Karting In 2008, de Vries won the WSK World Series for the
KF3 category, as well as the
German Junior Championship. In 2009, he retained both his German Junior and WSK World Series titles, as well as winning the European KF3 Championship. In September, he won the 2010
Karting World Championship. He also won the World Championship in 2011.
Formula Renault Eurocup 2012 In 2012, de Vries switched to single-seaters, being given a cockpit in the
Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 at
R-ace GP. De Vries achieved his first podium finish at his debut race in
Alcañiz with a second place, and he managed to repeat this result at the
Hungaroring. De Vries finished the season in fifth place, beating all of his teammates. In addition, de Vries took part in several races of the
Formula Renault 2.0 NEC, in which he managed a victory at his home track in
Assen. He was on the podium four times in eleven starts in the series and ended up tenth in the drivers' standings.
2013 The following year, de Vries switched to
Koiranen GP for his second season in the
series. He won one race each at the
Hungaroring and the
Circuit de Catalunya and again ended the season in fifth place in the championship.
2014 In 2014, de Vries stayed with Koiranen and competed in his third season of the
Eurocup. He won six races and finished on the podium in eleven of fourteen races. With 254 points to 124, he convincingly beat the runner-up
Dennis Olsen in the championship. In addition, he took part in the entire Alpine Formula Renault season. He won ten out of fourteen races and only failed to make the podium twice.
Formula Renault 3.5 Series In 2015, de Vries made the switch to the
Formula Renault 3.5 Series, racing for
DAMS. He was on the podium five times before winning the final race of the season at the
Circuito de Jerez, putting him third in the final standings with 160 points, only placing behind
Oliver Rowland and
Matthieu Vaxivière.
GP3 Series De Vries took part in the
GP3 Series in 2016 in with
ART Grand Prix. He scored his first podium at the
Red Bull Ring with a third place, then obtained his first pole in
Budapest. It wasn't until the second race at
Monza that he took his first win, a result he replicated at the
Yas Marina Circuit at the end of the season. He finished sixth in the championship, behind his teammates
Charles Leclerc and
Alexander Albon, who became champion and vice-champion respectively.
FIA Formula 2 Championship 2017 In 2017, de Vries switched to the
FIA Formula 2 Championship with
Rapax. He achieved his first win in the
Monte Carlo sprint race and scored a further three podium finishes before the summer break. Before the round at
Spa-Francorchamps, de Vries switched to
Racing Engineering, with whom he scored a second place at that very round. He ended his season seventh in the championship, placing second-highest of all rookies.
2018 during the
2018 FIA Formula 2 Championship For the
2018 season, de Vries moved to partner
Sean Gelael at
Prema Racing. His season started slowly with just two podiums from the opening third of the season putting him a fair way behind his title rivals. De Vries' first victory of the campaign in the sprint race at
Le Castellet was followed by a point-less round in
Austria and two finishes outside the top five in
Silverstone. Following that however, de Vries' form improved, winning the feature races in
Hungary and
Belgium respectively. However, even with his sixth podium of the season in the
Sochi feature race, de Vries was unable to finish in the top-three in the standings, being beaten by
Alex Albon,
Lando Norris and
George Russell by ten, seventeen and 85 points respectively.
2019 with
ART Grand Prix In 2019, de Vries remained in
Formula 2, returning to his former team
ART Grand Prix alongside
2018 GP3 vice-champion
Nikita Mazepin. His season started in strong fashion with a podium in
Baku and a sprint race victory in
Barcelona. He followed that up with a win from pole position in
Monaco and took the championship lead by winning the main race at
Le Castellet. A pair of third places at the
Red Bull Ring and a podium each in
Silverstone and
Budapest extended de Vries' advantage, and following another pair of thirds in
Monza he had put one hand onto the trophy. After his fourth and final victory of the season, which came at the penultimate round in
Sochi, de Vries was mathematically crowned Formula 2 champion. == Sportscar racing career ==