Ryan Hunter-Reay, 2014 Indianapolis 500 winner and 2012 INDYCAR SERIES champion, will join the Arrow McLaren IndyCar Team for the 110th Running of the Indianapolis 500, completing the team’s four-car lineup for “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing.”

Hunter-Reay, 44, will drive the team’s No. 31 Chevrolet, joining full-time Arrow McLaren drivers Pato O’Ward, Nolan Siegel and Christian Lundgaard at Indianapolis Motor Speedway during the Month of May in 2026.

“This is an incredible opportunity in so many ways,” Hunter-Reay said. “I’d like to express my gratitude to Zak (Brown), Tony (Kanaan) and the rest of the Arrow McLaren management team for pursuing this partnership and making it a reality. It is an honor to represent and drive for one of the most iconic teams in motorsports history, an organization that spares no effort or resource in the pursuit of being at the pinnacle of the sport and of course, winning the Indy 500.

“After coming so agonizingly close to a shot at the win in last year’s ‘500,’ I am beyond primed and ready to make the absolute most of this partnership.”

Hunter-Reay joins the team with a wealth of experience and a proven championship pedigree, with 395 INDYCAR SERIES starts over 21 seasons, earning 18 victories and 47 podium finishes. His storied open-wheel career is highlighted by success at IMS, where he will attempt to qualify for his 18th Indy 500 start in May. The Floridian will be one of five active drivers competing who boast an INDYCAR SERIES championship and an Indy 500 victory alongside Scott Dixon, Josef Newgarden, Alex Palou and Will Power.

Arrow McLaren continues its tradition of running an additional distinguished driver in the iconic 500-mile race. In past years, two-time Formula One World Champion Fernando Alonso (2017, 2020), two-time Indy 500 winner Juan Pablo Montoya (2021, 2022), 2013 Indy 500 winner Tony Kanaan (2023) and two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Larson (2024, 2025) have all raced in papaya in the Indy 500 as one-off entries for the team.

Ryan Hunter-Reay

Hunter-Reay – nicknamed “Captain America” - captured ultimate success in Indy in 2014 (photo, above) in dramatic fashion. He claimed victory in the Indy 500 by just .600 of a second — the second-closest finish in the race’s storied history — holding off then three-time winner Helio Castroneves. The triumph came one year after nearly taking the checkered flag in 2013, when he led Laps 193-197 before finishing third behind Tony Kanaan, now Arrow McLaren’s team principal.

Hunter-Reay has continued to contend for a second win at Indy in recent years, including 2025 when he charged to the front of the field and led 48 laps after starting 24th on the grid, before a fuel issue hindered his run in the closing laps.

“Ryan is a great addition to the Arrow McLaren IndyCar Team and just who we want in that fourth car this coming May alongside Pato, Nolan and Christian,” Kanaan said. “He’s an Indy 500 champion – and if you look at our history at McLaren – that's the reason we field a fourth car, to have one more contender in the mix.

“He is a proven winner, and we know he will have a strong chance to win this historic event. Ryan is one of the best teammates I’ve ever had, and we’re very excited to get started with him and have him part of our team into next May.”

One of the most successful American open-wheel racing drivers over the past two decades, Hunter-Reay has also tallied multiple overall IMSA sports car wins, including the 12 Hours of Sebring and Petit Le Mans. He has been invited to the Race of Champions five times and has won two ESPY Driver of the Year awards (2013 and 2014).