Toyota announced plans to enter the championship under the Hypercar regulations with a bespoke car based on the
GR Super Sport Concept. Toyota launched their GR010 Hybrid on 15 January 2021. In June 2020, boutique car manufacturer
Scuderia Cameron Glickenhaus committed to a two-car effort with the
SCG 007 LMH, in partnership with 1989 24 Hours of Le Mans winners
Sauber Motorsport, 15-time Le Mans winners
Joest Racing, and engine specialists Pipo Moteurs. At the 2020 24 Hours of Le Mans, LMP1 competitors ByKolles Racing Team committed to a hypercar programme with its own car, the PMC Project LMH, but the team were not present on the entry list announced ahead of the 2021 season.
Aston Martin initially planned to enter a car based on the
Valkyrie road-going model. Long-time LMP1
privateer team
Rebellion Racing will end its racing operations at the end of the
2019–20 season, despite having previously announced the joint development of a Hypercar with
Peugeot. Peugeot itself has announce plans to compete from 2022 onwards, and announced
Ligier Automotive as a partner in its project.
Alpine announced that it will enter the championship using a single rebadged
Rebellion R13 LMP1, run by
Signatech Alpine. In LMGTE Pro,
Aston Martin Racing ended its factory GTE Pro program run by
Prodrive to focus on their Formula One team and their LMGTE Am program.
Hypercar LMP2 In accordance with the 2017 LMP2 regulations, all cars in the LMP2 class will use the
Gibson GK428 V8 engine. Entries in the LMP2 Pro-Am Cup, set aside for teams with a Bronze-rated driver in their line-up, are denoted with Icons. •
Hélio Castroneves was scheduled to replace
Inter Europol Competition's
Renger van der Zande at the 1000 Miles of Sebring, but the round was cancelled.
LMGTE Pro LMGTE Am ==Results and standings==