Looking at the Hypercar entry list for the 2025 FIA World Endurance Championship, several things stand out. Aston Martin’s Valkyries have finally arrived, Lamborghini’s SC63 is nowhere to be seen, and Cadillac’s effort has expanded.

However, the biggest change comes in the driver columns. With the majority of the cars in the field now established and improving only via incremental updates, the factory teams are beginning to get creative in pursuit of podiums, race wins and of course, titles.

Some drivers have stepped away, and others have shifted teams or cars within the same team. Factories are also beginning to experiment with smaller, two-driver crews for the full season, exploring the potential performance benefits that consolidating your roster can bring.

Just two of the works teams head into the campaign with identical full-season driver line-ups, reigning Hypercar manufacturer’s champion Toyota and double Le Mans winner Ferrari. And both hope it’s a strategy that will pay off come the end of the season in November.

At Ferrari, in particular, the upcoming season brings with it so much promise. With stability in its driver roster and some key updates focused on reliability for its challenger, this could be the year when it all comes together.

The aims are clear for the new season: win Le Mans for a third straight year and put together a title-winning campaign with its two fac tory cars. Through 2023 and ’24, speed has been there; what was missing was consistency and standout results outside of the “main event” in France for the works-entered 499Ps.