Outright Cannonball record On October 7–9, 2006,
Alex Roy, Dave Maher and filmmaker Cory Welles set a transcontinental record of 31 hours 4 minutes from the Classic Car Club NYC to
Santa Monica Pier using a modified
2000 BMW M5, averaging with a top speed of . A spotter plane was deployed for the daytime sections. This and the U.S. Express are depicted in the 2019 documentary
APEX: The Secret Race Across America. In May 2007,
Richard Rawlings and co-pilot Dennis Collins allegedly broke the 1979 Cannonball Run time during the 2007
Bullrun entry, driving a black
Ferrari 550, modified with extra fuel tanks. Their final time was 31 hours and 59 minutes. In October 2013, a team led by
Ed Bolian with Dave Black and Dan Huang set a transcontinental record of 28 hours 50 minutes in a modified 2004
Mercedes-Benz CL55 AMG, averaging with top speed of . Black shared driving with Bolian, who served as the primary driver, while Huang served as spotter watching for police and obstructions such as deer or construction using image stabilized binoculars. The team averaged and reached a top speed of on the trip covering 13 states. The 2015
Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG was modified to provide and fitted with an additional fuel tank in the trunk providing enabling the team to stop just four times for fuel for a total of just over 22 minutes.
During the COVID-19 pandemic The record was broken multiple times during the
COVID-19 pandemic, taking advantage of a reduction in both road users and law enforcement presence. In April 2020, a formerly anonymous crew now identified as Chris Allen, James Allen, and Kale Odhner traveled from the Red Ball Garage on the east side of
Manhattan to the Portofino Hotel in
Redondo Beach, California—a total of —in 26 hours 38 minutes. The team averaged in a 2019
Audi A8L with extra fuel tanks in the trunk. In early June 2020, as reported by
Road & Track, Fred Ashmore allegedly completed a solo run in 25 hours and 55 minutes. The claim was cast into doubt by
Road & Track after investigation showed the evidence to support the claim to be doctored.
Double transcontinental record In May 2020, the team of Chris Clemens and Mark Spence in a highly modified
Mercedes SL500 followed the Toman/Tabbutt team out of New York, drove from the Red Ball Garage in
New York City to the Portofino Hotel & Marina in
Redondo Beach, California and then turned around and went back to the Red Ball Garage in 74 hours and 5 minutes. In April 2022, the team of Nik Krueger, Mark Spence and Wesley Vigh drove from the Red Ball Garage in
New York City to the Portofino Hotel and Marina in
Redondo Beach, California, then back to the Red Ball Garage in 65 hours and 28 minutes, shattering the prior record by nearly eight and a half hours. The team used a modified 2008
Saab 9-5. That record was beaten just one week later by Bennett Wilson, Chris Ruppmann, and Grady Leno with a time of 65 hours and 19 minutes in a 2012
Mercedes-Benz S-Class in April 2022. In October 2024, the team of Nik Krueger, Wesley Vigh, and Christopher Michaels drove from the Red Ball Garage in
New York City to the Portofino Hotel and Marina in
Redondo Beach, California and back to the Red Ball Garage in 61 hours and 59 minutes, setting the current Coast-to-Coast-to-Coast Cannonball Run Record and reclaiming their short-lived title from 2022. The run used the same 2008
Saab 9-5.
Diesel record On April 4, 2020, the three-man team consisting of Sean G. Petr, Jason Adkins, and Mark Spence piloted a 2014
Volkswagen Passat TDI SE from Goodwives Shopping Center in
Darien, Connecticut to the Portofino Hotel and Marina in
Redondo Beach, California in 28 hours and 30 minutes beating both the previous diesel record and Darien-Redondo time by more than 3 hours. The team averaged both and over the journey. In August 2024,
Las Vegas native Chris Stowell would complete a solo run of 27 hours and 16 minutes in a 2015
BMW 535d, not only breaking the diesel record, but also the last verified solo record (as Fred Ashmore's run has been disproven) set by the team of Arne Toman, Doug Tabbutt, and Berkeley Chadwick. Stowel averaged around and over the journey.
Motorcycle record Motorcycle between New York and Los Angeles 1917 to present: • Alan T Bedell drove a Henderson 4-cylinder motorcycle from LA to NYC in 7 days, 16 hours, and 16 minutes on June 13, 1917. •
Erwin "Cannonball" Baker drove his Ace motorcycle from LA to NYC in 6 days, 22 hours, 52 minutes in 1922. • Wells Bennet rode an Excelsior/Henderson in 1922 to cross NYC to LA in 6 days, 16 hours, 13 minutes. • Earl Robinson in 1935 did the run in 3 days, 6 hours, 53 minutes. • Rody Rodenberg set his record of 71 hours 20 minutes during June 17–20, 1936, on a 1936 Indian Scout. This was disputed by
Dot Robinson. • John Penton (of
Penton racing fame) set a time of 52 hours 11 minutes for the solo LA-to-NYC motorcycle run in 1959. The trek was made on a BMW R69S. • Tibor Sarossy, at the time a college student, set a record in 1968 of 45 hours 41 minutes. Tibor used a homemade fuel tank made of jerry cans, which allowed for a reported four fuel stops. He also claims he never slept, although he did pass out from a diet of Hershey Bars and coffee at a produce inspection station in California. He averaged on a BMW R69S. • Fred Boyajian set a new time of 42 hours 6 minutes on October 11, 1969. Fred used a beer keg to provide extra fuel. Evidence was Western Union telegrams at New York City and Los Angeles. •
Carl Reese left from West Valley Cycle Sales BMW Dealership in Winnetka, California, at 3:15 a.m. PST on August 28, 2015. Reese arrived at
BMW Motorrad dealership in Manhattan, New York City, at 9:04 p.m. EST the next day, travelling in 38 hours 49 minutes (average speed ) on a K1600GT BMW motorcycle. The trip was documented by notaries at both start and finish. • Adam Frasca posted a time of 37 hours and 7 minutes. Frasca departed Manhattan, NYC at 12:03 am EDT Tuesday, April 9, 2019, and arrived Redondo Beach, LA at 10:10 am PDT. • Calvin Cote completed the run in a time of , departing the Portofino Hotel and Marina on at and arriving at the Red Ball Garage on at . The run was completed on a
2012 BMW K1600 GTL equipped with a auxiliary fuel tank, radar detector, and radar/lidar absorbing paint. • Alex Jones set a new benchmark of atop his
2014 Yamaha FJR1300. The bike was equipped with a auxiliary fuel tank, radar detector, laser jammers, and additional lighting. Jones left the Red Ball Garage on at and arrived at Portofino Hotel on at , covering more than with stops only to refuel. • Ross "Beau" Earnest set a new time of 32 hours and 32 minutes between April 19–21, 2024. The 2008 Yamaha FJR1300 was equipped with an additional fuel cell, laser jammers, radar detector and a thermal night vision camera. Earnest left the Red Ball Garage in NYC on Friday April 19 at and made it to the Portofino Inn Hotel in Redondo Beach, CA Sunday morning April 21 at . Covering more than he only stopped 5 times for fuel and was able to keep an average of .
Electric vehicle record In 1968, the
Great Transcontinental Electric Car Race was held between student groups at
Caltech and
MIT. The
Caltech team, led by EV pioneer
Wally Rippel, converted a 1958
VW Microbus powered by lead-
cobalt batteries from Electric Fuel Propulsion Corporation of Detroit. The
MIT team converted a 1968
Chevrolet Corvair powered by
NiCad batteries. The
MIT team raced from
Cambridge, Massachusetts, to
Pasadena, California, while the
Caltech team raced the opposite direction. A network of 54 charging locations was set up along the route, spaced apart. The race began on August 26, 1968, and ended on September 4. Although the
MIT team reached
Pasadena first, they were towed part of the way. After assessing penalty points,
Caltech was declared the winner with a corrected time of 210 hours 3 minutes. With the introduction of long-range EVs, such as the
Tesla Roadster (2008) and, in particular, the
Tesla Model S, coast-to-coast travel became more feasible. In January 2014,
Tesla Motors completed the first coast-to-coast corridor in their
supercharging network for the
Model S. A team of 15 from
Tesla Motors completed a route from
Los Angeles to
New York City run in 76 hours, 5 minutes. (Time included 60 hours, 8 minutes driving, and 15 hours, 57 minutes charging.) In July 2014, a team from
Edmunds completed a slightly shorter 3,331.9-mile route in 67 hours, 21 minutes. (Time included 52 hours, 41 minutes driving, and 14 hours, 40 minutes charging.) Carl J. Reese and co-drivers Rodney Hawk and Deena Mastracci took advantage of a newly opened corridor on
Interstate 70 to drive the route from the City Hall in Los Angeles to the City Hall in New York City in 58 hours and 55 minutes during April 16–19, 2015, a new record for EVs in a 2015
Tesla Model S P85D. The drivers stopped 24 times for electric charging, with a total charge time of 12 hours 48 minutes. As proof, Reese presented 16 documents notarized on both ends, identifying drivers and three eyewitnesses: Matt Nordenstrom, Johnnie Oberg Jr., and Anthony Alvarado. Complete GPS logs recorded by GPSInsight (a fleet tracking company) were sent to
Jalopnik and the
Guinness Book of World Records. GPSInsight provided GPS tracking equipment to the team to verify the event. On October 18–21, 2015, Deena Mastracci and Reese were joined by Alex Roy. They set a new record for an LA–NYC run in an electric vehicle with a total time of 57 hours, 48 minutes. On August 24–27, 2016, the LA–NYC record was broken again by a team comprising Alex Roy, Righthook CEO Warren Ahner, and
StreetWars founder Franz Aliquo, who completed the run in 55 hours flat in a 2016 Tesla Model S 90D. GPS logs were recorded by US Fleet Tracking, and Comma.AI's Chffr data logger, and data was shared with The Drive. In December 2017, with an early-production
Tesla Model 3, which are delivered to California-based customers only,
Alex Roy and co-driver Dan Zorrilla broke the eastbound Electric Cannonball Run record again, driving from the Portofino Inn to the Red Ball Garage in 50 hours and 16 minutes. Their drive took place December 28–31 of 2017. GPS data was captured using the GPS Tracks application, and video evidence was shared on YouTube. In July 2019 a family team of Robin Jedi Thomsen, and her parents Lars Thomsen and Betty Legler set a record of 48 hours 10 minutes driving westbound for in a
Tesla Model 3 Long Range between July 12 and 14, 2019. In August 2019, Kyle Conner and Matthew Davis set a record of 45 hours and 16 minutes driving westbound from New York City to Los Angeles in a
Tesla Model 3 Long Range which had been modified, including lowering the car for better aerodynamics. At the end of 2020, Kyle Conner, Drew Peterson and Tijmen Schreur lowered the EV record to 44:26 despite winter conditions in an
Out of Spec Motoring Porsche Taycan with the large battery, aerodynamic wheels, and massaging seats, using
Electrify America CCS chargers with up to 350 kW. In October 2021, the EV record was broken twice in the same rented 2021 Tesla Model S Long Range. The first drive, from Los Angeles to New York City, by Ryan Levenson and Will Wood, lowered the EV record to 42:52. The second drive occurred on October 22, 2021, leaving from the Red Ball Garage in Manhattan at 11:00 am and arriving at the Portifino Inn in Redondo Beach, CA 42 hours, 17 minutes later. The second drive was piloted by a driver team of Ryan Levenson and Josh Allan. The only modification made to the stock Tesla was to replace the factory 21-inch wheels with the more efficient Tesla 19-inch wheels and to over-inflate the tire pressure to for the second drive. In April 2023, Kyle Conner attempted another record with the Out of Spec Motoring team, using a
Lucid Air. The trip took 44 hours 32 minutes, which did not set a new record. However, their lead car
Polestar 1, driven by Alyssa Zupan, set a new
plug-in hybrid record with 45 hours and 38 minutes. In October 2024, Kyle Conner, Tijmen Schreur and Drew Peterson broke the record driving a 2025
Porsche Taycan in 39 hours 29 minutes. They became familiar with the car’s charging curve the week before after the car was the first EV to reach the finish point in a cross-country EV contest from
Seattle,
Washington to
Boston,
Massachusetts named the "I-90 Surge" and involving nine EVs and a comparable ICE vehicle.
Electric motorcycle records In April 2022, Steven Day set a record of 111 hours driving the route with a 2022 Energica EVA Ribelle. He drove the route in reverse, from Redondo Beach to New York City.
Semi-automated vehicle record In April 2015, the first coast-to-coast semi-automated record was set by employees of Delphi. Delphi engineers covered ,
San Francisco to
New York City, over a span of nine days. In October 2015,
Carl J. Reese, Deena Mastracci, and
Alex Roy set a new coast-to-coast record using
Tesla's new
Autopilot function. The trio made the journey in 57 hours, 48 minutes after departing from
Redondo Beach, California on October 18 at 9:15 p.m. PST, and arriving at Red Ball Garage in
New York on October 21 at 10:03 a.m. EST. The trip was completed with fewer than 14 hours of charging and 96 percent of the driving done by
Tesla's Autopilot system. This record was a first outside of manufacture testing, proving that automated systems can deliver people coast to coast safely in record time. In August 2016, the semi-automated (
SAE level 2) driving record at 55 hours was set during the electric cross-country record run by Franz Aliquo, Warren Ahner, and Alex Roy in a
Tesla Model S 90D, whose "
Autopilot" function was engaged 97.7% of the way. In April 2024, a new semi-automated record was set by Jay Roberts and his wife Gypsy Roberts in a
2017 Prius. The car was fitted with a Comma.ai driver assistance system which ran
openpilot. The drive took 43 hours and 18 minutes and was 98.4% autonomous. In April 2025, Jay Roberts and Gypsy Roberts would lower the record to an even 38 hours. The drive was done with 99.125% autonomy. ==Cannonball record progression==