
Toyota Gazoo Racing is taking another significant step in its hydrogen mobility journey with the public debut of the new TR LH2 Racing Prototype at the 2026 24 Hours of Le Mans.
The liquid hydrogen-fueled prototype will complete demonstration laps at the legendary Circuit de la Sarthe, showcasing Toyota’s latest progress in hydrogen combustion technology and its broader vision for carbon-neutral motorsport.
The TR LH2 Racing Prototype represents the latest evolution of Toyota’s hydrogen racing program, building on years of development in both circuit racing and rally competition. Rather than being a race entry, the vehicle serves as a dedicated technology development platform designed to test hydrogen-powered performance under the demanding conditions of endurance racing.
Hydrogen Technology Takes Center Stage at Le Mans
Toyota will conduct the first public demonstration drives of the TR LH2 Racing Prototype during Le Mans week. The vehicle is scheduled to complete demonstration laps of the 13.626-kilometer Circuit de la Sarthe on June 11 and June 13, giving fans an opportunity to experience the sound and character of a hydrogen combustion engine in action.
The prototype is powered by a liquid hydrogen fuel system paired with an internal combustion engine specifically engineered to run on hydrogen. While Toyota has not disclosed detailed performance specifications, the project’s primary goal is technology validation rather than outright lap times.
By testing hydrogen combustion in one of motorsport’s most challenging environments, Toyota aims to demonstrate that alternative fuels can deliver the excitement and endurance capabilities traditionally associated with racing while contributing to long-term decarbonization efforts.
Based on Toyota’s Hypercar Platform
The TR LH2 Racing Prototype is built on the same chassis architecture as Toyota’s current Hypercar program. Sharing its foundation with the race-winning endurance platform allows engineers to evaluate how hydrogen systems perform under sustained high-speed operation, long-distance running, and race-like stress conditions.
The car also continues the development path established by Toyota’s hydrogen racing concepts. In 2023, the company unveiled the GR H2 Racing Concept at Le Mans as a vision for a future hydrogen category in endurance racing. That effort evolved into the liquid hydrogen-powered GR LH2 Racing Concept, which debuted at Le Mans in 2025. The new TR LH2 Racing Prototype now serves as the next major milestone in bringing the technology closer to real-world motorsport applications.
Years of Hydrogen Development
Toyota’s hydrogen motorsport journey began in 2021 when Rookie Racing entered the Japanese Super Taikyu Series with the ORC ROOKIE GR Corolla H2 Concept powered by gaseous hydrogen. The program later transitioned to liquid hydrogen fuel, expanding Toyota’s understanding of storage, refueling, and performance characteristics.
The company has also explored hydrogen technology in rallying. The GR Yaris H2 completed demonstration runs during the Ypres Rally in 2022, while the GR Yaris Rally2 H2 Concept has since appeared at major international rally events, helping advance hydrogen combustion technology across different motorsport disciplines.
Each project has contributed valuable data that is now being applied to the TR LH2 Racing Prototype.
Supporting the Future Hydrogen Ecosystem
Toyota emphasizes that the future success of hydrogen mobility depends on more than vehicle technology alone. Fuel production, storage, transportation, and refueling infrastructure must also evolve to support widespread adoption.
Motorsport provides a unique environment for accelerating that development. By pushing hydrogen systems to operate under extreme conditions, manufacturers, suppliers, and infrastructure partners can identify challenges and develop solutions more quickly than would be possible through conventional road vehicle testing alone.
The TR LH2 Racing Prototype will be displayed in Le Mans’ Hydrogen Village before its demonstration runs, allowing visitors to learn more about Toyota’s hydrogen initiatives and the role the technology could play in achieving a carbon-neutral future.
Toyota’s Multi-Pathway Strategy
The Le Mans debut of the TR LH2 Racing Prototype highlights Toyota’s commitment to what it calls a “multi-pathway” approach to reducing emissions. Rather than relying on a single technology, the company continues to invest in battery-electric vehicles, hybrids, hydrogen fuel cells, and hydrogen combustion engines.
Toyota believes different technologies will be suited to different applications, markets, and customer needs. Through motorsport, the company can accelerate development while showcasing potential future solutions in one of the most visible arenas in the automotive world.
As the TR LH2 Racing Prototype takes to the Circuit de la Sarthe, Toyota is sending a clear message that hydrogen combustion remains an important part of the conversation about the future of performance vehicles and sustainable motorsport.





