Skip to content
Loading race information...
  • Official Site Of NASCAR
      • Live
        • Live Leaderboard
        • Live Odds
        • Scanner Audio
        • Scanner Audio
        • Fantasy Live
        • 36 For 36
    • Home
    • News
    • Schedule
    • Standings
    • Results
    • Entry List
    • Fantasy
    • NASCAR Channel
    • More
      • Drivers
      • Teams
      • Fan Rewards
      • Podcasts
      • International
      • Regional
      • NASCAR Classics
      • eNASCAR
      • Shop
      • Racing Reference
      • Jayski
      • Tickets
      • Shop
Chase Elliott looks on.
BACK TO GALLERIES

Chase Elliott through the years

By Staff Report | Published: December 17, 2025 57
Christian Petersen | Getty Images
BACK TO GALLERIES

1 of 57

Sean Gardner | Getty Images

Chase Elliott has had quite a rise up the NASCAR ladder. The following is a look through Elliott's life in NASCAR, including some classic shots of him with Hall of Famers, like dad Bill Elliott and Dale Earnhardt.

2 of 57

Twitter

From a young age, Chase Elliott was a fixture at NASCAR race tracks around the country, often seen with his racing father "Awesome Bill" Elliott. Here, he's pictured in the lap of the legendary Dale Earnhardt.

3 of 57

Jamie Squire | Getty Images

2002: Young Chase Elliott made another race track cameo with father Bill before the Pennsylvania 500 at Pocono Raceway on July 28.

4 of 57

Jonathan Ferrey | Getty Images

2002: The future racer got an early taste of Victory Lane, celebrating with his father in the legendary Indianapolis Motor Speedway Victory Lane after the elder Elliott's 2002 Brickyard 400 win.

5 of 57

Sara D. Davis | Getty Images for NASCAR

2011: Chase Elliott began racing in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East at the age of 15, making his first start in the series on April 2, at Greenville-Pickens Speedway. He finished fourth in his K&N debut.

6 of 57

Jamie Squire | Getty Images

2012: Chase Elliott earned his first K&N Pro Series win on May 19, when he beat future fellow NASCAR Cup Series driver Ryan Blaney to the start-finish line by .844 seconds at Iowa Speedway.

7 of 57

Rainier Ehrhardt | Getty Images

2013: His racing career on the upswing, Chase Elliott was named as part of the NASCAR Next class in 2013. His classmates included Ryan Blaney, Kyle Larson, Bubba Wallace and Daniel Suarez (all pictured here).

8 of 57

Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

2013: Chase Elliott began competing in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series on a part-time schedule in 2013, making his series debut at Martinsville Speedway on April 6. He only raced one part-time season in the series, driving the No. 94 Chevrolet.

9 of 57

Geoff Burke | Getty Images

2013: Chase Elliott earned his first NASCAR Camping World Truck Series victory on Sept. 1 at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park, leading 22 of 64 laps around the road course and making contact with Ty Dillon at the finish.

10 of 57

Robert Laberge | Getty Images

2014: Before the start of the 2014 season, JR Motorsports announced Chase Elliott would drive the No. 9 Chevrolet for the Dale Earnhardt Jr.-owned team in the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

11 of 57

Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

2014: It didn't take Chase Elliott long to start tallying wins; he drove the No. 9 JR Motorsports Chevrolet to Victory Lane on April 4 at Texas Motor Speedway. It was just his sixth series start.

12 of 57

Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

2014: Chase Elliott's rookie year in the Xfinity Series also marked his first major series NASCAR championship. Having won three times that year, Elliott did the infamous yellow burnouts at Homestead-Miami Speedway after securing the title for JR Motorsports, the team's first Xfinity championship.

13 of 57

Bob Leverone | Getty Images

2015: Before the start of the 2015 season, Hendrick Motorsports announced veteran driver Jeff Gordon would retire after the 2015 season and Chase Elliott would take his place as the driver of the legendary No. 24 Chevrolet beginning in 2016.

14 of 57

Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

2015: The 2015 NASCAR Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony at the NASCAR Hall of Fame on Jan. 30 was a family affair, as Chase Elliott's father, Bill, was inducted into the 2015 class.

15 of 57

Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

2015: To prepare for his full-time stint in the No. 24 ride, Chase Elliott made five NASCAR Cup Series starts in the No. 25 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet in 2015. His best result came at Richmond Raceway, when he finished 16th.

16 of 57

Chris Trotman | Getty Images

2015: Chase Elliott earned the 2015 Most Popular Driver award in the NASCAR Xfinity Series at the end-of-season banquet. His JR Motorsports team owner Dale Earnhardt Jr. also earned the award in the NASCAR Cup Series.

17 of 57

Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

2016: Chase Elliott and crew chief Alan Gustafson kicked off his rookie season with a bang, earning the season-opening pole award at Daytona International Speedway on Feb. 14. Elliott, who became the youngest Daytona 500 pole winner in series history, drove the No. 24 Chevrolet at 196.314 mph to secure the top spot for "The Great American Race."

18 of 57

Jonathan Ferrey | Getty Images

2016: Chase Elliott's father, Bill, was in attendance for his son's first NASCAR Cup Series pole at Daytona International Speedway. The elder Elliott still holds the record for fastest qualifying speed at the Florida track, having reached 210.364 mph during 1987 qualifying for the Daytona 500.

19 of 57

Sean Gardner | Getty Images

2016: Inching closer and closer to Victory Lane, Chase Elliott earned his first runner-up result in the FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway on June 11, leading 35 laps around the 2-mile track. He would notch another runner-up finish at the 2-mile track on Aug. 28.

20 of 57

Matt Sullivan | Getty Images

2016: In preparation for his road course debut at Sonoma Raceway on June 26, Chase Elliott ran the K&N West Series race to gain experience -- and took home the checkered flag in the process.

21 of 57

Patrick Smith | Getty Images

2016: Chase Elliott took home Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors for the season beating out fellow rookies Ryan Blaney and Chris Buescher for the award. On the season, Elliott notched 10 top fives, 17 top 10s and led 358 laps, while making the postseason field.

22 of 57

Getty Images

2017: Chase Elliott opened his second full-time season the same way he began his rookie campaign, with the Daytona 500 pole. The Georgia native became the fifth driver to win consecutive Daytona 500 poles -- joining Fireball Roberts, Buddy Baker, Bill Elliott (his dad) and Ken Schrader in that exclusive club.

23 of 57

Chris Trotman | Getty Images

2017: His third career NASCAR Cup Series start at Michigan International Speedway yielded a runner-up result in June. That made it three starts, three second-place finishes for Chase Elliott at Michigan.

24 of 57

Courtesy of Hendrick Motorsports

2017: In August 2017, Hendrick Motorsports announced Chase Elliott would drive the No. 9 in 2018. The number was famously driven by his father, Bill Elliott.

25 of 57

Sarah Crabill | Getty Images

2017: The sophomore driver made his second career appearance in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs after 14 top-10 finishes in the 26-race regular season. Chase Elliott's Hendrick Motorsports teammates Jimmie Johnson (left) and Kasey Kahne (right) also advanced.

26 of 57

Robert Laberge | Getty Images

2017: Chase Elliott came very close to his first NASCAR Cup Series win again toward the end of the season at Phoenix Raceway. The then-21-year-old was racing for the fourth spot in the Championship 4 season finale and was leading until Matt Kenseth passed him with nine laps remaining, foiling his chance at a remarkable first victory.

27 of 57

David Becker | Getty Images

2017: Chase Elliott finished the season in fifth place and celebrated during Champion's Week at Las Vegas.

28 of 57

Getty Images

2018: After eight runner-up finishes, Chase Elliott finally broke through. He held off defending race winner Martin Truex Jr. by 7.56 seconds at Watkins Glen International as the No. 78 ran short of fuel on the final lap. Elliott led 52 of the race's 90 laps en route to his first win in his 99th career start in NASCAR's premier series.

29 of 57

Getty Images

2018: Let the celebration begin!

30 of 57

Getty Images

2018: Chase Elliott won his second career NASCAR Cup Series race on Oct. 7 at Dover Motor Speedway.

31 of 57

Getty Images

2018: When Elliott couldn't quite knock off wins in years past, he was known for saying, "I hate it for my guys." It was appropriate to see him celebrate with his No. 9 Chevrolet teammates at Dover Motor Speedway.

32 of 57

Chris Graythen | Getty Images

2018: Make it three! Elliott's win at Kansas Speedway in the 2018 Playoffs gave him a trio of wins for the season.

33 of 57

David Becker | Getty Images

2018: Chase Elliott takes over the Most Popular Driver mantle from Dale Earnhardt Jr. as he officially wins the award during Champion's Week in Las Vegas.

34 of 57

Sean Gardner | Getty Images

2019: Chase Elliott navigated treacherous Talladega Superspeedway beautifully, winning his first superspeedway race at NASCAR's top level on April 28.

35 of 57

Sean Gardner | Getty Images

2019: Chase Elliott returned to the scene of his first NASCAR Cup Series win -- Watkins Glen -- and won it again on Aug. 4. The No. 9 Chevrolet led 80 (of 90) laps on the day and held off veteran Martin Truex Jr. in a spirited final laps battle -- just like last year. Elliott also scored an additional road win at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval.

36 of 57

Brian Lawdermilk | Getty Images

2019: Chase Elliott overcame a "heartbreak turn" mishap just past the halfway point of the race to capture a playoff win at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval.

37 of 57

Chris Graythen | Getty Images

2019: For the second year in a row, Chase Elliott won the 2019 Most Popular Driver at the NASCAR Awards. He would also win the award in 2020.

38 of 57

Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

2020: Chase Elliott captured the "Busch bounty" and performed Kyle Busch's signature bow after beating him in a Camping World Truck Series event at Charlotte Motor Speedway. The $100K reward (put up by Camping World CEO Marcus Lemonis and NASCAR Cup Series star Kevin Harvick) goes to a COVID-19 relief effort of Elliott's choosing. The win came days after Elliott and Busch had a run-in at Darlington Raceway in the closing laps of a Cup race while battling in the top three.

39 of 57

Chris Graythen | Getty Images

2020: Chase Elliott won the Alsco Uniforms 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, NASCAR's fourth Cup Series race back after the COVID-19 outbreak paused on-track activity. The victory came four days after Elliott finished runner-up in the Coca-Cola 600 -- a Sunday to Thursday turn. It also marked his first 2020 win in the top ranks, securing him a spot in the NASCAR Playoffs.

40 of 57

Brian Lawdermilk | Getty Images

2020: Chase Elliott earned his way into the Championship 4 with his win in the Round of 8 cutoff race at Martinsville Speedway. This marked the first time Elliott has reached the Championship 4.

41 of 57

Chris Graythen | Getty Images

2020: Chase Elliott won the Championship 4 finale at Phoenix Raceway to earn his first career NASCAR Cup Series championship.

42 of 57

Chris Graythen | Getty Images

2021: Chase Elliott's win in the first NASCAR Cup Series race at Circuit of The Americas was a milestone for two reasons. It marked the 800th Cup win for Chevrolet and also saw Hendrick Motorsports tie Petty Enterprises for the most Cup wins -- a mark that would be broken a week later by Hendrick.

43 of 57

James Gilbert | Getty Images

2021: Elliott continued his mastery of road courses by scoring a victory in the Cup Series' return to Road America. The victory was his seventh on a road course out of 13 Cup wins to date). He reached the Championship 4 for the second straight year but did not successfully defend his title.

44 of 57

Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

2021: For the fourth straight year, Elliott won the NMPA Most Popular Driver Award at the season-ending awards show.

45 of 57

James Gilbert | Getty Images

2022: Chase Elliott's third win of the year was a special one, claiming his 16th career win and first at his home track of EchoPark Speedway (formerly Atlanta Motor Speedway). With his triumph, in which he led 96 of 260 laps, the Elliotts join the Earnhardts and Jarretts as father-son duos to win at the Georgia facility.

46 of 57

Chris Graythen | Getty Images

2022: Elliott clinched the Regular Season Championship at Watkins Glen International in August, finishing fourth in the race after leading 29 laps.

47 of 57

Sean Gardner | Getty Images

2022: Elliott earned his second win at Talladega Superspeedway in the second round of the NASCAR Playoffs, tying his single-season mark for victories in the Cup Series with five. The bar of five wins stood as the season-high for any driver in the premier series.

48 of 57

Chris Graythen | Getty Images

2022: Elliott and longtime crew chief Alan Gustafson ended the season with a third consecutive trip to the Championship 4 and third straight season of leading 850 or more laps.

49 of 57

Chris Graythen | Getty Images

2022: Elliott was named the NMPA Most Popular Driver in December, earning the honor as fan favorite for the fifth consecutive year.

50 of 57

Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

2023: Elliott competed in each of the first two races this season but missed the next six weeks due to a broken left leg suffered while snowboarding. Elliott returned at Martinsville Speedway and finished inside the top 10. 

51 of 57

Sean Gardner | Getty Images

2023: Elliott concluded the Cup Series season with a 17th-place finish in the final standings. Although he missed out on the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs title hunt, Elliott did take home his sixth consecutive National Motorsports Press Association (NMPA) Most Popular Driver Award. 

52 of 57

Chris Graythen | Getty Images

2024: Elliott ended a 42-race winless drought at Texas Motor Speedway. He led 39 laps in a thriller and executed final restarts to perfection in NASCAR Overtime before the event ended under caution. 

53 of 57

Getty Images

2024: Elliott ended the year with a strong performance in his return to the Cup Series Playoffs, scoring top tens in seven of the final 10 races. While the No. 9 driver missed out on a chance to compete in the Championship 4, he proved he is still a top contender. 

54 of 57

Sean Gardner | Getty Images

2025: A new campaign brought about a fresh start for every Cup Series team. However, no team -- or driver -- started off as well as Chase Elliott, who wheeled his No. 9 Chevy to victory in the Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium. 

55 of 57

Sean Gardner | Getty Images

2025: Elliott scored his first points-paying victory of the campaign in front of his hometown crowd at EchoPark Speedway (formerly Atlanta Motor Speedway). The win was the 20th of his career, breaking a 44-race winless streak and punching his playoff ticket for the second year in a row. 

56 of 57

Chris Graythen | Getty Images

2025: Elliott advanced to the Cup Series Playoffs Round of 8 in dramatic fashion after powering his way to Victory Lane in the fall race at Kansas Speedway. The No. 9 pilot capitalized on last-lap contact between Toyota drivers Denny Hamlin and Bubba Wallace to wheel past the pair, clinching the race win. 

57 of 57

Christian Petersen | Getty Images

2025: For first time since the 2022 season, Elliott had a multi-win season. The Hendrick driver secured a playoff berth after winning a summer thriller under the lights at his home track, EchoPark Speedway. Then, Elliott made a deep playoff run into the Round of 8 after winning the Kansas fall race, finishing eighth in the final standings. The Dawsonville, Georgia native also captured his eighth consecutive NMPA Most Popular Driver Award.

nascar.com homepage
  • FACEBOOK

  • X

  • INSTAGRAM

  • SNAPCHAT

  • TIKTOK

  • YOUTUBE

  • DISCORD

  • HELP/SUPPORT
  • Contact Us
  • Updated Terms of Use
  • Updated Privacy Statement
  • Accessibility
  • Suppliers
  • Site Map
  • Cookie Settings
  • AdChoicesAd Choices Icon
  • Do Not Sell / Share My Information
  • INFORMATION
  • About NASCAR
  • Careers
  • Official Partners
  • NDM Advertising
  • Sponsorships
  • PRODUCTS
  • Fantasy
  • Scanner
  • Mobile Apps
  • Follow Live
  • NASCAR Classics
  • NASCAR Shop
  • INITIATIVES
  • NASCAR IMPACT
  • NASCAR MilTix
  • NASCAR Foundation
  • NASCAR Fan Council
  • NASCAR Fan Rewards Terms
  • NASCAR Fan Rewards FAQs
  • MORE SITES
  • IMSA
  • ARCA
  • FloRacing
  • eNASCAR
  • NASCAR International
  • NASCAR Hall of Fame
  • Credit One
  • Historic Sportscar Racing

NASCAR® and its marks are trademarks of the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, LLC. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

Copyright © 2026 NASCAR Digital Media, LLC. All rights reserved.

Home
Schedule
Results
Standings
More