curated by GRRL! updated: January 25, 2026

Bio Excerpt: Hannah McKillop built her co-driving career from the ground up, starting with navigational rallies before transitioning to stage rallying about a decade ago. The Northern Ireland native has logged over 70 rallies across British, European, and world championship events, competing in roughly 20 events per year... (full bio below ↓↓)

Hannah Mckillop

Rally racer

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I definitely see massive progress. It’s great to see so many female co-drivers in Europe and more and more in the UK.

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Hannah's Details:

nickname:
Hanny
Birthday:
March 23, 1994 (31)
Birthplace:
Ireland
racing type:
Rally racing
series:
team(s):
racing status:
Pro
height:
178cm
residence:
inspiration(s):
Josh Davison, Michael Davison, her father.
guilty pLEASURES:
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GRRL! Number:
GRRL-0293

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YouTube VIDS about Hannah:

Aoife Raftery Rally Onboard | Hannah Mckillop

Hannah's full bio:

(last updated January 24, 2026

Hannah McKillop is a Northern Ireland-born co-driver who’s logged over 70 rallies across British, European, and world championship events—including a debut at the 92nd Monte Carlo Rally that announced her arrival on rallying’s biggest stage.

EARLY YEARS

Born March 23, 1994, in Northern Ireland, Hannah McKillop attended her first rally at precisely two weeks old, strapped in alongside her mechanic father. “I attended my first rally at just two weeks old with my dad,” she’s said. “He is a mechanic and I spent my childhood in the garage with him watching and learning—in between ballet lessons! I have always loved the sport and have become more involved in it over the years, from the organisation to competing.”

That childhood was split between pink tutus and pace notes, garage floors and rally stages. Her father’s workshop became her earliest classroom, where she absorbed the language of motorsport—timing, mechanics, the rhythm of competition—long before she ever called out a single pace note herself. The juxtaposition is perfect: a little girl pirouetting her way through ballet recitals before heading home to a world of grease, engines, and stage times. Most kids grow up with one passion. McKillop grew up fluent in two.

She eventually traded the stage for the stages, but not immediately. It wasn’t until she met Josh Davison at 19—her now-husband and fellow co-driver—that the idea of competing herself took root. “The Scotland-based driver admits she had always wanted to compete in motorsport but only started after she met Josh, her now husband, 10 years ago at the age of 19,” she explained in a 2024 interview. “‘Josh is also a co-driver and taught me a lot from his experience. It helped me to get started.’” Josh didn’t just teach her the craft; he gave her permission to stop watching from the sidelines and start calling the notes herself.

OTHER INTERESTS

Beyond rallying, McKillop’s documented interests are minimal—at least publicly. There’s that childhood ballet background, which she references with a wink but no elaboration. No mention of hobbies, side hustles, or charitable work. If she has passions outside the car, she’s keeping them close. What’s clear is that rallying isn’t a part-time gig or a weekend diversion; it’s the center of gravity. When you’re competing in roughly 20 events a year and your husband and father-in-law are both in the same sport, there’s not a lot of room—or need—for extracurriculars.

EARLY SUCCESS

McKillop didn’t leap straight into stage rallying. She started smart: navigational events, the proving ground where timing, organisation, and precision matter as much as speed. “That was a great learning ground for timing and organisation,” she’s said, “now my heart lies with Stage Rallying and pace notes.” She won a few novice categories in those early navigational competitions—no specific dates or events documented, but enough to prove she had the instincts and discipline the job requires.

It was Josh and his father, Michael Davison, who encouraged her to make the leap from nav rallies to stage rallying. She trialled different forms of navigating about a decade ago, learning the ropes alongside two men who knew the sport inside out. The transition stuck. Over the years, she’s built a resume that spans national and European-level events, including the British Rally Championship, Scottish Rally Championship, British Historic Championship, and BTRDA. She competes in around 20 events a year—a schedule that would exhaust most people but seems to be exactly where McKillop thrives. By 2024, she was named one of Motorsport UK’s “Five to Watch,” a nod to her growing reputation and ambition.

NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENTS

  • 2024: Made her WRC debut as co-driver for Chris Ingram at the 92nd Monte Carlo Rally, one of the sport’s most prestigious and punishing events[1][2].
  • 2024: Named one of Motorsport UK’s “Five to Watch” for her rising profile and competitive ambitions[2].
  • 2025: Competed in the ADAC Opel Electric Rally Cup with Irish driver Aoife Raftery, finishing 8th overall in the opening round—her first experience in an electric rally car and her first event on German rally stages[3].
  • Career: Over 70 rallies competed across British, European, and world championship levels[1][6][7].

INSPIRATIONS

McKillop’s biggest influences are family. Her father introduced her to rallying before she could walk, and her husband taught her how to compete in it. Josh Davison didn’t just offer tips—he opened the door. Without him, she’s admitted, she might never have started. The Davison family—Josh and his father Michael—became her mentors, co-drivers, and rally family all at once. She’s co-piloted with both men, and while she jokes that “maybe two co-drivers in one car doesn’t work so well” when she and Josh team up, she’s also said she “really enjoyed” competing with Michael. “It’s always a lot of fun,” she’s noted, capturing the rare dynamic of a family that rallies together and somehow makes it work.

REPUTATION

McKillop’s reputation is built on calm, confidence, and adaptability. Ahead of her WRC debut at Monte Carlo, she approached the event with the kind of composure that belied her inexperience. “It made a huge difference and I approached the event calm and confident,” she said. “I felt completely at ease starting my first WRC event. Chris is a really talented driver, and he has such a natural ability to get to grips with a new car, new team, and new co-driver so quickly.”

That ability to slot into new partnerships—whether with Chris Ingram at Monte Carlo or Aoife Raftery in the electric Opel—suggests a co-driver who’s technically sharp and emotionally steady. In a role where trust and communication can make or break a stage, McKillop’s gotten positive coverage without the drama. She’s featured in podcasts, profiled by Motorsport UK, and covered in rally media as a driver to watch. No controversies. No feuds. Just steady progress and a growing list of events where she’s proven she belongs.

FUTURE GOALS/PLANS

McKillop’s ambitions are clear: more WRC, more ERC, more top-tier British Championship rounds. As of 2024, she stated her goal to compete in more world and European championship events, as well as the UK’s top rallies. In 2025, she’s continuing in the ADAC Opel Electric Rally Cup with Raftery, currently at the halfway point of her fifth season in competitive rallying. There’s no talk of retirement, no pivoting to commentary or team management. She’s still building, still competing, still adding stages to an already impressive tally. If her trajectory holds, McKillop’s name will keep appearing on entry lists for the events that matter—and she’ll keep calling the notes that get her drivers to the finish.

References:

Good News Monaco – Hannah McKillop Monte Carlo Rally Interview
Motorsport UK – Inside Revolution: Five to Watch in 2024
Opel Ireland – ADAC Opel Electric Rally Cup 2025
Jade Paveley Motorsport Podcast – Hannah McKillop Episode
eWRC Results – Hannah McKillop Co-Driver Profile
Motorsport Now Podcast – Hannah McKillop Interview
GetPodcast – Hannah McKillop Championship Co-Driver Feature