In late 2004, at age 14, Austin signed a
driver development deal with
Hendrick Motorsports. Hendrick dissolved its driver development program in 2006. Originally backed by the new STAR Motorsports team, the deal fell through after STAR failed to fulfill its financial obligations. Austin's family was given a race shop and car parts, so they used the parts to race in numerous series. While a sixteen-year-old in
high school, Austin was the driver and
crew chief for the family effort. He raced in 23 events in the season, with three wins, six top fives, and eight top tens. In that start, he became the first
African American driver to start in a
NASCAR Busch Series (then the name of the XFINITY Series)
oval track race, and the second African American driver to start in the series' history. He started in eleven
NASCAR Grand National Division, Busch East Series races, with four top ten finishes. He had his first start in
ARCA that season. He was scheduled to run fifteen races for RWI in the Nationwide Series in 2008, but those plans were postponed. He left the team later in the season. He was announced as the driver of the No. 32
Trail Motorsport Chevrolet Silverado in 2009, but the team closed very early in the season. Chase Austin picked up a ride with
Xxxtreme Motorsport to drive the No. 07 Chevrolet part-time. During the Nationwide Series race at
Bristol Motor Speedway on August 21, 2009, he crashed heavily with
Kyle Busch and
Reed Sorenson while dropping down the track following a punctured tire. Austin ran a Camping World Truck and Nationwide race in 2010 for the newly formed United Racing Group with sponsorship from Walgreens and Forgotten Harvest. ==Indy Lights and IndyCar==