth place overall, overcoming a 3-minute 30-second time penalty from early service violations to score eight points in a gritty gravel performance. This result affirmed his adaptability and directly supported his momentum from the prior year's Asia-Pacific Rally Championship triumph with the Škoda, marking the culmination of his revival strategy before shifting emphasis to regional dominance.[37]Regional and Asia-Pacific championships
Asia-Pacific Rally Championship achievements
Chris Atkinson's involvement in the Asia-Pacific Rally Championship (APRC) began in the early 2000s, where he demonstrated early promise in the Super 1600 category. Driving a Suzuki Ignis S1600, he secured the APRC Super 1600 title in 2003, followed by a repeat victory in 2004 with the same model, establishing himself as a dominant force in the regional super 1600 class.[1][2] Atkinson's return to the APRC in 2012 marked a career highlight, as he clinched the overall drivers' championship driving a Škoda Fabia S2000 for India's Team MRF. The season consisted of six rounds across diverse terrains, with Atkinson accumulating 129 points under the FIA's standard scoring system—awarding 25 points for first, 18 for second, and 15 for third—to edge out rivals like New Zealand's Brian Green and India's Gaurav Gill. He secured outright victories in two rounds: the opening Brother International Rally of Whangarei in New Zealand, where he finished 28.1 seconds ahead of Per-Gunnar Andersson, and his home event, the International Rally of Queensland, extending his championship lead with a commanding performance. Consistent podium finishes, including seconds in New Caledonia, Malaysia, and the decisive China Rally Longyou, ensured the title without needing a win in the finale.[38][39][40] The 2012 campaign showcased Atkinson's adaptability to the APRC's unique challenges, which blended high-speed gravel stages in Oceania—such as the forested roads of New Zealand—with tropical humidity and mixed surfaces in Asian events like the sealed roads of Malaysia and the demanding gravel of China. These conditions demanded precise car setup adjustments and tire choices, contrasting with the more uniform European gravel of the WRC. Rivals like Gill, who scored strong points in later rounds driving a similar Škoda, pushed Atkinson throughout, highlighting the competitive depth in the production-based S2000 category.[41][42] Following his 2012 triumph, Atkinson made select appearances in regional rallies, including the Chinese Rally Championship in 2013, though he did not challenge for the APRC title won by Gaurav Gill. This success in the regional series also prepared him for a partial return to the World Rally Championship later that year.[1][43]Other regional series participation
In 2018, Chris Atkinson undertook a part-time campaign in the American Rally Association (ARA) national championship as part of Subaru Rally Team USA, marking his return to stage rallying after focusing primarily on rallycross.[44] He competed in the Oregon Trail Rally, the season's opening national event held from April 20–22 in Union and Sherman Counties, Oregon, driving a factory-prepared 2018 Subaru WRX STI rally car equipped with DMACK tires.[5] The effort was funded through Subaru's official motorsports program, which provided full factory support including logistics, engineering, and co-driver Stéphane Prévot, allowing Atkinson to share the entry with teammates like David Higgins while balancing his rallycross commitments.[44] At the Oregon Trail Rally, Atkinson encountered mechanical issues on the first day, limiting his participation to spectator stages initially, but he rejoined for the full Sunday schedule of eight stages covering 66.54 km of gravel roads.[44] Despite the setback, he set the fastest time on six of those stages, demonstrating competitive pace in the Open 4WD class, and ultimately finished 17th overall in a time of 2:24:58.7, 44 minutes 44.4 seconds behind winner David Higgins.[45] This outing highlighted the challenges of transitioning from short rallycross formats to multi-day stage rallies, with Atkinson's vehicle choice emphasizing reliability and power delivery suited to high-speed American gravel stages.[46] Following his full-time World Rally Championship tenure ending in 2008 and sporadic WRC appearances through 2013, Atkinson participated in select national-level events in Asia, particularly in the Chinese Rally Championship under the SCRC banner.[5] In 2014, he drove a FAW-Volkswagen Golf GTI for the factory-supported FAW-Volkswagen Team, funded through a manufacturer partnership that covered car preparation, travel, and entry fees as part of promotional efforts in the growing Chinese motorsport market.[5] His entries included the Wuyi Rally (1st overall), Rally China Longyou (1st overall), and Hunan Rucheng Rally (2nd overall), where the all-wheel-drive Golf's setup prioritized handling on mixed tarmac and gravel surfaces typical of regional Chinese events.[47][48][49] In 2015, Atkinson continued with FAW-Volkswagen in the Chinese Rally Championship, contributing to the team's manufacturers' and drivers' title victories through strong performances, including a win at the China Rally.[1][50] Atkinson also engaged in advisory capacities for emerging regional series in Australia, contributing to the development of the Extreme Rallycross Championship announced in 2015.[51] He participated in preview testing at Sydney Motorsport Park, providing feedback on Supercar Lite vehicles to refine formats, safety features, and track layouts, drawing from his rallycross experience with Subaru in the Americas.[52] His involvement helped shape the series' structure, emphasizing close-quarters racing on dirt ovals with jumps, and he publicly endorsed the initiative as a bridge between rallying and rallycross for Australian audiences.[53]Rallycross and off-road racing
Global Rallycross Championship
Chris Atkinson entered the Global Rallycross Championship (GRC) in 2016 with the Subaru Rally Team USA, competing in the final four rounds aboard the Subaru WRX STI and marking his transition from the endurance-focused World Rally Championship to the explosive, contact-heavy format of rallycross, which emphasizes rapid acceleration, massive jumps, and wall-riding maneuvers. His debut came at the Atlantic City event, where he advanced through the heats and semi-finals but encountered mechanical troubles in the final, classifying 11th overall despite demonstrating competitive pace in qualifying and early stages.[15][54] Atkinson continued to adapt quickly in subsequent rounds, finishing sixth in the Seattle final after recovering from a spin caused by contact in the semi-final, where he had dueled closely with defending champion Scott Speed. The season concluded with a double-header in Los Angeles, where he secured pole position for the first race—Subaru's maiden front-row start in GRC—and placed seventh in both finals, highlighting his growing comfort with the series' short, high-stakes battles and the WRX STI's handling on mixed-surface tracks.[55][56][57] In 2017, Atkinson ran the full 12-round Red Bull GRC schedule with Subaru, achieving several podiums as the team refined the WRX STI and climbed the competitive ladder, including a third-place finish in the Seattle doubleheader after winning pole and a semi-final, as well as another podium at New England that represented Subaru's first in the series. These results underscored his skill transfer from rallying's precision driving to rallycross's aggressive overtaking, contributing to Subaru's improved performance amid the Red Bull-backed series' evolution toward more spectator-friendly events with enhanced broadcasting and international driver lineups before its rebranding in 2018.[58][59]Americas Rallycross Championship and ARX
Atkinson joined Subaru Motorsports USA for the inaugural 2018 Americas Rallycross (ARX) Championship, competing in all four rounds aboard the team's WRX STI rallycross car, a high-performance variant producing approximately 600 horsepower and accelerating from 0 to 60 mph in under 2 seconds.[60] The series emphasized short-course racing tactics, including precise joker lap timing to minimize time loss on the alternate route and aggressive starts to gain positions in the tight, mixed-surface layouts that rewarded quick decision-making and vehicle control.[61] His efforts yielded consistent results, contributing to Subaru's strong team performance in a season marked by intense competition among manufacturers. In 2019, Atkinson remained with Subaru for the expanded six-round ARX calendar, securing two victories amid a fierce championship battle. He claimed his first win at the Gateway double-header in July, executing a dramatic last-corner pass on Steve Arpin to triumph from the back row of the grid after early-race contact eliminated title rival Tanner Foust.[62] Later, at the season finale in October at Mid-Ohio, Atkinson led wire-to-wire in the final to notch his second victory, clinching second place overall in the drivers' standings behind Foust by just a few points in one of the closest title fights in recent U.S. rallycross history.[63] These results highlighted Subaru's dominance, as the team captured the manufacturers' championship for the first time. The 2019 season represented Atkinson's final full-time rallycross campaign, as the ARX series folded after two years due to financial challenges and lack of sustained manufacturer and sponsor commitment, leading to a reconfiguration of American rallycross into new formats like Nitrocross.[64][65] With no full-time seat in the evolving landscape, Atkinson stepped away from professional competition to focus on media and financial pursuits.[3]Diverse racing activities
Circuit racing and endurance events
Chris Atkinson made his circuit racing debut at the 2006 24 Hours of Nürburgring, driving a modified Subaru Impreza Spec C for the British team Autosportif Racing UK alongside drivers Jonathan Price, Alan van der Merwe, and Philipp Bennett.[66] The team encountered mechanical issues during the event, requiring extended pit stops, but completed the 24-hour endurance race, finishing 116th overall and 13th in the SP6 class after 105 laps.[66] This marked Atkinson's initial foray into endurance circuit racing, leveraging his rally-honed versatility in high-speed, multi-surface driving to adapt to the demanding Nordschleife layout. The following year, Atkinson competed in the inaugural 2007 Bathurst 12 Hour at Mount Panorama Circuit, piloting a factory Subaru Impreza WRX STI in the Class B category with co-drivers Cody Crocker and Dean Herridge for Subaru Australia.[67] The trio delivered a strong performance, leading early before a late safety car period, ultimately securing second place outright and first in class after 257 laps, just behind the winning BMW 335i.[67] This result highlighted the challenges of transitioning rally expertise—focused on unpredictable gravel and tarmac stages—to the sustained pace and traffic management of endurance circuits. In 2011, Atkinson tested a V8 Supercar for the Supercheap Auto Racing Holden team, driving Russell Ingall's Commodore at Queensland Raceway.[68] He described the experience as "a different world" from rallying, noting the emphasis on smooth, consistent laps and heavy braking zones rather than the aggressive, dirt-influenced style of rally stages.[68] Later, in 2022, he tested an Audi RS 3 LMS TCR car at Queensland Raceway for Australian TCR competitor Liam McAdam, further exploring circuit-based tin-top racing.[69] More recently, Atkinson has engaged in historic endurance events through the Masters Endurance Legends series. In 2021, he drove an Oreca FLM09, competing in races across European circuits. Continuing with Era Motorsport, he piloted an Oreca FLM09 prototype in 2025, achieving a class podium at the Silverstone Festival in the P2 category.[70] These outings underscore his ongoing adaptation to endurance formats, emphasizing strategy and reliability over raw rally speed.Recent part-time rallying and advisory roles
Following his full-time retirement from competitive rallying, Chris Atkinson announced plans for selective guest appearances in the American Rally Association (ARA) series in 2024, primarily with Subaru Rally Team USA. He was set to return to stage rallying on a part-time basis, driving a 2018 Subaru WRX STI in a shared program alongside teammates Patrik Sandell and Travis Pastrana. The campaign was to focus on high-profile national events to maintain his competitive edge without a full schedule, beginning with the Oregon Trail Rally on May 17–18 in Oregon. This would have marked Atkinson's first ARA outing since earlier stints in 2017, allowing him to apply his World Rally Championship-honed skills on demanding gravel stages.[71] Atkinson's selective participation was to emphasize enjoyment and team support over championship contention, with entries determined based on availability and logistical fit. He expressed enthusiasm for the challenge, noting, "I’m really excited about this opportunity... It’s been a while since I’ve done a high-speed rally and I don’t underestimate the challenge." No confirmed completions from the 2024 schedule were reported, and as of November 2025, no full-season ARA commitments have been announced. Teammate Travis Pastrana competed in the 2025 Oregon Trail Rally, finishing third overall.[71] This part-time rallying aligns with Atkinson's broader professional commitments, including his role as Performance Editor at CarExpert, where he evaluates high-performance vehicles and shares insights from his racing background. This media position, combined with his finance career, enables a balanced lifestyle focused on family and selective motorsport involvement, with no confirmed full-season commitments through 2025. His contributions extend to informal advisory input for Subaru on rally setups during events, drawing from prior testing experience to aid development without formal roles.[7]Post-competitive career
Transition to media and finance
Following his retirement from full-time professional racing in 2019, Chris Atkinson returned to the finance industry, where he had begun his career as one of Australia's youngest stockbrokers at age 19. He joined Macquarie Private Bank as a Private Banker, drawing on his Bachelor of Commerce degree in finance and accounting from Bond University, earned in 1998. This move allowed him to apply his early professional experience in financial markets and investments to client advisory services.[3] In July 2020, Atkinson expanded into automotive media by joining CarExpert as Performance Editor and shareholder, bringing his extensive racing expertise to content creation. In this role, he conducts performance reviews, track testing, and video analyses of high-performance vehicles, often at facilities like Queensland Raceway. Examples include his evaluations of the 2023 Porsche 911 Carrera GTS, where he assessed its handling against more track-focused siblings, and the 2023 Porsche 911 GT3, comparing it to prior models on CarExpert's lap time leaderboard.[6][72][73] Atkinson's transition reflected a desire for career stability after over two decades in the unpredictable world of professional motorsport, balancing his passion for cars with more predictable professional pursuits in banking and media.[3]Ongoing motorsport involvement
Following his retirement from full-time competitive driving in 2019, Chris Atkinson has maintained active ties to motorsport through advisory and developmental roles in Australia. He serves as a competition checker for the EROAD Australian Rally Championship (ARC), driving stages ahead of competitors to identify and report on changing conditions or hazards, ensuring safety across events. This position, appointed in 2022, leverages his extensive WRC experience to support the championship's operational integrity.[74] Atkinson contributes to the growth of Australian rallying by mentoring emerging talent, emphasizing the importance of tarmac rally experience for drivers aiming to progress to international levels like the WRC. In interviews, he has advised young Australian competitors to prioritize European tarmac events to build skills on varied surfaces, drawing from his own career trajectory with Subaru and other teams.[75] He remains engaged through speaking engagements that preserve rally history, such as a February 2025 podcast appearance reflecting on his 2005 Subaru World Rally Team debut at Rally Sweden, marking the event's 20th anniversary. Atkinson shared insights into his early WRC challenges and successes, highlighting the evolution of the sport. Additionally, in his role as Performance Editor at CarExpert since 2020, he conducts track tests and demonstrations that promote performance driving.[76][6]Results and records
WRC statistical summary
Chris Atkinson competed in 77 World Rally Championship (WRC) events between 2004 and 2014, achieving zero outright wins but securing six podium finishes—two second places and four third places—along with 41 stage victories and a total of 165 points.[16] His best individual event result was second place, earned twice in 2008 at Rally Mexico and Rally Argentina.[17] Atkinson's career also included 39 points-scoring finishes and 12 retirements, reflecting a reliability rate of approximately 84%.[1] During his factory-supported era with the Subaru World Rally Team from 2005 to 2008, Atkinson made 62 starts, capturing all six of his podiums and the majority of his stage wins, which propelled him to his career-best championship position of fifth overall in 2008 with 50 points.[16] In contrast, his privateer phase—spanning partial seasons in 2004, 2006, 2009, 2012, 2013, and 2014 with teams like Proton, Ford Stobart, and Mini—accounted for 15 starts, yielding no podiums but consistent points hauls, such as 28 points in seven events during 2012.[77] This shift highlighted a transition from competitive factory machinery to less-resourced efforts, yet he maintained a professional approach, often maximizing results in underdog scenarios.[15] Among Australian drivers in the WRC, Atkinson's record stands out compared to contemporaries like Neal Bates, who completed fewer top-level starts—primarily limited appearances in Rally Australia and Rally New Zealand—and achieved a best event finish of sixth, without podiums or significant championship contention.[78] Atkinson's sustained presence and higher achievement level underscore his status as Australia's most successful WRC competitor of the era.[79] Atkinson demonstrated particular strength on home soil, consistently finishing in the top 10 at Rally Australia across multiple years, including fourth place in 2006 and solid points scores in 2005 and 2008, leveraging local knowledge to outperform expectations relative to his machinery.[4] This trend extended to Rally New Zealand, where early stage wins in 2005 highlighted his adaptability to gravel surfaces familiar from regional rallying.[16]World Rally Championship (WRC) Results
Chris Atkinson's WRC career spanned nine seasons from 2004 to 2014, with 77 starts, no wins, six podiums, and 165 points scored. The following table summarizes his yearly championship results, including starts, retirements, points, and final position.[77]| Year | Starts | Retirements | Points | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | 4 | 1 | 4 | 16th |
| 2005 | 15 | 4 | 13 | 12th |
| 2006 | 16 | 1 | 20 | 10th |
| 2007 | 16 | 2 | 31 | 7th |
| 2008 | 15 | 3 | 50 | 5th |
| 2009 | 1 | 0 | 4 | 14th |
| 2012 | 7 | 1 | 28 | 13th |
| 2013 | 1 | 0 | 8 | 16th |
| 2014 | 2 | 0 | 7 | 18th |
Asia-Pacific Rally Championship (APRC) 2012 Results
Atkinson won the 2012 APRC drivers' title with 154 points, securing the championship with a third-place finish in the final round. Driving a Škoda Fabia S2000 for Team MRF, he achieved two outright wins and 16 stage victories across the six rounds. The table below details his results per round, including position and event points (APRC scoring: 25 for 1st, 18 for 2nd, 15 for 3rd, etc.; total of 154 includes additional bonus points for leg performances).[5][37][40][80]| Round | Rally Name | Position | Points | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Brother International Rally of Whangarei (New Zealand) | 1st | 25 | Outright win; co-driver Stéphane Prévot |
| 2 | Rally New Caledonia | 2nd | 18 | |
| 3 | International Rally of Queensland (Australia) | 1st | 25 | Home event win |
| 4 | Malaysian Rally | 2nd | 18 | |
| 5 | Rally Hokkaido (Japan) | Ret. | 0 | Mechanical |
| 6 | Rally China Longyou | 3rd | 15 | Clinched title |
Global Rallycross Championship (GRC) and Americas Rallycross (ARX) Supercar Results
Atkinson competed in the GRC Supercar class with Subaru Rally Team USA from 2016 to 2017, transitioning to ARX in 2019. He scored consistent points with podiums in 2017 and wins in 2019, finishing runner-up in the ARX drivers' standings. The table summarizes his seasonal standings and key results (points based on GRC/ARX scoring systems).[2][63]| Year | Series | Starts | Podiums/Wins | Points | Position | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | GRC | 4 | 0 | 88 | 11th | Debut season; final four rounds in Subaru WRX STI Supercar; no retirements |
| 2017 | GRC | 11 | 2 | 392 | 7th | Two podiums (3rd at New England, Seattle I); co-driver not applicable (solo events); retirements: 2 (e.g., rollover at Ottawa) |
| 2019 | ARX | 6 | 2 wins | N/A | 2nd | Wins at Gateway (Round 2, Saturday) and Mid-Ohio (Round 6); 2nd overall; Subaru team champions; no major retirements |
Americas Rally Association (ARA) Results (Select Years, 2023–2025)
Atkinson returned to rallying in the ARA National Championship, focusing on 2WD and Open 2WD classes in a Subaru Impreza. He achieved top-5 finishes in multiple rounds from 2023 to 2025, with consistent points scoring despite a mid-pack overall in 2023. The table highlights select round results and seasonal standings (ARA scoring: variable by class, emphasizing finishes). As of November 2025, the season is ongoing.[84]| Year | Class | Key Rounds/Finishes | Points | Overall Position | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | Open 2WD | Top-5 in 2 rounds (e.g., Central Regional events) | N/A | 40th (of 105) | 5 events; focus on regional; no retirements noted |
| 2024 | L2WD National | 3rd overall; top-5 in 3 rounds (e.g., 100 Acre Wood Rally) | 76 | 3rd (of 15) | Strong season; Subaru Impreza |
| 2025 | Open 2WD | Top-5 in Overmountain Rally (Tennessee, Round TBD); ongoing | N/A | TBD | Partial season; technical stages emphasized |