
Here is our comprehensive guide to 2026 Dakar Rally categories, explaining each discipline and the drivers and riders to look out for across the two-week endurance classic.
The 48th edition of the event is set to ignite the deserts of Saudi Arabia from January 3 to 17, drawing over 800 competitors from 69 nationalities across 431 vehicles in a grueling test of speed, strategy, and survival.
As the seventh edition hosted in the Kingdom and the opening round of the FIA-FIM World Rally-Raid Championship (W2RC), the 2026 Dakar Rally features a Prologue followed by 13 competitive stages.
We take a deep dive into all categories spanning high-tech prototypes, stock vehicles, lightweight challengers, side-by-sides, motorcycles, massive trucks, historic classics, and innovative zero-emission machines.
T1 Ultimate
In the T1 Ultimate category, high-performance cross-country vehicles including 4×4 and 4×2 prototypes dominate with 73 entries poised for outright victory, blending cutting-edge engineering and driver prowess across the rally’s punishing terrain.
Yazeed Al-Rajhi, the first Saudi to win on home soil, enters as the title defender with Toyota Gazoo Racing, his resilience tested by recovery from last year’s high-speed incident that sidelined him mid-event, yet his intimate knowledge of Saudi dunes positions him as a frontrunner.
Ford Performance counters with its V8-powered Raptor T1+, entrusting former Dakar winner Carlos Sainz and teammate Mattias Ekström to challenge for supremacy.

Sainz, with his four overall car victories, brings tactical brilliance honed from rally legends like Paris-Dakar eras, while Ekström’s versatile speed from rallycross adds unpredictability to their assault.
Dacia Sandriders fields a powerhouse duo in five-time Dakar champion Nasser Al-Attiyah and Sébastien Loeb, where Al-Attiyah’s unmatched desert intuition—bolstered by recent W2RC successes—pairs with Loeb’s nine WRC titles for a blend of raw power and precision.
Other notables include Toyota’s consistent performers like Lucas Moraes and Guillaume de Mevius, who could exploit any mechanical misfortunes among the leaders, ensuring the T1 Ultimate class remains a chess match of pace notes, tire management, and dune navigation.
T2 Stock
The T2 Stock category features production-based cross-country vehicles with minimal modifications which offer a purer test of reliability, now energized by recent regulatory tweaks allowing performance enhancements that have drawn fresh contenders into the fray.

British manufacturer Land Rover debuts three Defenders, spearheaded by 14-time Dakar winner Stéphane Peterhansel, whose transition from Audi prototypes to this stock class leverages his encyclopedic rally experience for potential dominance despite the category’s emphasis on durability over outright speed.
Peterhansel’s teammates Rokas Baciuška and Sara Price bolster the effort, with Baciuška’s recent T3 successes signaling adaptability, while Price’s growing reputation in off-road circles promises breakout performances amid the eight entries.
These stock machines, limited to series-production engines and chassis, face the same brutal stages as their Ultimate counterparts but reward meticulous preparation, positioning Peterhansel as the veteran to watch for a record-extending triumph.
T3 Challenger
The T3 Challenger class elevates lightweight prototypes designed exclusively for off-road savagery, with 38 entries embodying agility and innovation in a division that has exploded in competitiveness.
These sub-2,000kg prototypes with sequential gearboxes and turbo engines duel over rocky wadis and endless sands, occasionally outpacing heavier rivals in twisty sectors.

Saudi star Dania Akeel commands attention as she enters a Taurus T3 Max with navigator Sébastien Delaunay to chase category glory on home soil. Her blistering pace yielded third in the 2025 FIA World Rally-Raid Championship, a win at the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge, and a Dakar stage victory last year, .
Puck Klaassen and Augusto Sanz in their GRally entry, alongside Pim Klaassen’s Dutch challenge, Bruno Saby’s WRC pedigree, and Kevin Benavides’ transition from bikes to Taurus, while Stéphane Sarrazin’s F1 and Le Mans background adds elite crossover appeal.
T4 SSV (Side-by-side vehicles)
Side-by-side vehicles in the T4 SSV category are nearly production-based with rally-tuned modifications, distinguished from the more prototype T3 Challenger class by being closer to stock.
A total of 43 near-production machines will compete at the 2026 Dakar Rally, delivering door-to-door action in a fan-favorite division blending accessibility and ferocity.

Francisco “Chaleco” López Contardo, a two-decade Dakar veteran and multiple South American-era standout, returns in Can-Am’s Maverick R, his dune mastery and endurance primed for resurgence against a stacked grid.
Factory Can-Am’s João Monteiro, Kyle Chaney, and Hunter Miller will face-off against Polaris led by World Rallycross champion Johan Kristoffersson in the RZR Pro R Factory, with his co-driver Ola Fløene bringing WRC navigation savvy.
Motorcycles (Bikes)
Motorcycles claim 118 FIM entries, segmented into RallyGP for factory professionals, Rally2 for semi-pros, and Original by Motul for self-reliant adventurers, forming the rally’s heartbeat with raw rider skill.
Australian Daniel Sanders “Chucky” of Red Bull KTM Factory Racing dominated 2025 after a stellar rookie year, with his fluid style and stage-win tally marking him as the overall favorite across the prologue and marathons.

Hero MotoSports counters with 2024 FIM World Rally-Raid Champion Ross Branch whose near-podium in 2025 ended in a crash, alongside Nacho Cornejo who claimed nine stage wins and seventh overall, plus Tobias Ebster’s Rally2 push.
T5 Trucks
Trucks in T5 split into T5.1 competition beasts which are both prototype and production-based, modified for the race, and T5.2 assistance giants providing logistical and mechanical support during the rally.

A total of 46 entries will be rumbling as rolling fortresses across the 2026 Dakar Rally. Czech ace Martin Macík hunts a third straight win in his MM Technology EVO 4 “Louis,” its FPT 13-liter engine under nine tons primed for hat-trick history alongside only two prior legends.
Dakar Classic
Dakar Classic revives nostalgia with 97 historic vehicles—75 cars, 22 trucks—from 1980s-’90s up to 2005 registrations, run as regularity rallies over 4,292 km.
This category uses a regularity rally format, focusing on consistency rather than outright speed.

Groups H1-H4 tier by average speeds, accommodating low-power leaf-spring relics to high-rev period C machines, drawing 211 competitors including 18 women from 26 nations in a sentimental counterpoint to modern fury.
Mission 1000
Returning for a third year, Mission 1000 features vehicles using alternative or zero-emission propulsion systems.
A total of seven electric bikes and one hydrogen-biodiesel hybrid truck will tackle 1,071 km across 13 shortened stages, scoring on reliability (100% route completion), launch control sprints, and fan votes for sustainable futures.
READ MORE:
Dakar Rally 2026 schedule: Full route and stages
The Ultimate Endurance Test :Dakar’s 48-hour Chrono Stage explained






