For more than a century, the 24 Hours of Le Mans has been motorsport’s ultimate proving ground: a rolling laboratory where reputations are built, shattered, and occasionally resurrected at 200 mph. Porsche has made it a religion. Ferrari treats it like sacred art. Audi weaponized it. Toyota conquered it through sheer persistence. And yet, through more than 100 editions of the race, one massive corner of the global auto industry has remained conspicuously absent.
Until now.
Chery has signed a five-year agreement with the ACO to compete at Le Mans under its premium Exeed brand, marking the first time a Chinese manufacturer will take on the world’s most famous endurance race. It’s a milestone not just for Chery, but for China’s entire automotive industry—and a signal that the country’s ambitions now extend far beyond showrooms and sales charts.
Because if you want to be taken seriously as a carmaker, there’s no better place to earn your scars than motorsport. And there’s no harsher judge than Le Mans.
Motorsport: The Last Unclaimed Territory
Chinese manufacturers have spent the last two decades mastering volume, electrification, and global expansion. What they’ve largely avoided is racing—the messy, expensive, ego-bruising business of pushing machines past the edge in public. Motorsport has always been more than spectacle; it’s a marketing platform, a technical incubator, and a cultural statement rolled into one. And until now, China has sat that one out.
That’s why Exeed’s Le Mans entry matters. In a race that has hosted everyone from Jaguar and Bentley to Cadillac and Lamborghini, the absence of a Chinese badge has been glaring. Le Mans is where brands prove not just speed, but durability, engineering discipline, and institutional confidence. Showing up means you believe your engineers belong in the same conversation as the world’s best.
Chery clearly believes that now.
The Big Question: What’s Under the Bodywork?
Le Mans isn’t kind to newcomers, and it’s especially unforgiving to half-baked powertrains. Exeed’s current road-car lineup—SUVs and sedans with no GT sports cars in sight—offers little hint of what kind of race car will emerge. What we do know is that an entirely new machine will have to be developed, complete with an internal combustion engine capable of surviving 24 hours of flat-out abuse.
That’s where things get interesting.
Chery, like most Chinese manufacturers, has limited experience beyond four-cylinder engines. Six- and eight-cylinder powerplants are rare exceptions in China’s domestic market, making a Le Mans effort feel almost absurd on paper. Hybridization seems likely—both as a nod to modern endurance racing and a way to leverage China’s strength in electrification—but even that doesn’t solve the core issue: someone still has to build a serious combustion engine.
The smart money says Chery won’t do it alone. Outsourcing the engine to a specialized engineering firm would shortcut years of development pain and reduce the inevitable “childhood illnesses” that plague first-time race programs. It wouldn’t be unprecedented either—plenty of manufacturers have leaned on external expertise before claiming victories as their own.
Impossible Missions Have Precedent
If this all sounds unrealistic, history says otherwise. In the 1960s, Ford’s decision to take on Ferrari at Le Mans seemed laughable. Detroit muscle versus Italian racing aristocracy? We know how that turned out.
Exeed’s challenge may be even steeper. This isn’t just a new team—it’s a new motorsport culture learning endurance racing from scratch. But that’s exactly why the project feels significant. Le Mans has never been about comfort zones. It rewards obsession, resources, and the willingness to fail publicly until you don’t.
And Chery has resources in abundance.
Money, Scale, and a Replica of La Sarthe
Chery sold more than 2.5 million vehicles last year and remains China’s largest auto exporter. This isn’t a vanity startup throwing a logo on a race car—it’s a global manufacturing giant with the financial muscle to play the long game. That matters, because Le Mans success isn’t bought with a single check; it’s earned through years of testing, iteration, and heartbreak.
To underline its seriousness, the ACO agreement reportedly includes French consultants helping Chery build a Le Mans–style test track in Wuhu, where the company is headquartered. A replica of Circuit de la Sarthe on Chinese soil isn’t just symbolic—it’s a declaration of intent. Engineers and drivers training 365 days a year on a homegrown endurance circuit? That’s how racing programs mature.
More Than a Race Entry
Exeed’s Le Mans debut isn’t about trophies—at least not yet. It’s about credibility. About proving that Chinese manufacturers aren’t just fast learners in electrification and manufacturing scale, but capable of mastering the most unforgiving discipline in motorsport.
Le Mans doesn’t care how many cars you sell. It doesn’t care about market share or export numbers. It cares whether your machine can survive the night, the rain, and the relentless punishment of 5,000 kilometers at full tilt.
For the first time, China is ready to find out.
And whether Exeed finishes first or last, just showing up changes the conversation forever.
Source: Chery