curated by GRRL! updated: February 25, 2026

Bio Excerpt: Lotte van Drunen made history in 2024 when she became the youngest FIM Women’s Motocross World Champion ever at just seventeen years old. The Dutch rider dominated her rookie WMX season with calculated aggression and veteran-level composure, claiming the red plate early and never letting go.... (full bio below ↓↓)

Lotte van Drunen

Motorcycle racer 

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Link to female motorsports racer Lotte van Drunen's Instagram account

I have no illusions at all and know that with my 16 years, 1.71 height and 57 kg. I am no match for most men in this class, but I still want to experience what it is like and how tough such a weekend will be.

Lotte's Details:

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Birthday:
Unknown
Birthplace:
Gorinchem, Netherlands
racing type:
Motorcycle racing
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racing status:
Pro
height:
171cm
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guilty pLEASURES:
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GRRL! Number:
GRRL-1064

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Lotte's full bio:

Lotte van Drunen made history as the youngest rider ever to win the FIM Women’s Motocross World Championship at just seventeen years old, shattering records and redefining what young women can achieve in motorsports.

EARLY YEARS

Born on August 9, 2007, in Gorinchem, Netherlands, Lotte van Drunen grew up in a country with a rich motocross tradition but limited pathways for women in the sport. She didn’t come from a racing dynasty or inherit a trust fund—just a fierce determination to ride and the guts to show up at tracks where she was usually the only girl. While most kids her age were figuring out TikTok, van Drunen was mastering bike control on dirt tracks, developing the technical precision and fearlessness that would later become her signature.

The Netherlands has produced plenty of motocross champions, but few started as young or climbed as fast as van Drunen. By the time she was in her early teens, she was already outpacing riders with years more experience, proving that talent and drive matter more than how long you’ve been around. Her early years weren’t about gentle encouragement and participation trophies—they were about showing up, getting dirty, and earning respect one lap at a time.

OTHER INTERESTS

EARLY SUCCESS

Van Drunen’s rookie season in the FIM Women’s Motocross World Championship in 2024 wasn’t just impressive—it was a masterclass in arrival. She didn’t ease into the series or spend a season learning the ropes. Instead, she grabbed the red plate early and wore it like she’d been born for it[1]. Racing against seasoned competitors who had years of World Championship experience, the seventeen-year-old Dutch rider demonstrated composure that belied her age, combining aggressive starts with smart, calculated racing.

Her 2024 campaign wasn’t without challenges. At Lommel, one of the most physically demanding tracks in motocross, van Drunen took on the MX2 class—racing against the men—to test herself and gain experience on the brutal sand track[2]. It was a gutsy move that showcased her ambition and refusal to stay comfortable. While most rookies would be content focusing solely on their championship battle, van Drunen sought out additional challenges, a pattern that would define her approach to racing.

When she clinched the 2024 FIM Women’s Motocross World Championship title, van Drunen became the youngest world champion in the series’ history[3]. She didn’t just win—she dominated with a maturity and consistency that made veteran riders take notice. It was the kind of rookie season that doesn’t happen often: complete, confident, and championship-winning.

NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENTS

  • 2024: Became the youngest FIM Women’s Motocross World Champion in history at age 17[3].
  • 2024: Competed in MX2 class at Lommel to gain experience racing against male competitors[2].
  • 2024: Held the red plate (championship leader’s designation) during her rookie WMX season[4].

INSPIRATIONS

REPUTATION

Van Drunen has earned a reputation as a rider who doesn’t back down from challenges or take the easy route. Her decision to race MX2 at Lommel—widely considered one of the most physically punishing tracks in the world—while simultaneously fighting for a world championship title demonstrated a hunger for competition that goes beyond winning trophies[2]. She’s known for strong starts and the ability to maintain pace under pressure, qualities that make her dangerous from gate drop to checkered flag.

In the paddock, she’s respected for her professionalism and focus. At an age when many athletes are still finding their voice, van Drunen has already established herself as someone who lets her riding do the talking. She’s backed by Fox Racing and Yamaha Racing, partnerships that reflect both her marketability and her potential for long-term success in the sport[5][6]. Her youth hasn’t been a liability—it’s been an asset, bringing fresh energy and a new generation of fans to women’s motocross.

What sets van Drunen apart isn’t just her speed—it’s her approach. She races with the calculated aggression of someone twice her age, making smart passes and avoiding the rookie mistakes that typically plague first-year riders. Her competitors quickly learned that her age meant nothing once the gate dropped. She’s the rider who made everyone else raise their game, the one who proved that the next generation of women’s motocross isn’t waiting their turn—they’re here now, and they’re fast.

FUTURE GOALS/PLANS

With a world championship already in hand before her eighteenth birthday, van Drunen’s future is wide open. The question isn’t whether she’ll continue to succeed, but how far she’ll push the boundaries of women’s motocross. Defending a world title is an entirely different challenge than winning one, and the 2025 season will test whether her rookie dominance was a flash or the beginning of a dynasty. Early indications suggest the latter—van Drunen has already claimed the 2025 WMX World Championship title, proving her 2024 success was no fluke[7].

Her willingness to compete in MX2 hints at broader ambitions. While she’s already at the top of women’s motocross, van Drunen has shown interest in continuing to test herself against male competitors, a path that could open new opportunities and push the conversation about women in motorsports into new territory. Whether she continues to dabble in mixed-gender competition or focuses on extending her dominance in WMX, she’s positioned to be a defining figure in women’s motocross for years to come.

Van Drunen represents something bigger than championships and podiums. She’s proof that young women don’t need to wait their turn or ease into success—they can show up, compete at the highest level, and win immediately. At seventeen, she became a world champion. At eighteen, she’s already defending that title successfully. What she does next will be worth watching, because if her first two seasons are any indication, she’s just getting started. The barriers that held back previous generations of female riders don’t seem to register with van Drunen—she simply sees tracks to conquer and titles to win, and so far, she’s been right every time.

References:

Interview: Lotte van Drunen on her WMX rookie season so far and having the red plate
Lotte van Drunen racing MX2 at Lommel
2024 FIM WMX World Champion Lotte van Drunen
Interview: Lotte van Drunen on her WMX rookie season so far and having the red plate
Lotte van Drunen – Fox Racing
Lotte van Drunen crowned 2025 WMX World Champion
Lotte van Drunen crowned 2025 WMX World Champion

(bio last updated: 2026-02-25T16:39:26.000Z)