curated by GRRL! updated: January 28, 2026

Bio Excerpt: Leah Christine Pruett has built a career commanding 11,000-horsepower Top Fuel dragsters with the precision of a surgeon and the fearlessness of someone who clearly missed the memo about what’s supposed to be intimidating. Starting in Jr. Dragsters at eight, she methodically climbed the ladder through... (full bio below ↓↓)

Leah Pritchett

Drag racer

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Leah's Details:

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Birthday:
May 26, 1988 (37)
Birthplace:
Lake Havasu City, Arizona
racing type:
Drag racing
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racing status:
Pro
height:
175cm
residence:
Lake Havasu City, Arizona
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GRRL! Number:
GRRL-0642

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Leah's full bio:

(last updated 2026-01-26

Leah Pruett is a Top Fuel drag racer who commands 11,000 horsepower with the precision of a conductor and the guts of a gladiator—a woman who’s made her name piloting the fastest, most dangerous machines in motorsports while refusing to let anyone, including herself, stand in the way of building the life she wants.

EARLY YEARS

Born Leah Christine Pruett on May 26, 1988, in Redlands, California, to parents Ron and Linda Pruett, racing wasn’t just in her blood—it was the family business[1]. Her father was a drag racer, and her childhood playground was the track. By the time she turned eight, the legal age to race a Jr. Dragster, she was already behind the wheel of a five-horsepower Briggs & Stratton-powered machine, learning the rhythms of speed and precision that would define her career[2]. She grew up alongside her older sister Lindsey, and while other kids were playing with dolls, Leah was learning gear changes and throttle control in her dad’s repair shop[3].

After graduating from Redlands High School, she attended California State University, San Bernardino, where she earned a degree in communications[4]. But school was just the side hustle—her real education was happening at the strip, where she was methodically working her way through the drag racing ranks with a singular focus that would become her trademark.

OTHER INTERESTS

When she’s not strapped into a Top Fuel dragster doing 330 mph, Pruett is a woman who knows how to play as hard as she races. Her hobbies read like an adrenaline junkie’s bucket list: wake surfing, off-roading, snowboarding, volleyball, mountain biking, and archery[5]. She’s also a fitness enthusiast and an unabashed dog lover—because apparently, piloting an 11,000-horsepower missile down a quarter-mile strip isn’t enough of a workout. It’s a life lived at full throttle, even when the parachute’s deployed.

EARLY SUCCESS

Pruett made her NHRA Jr. Dragster debut in 1996, sporting the infamous pink rookie ribbon beneath her helmet—an image that would prove prophetic for a racer who’d spend her career disrupting expectations[6]. She methodically climbed the ladder, moving through various classes with the patience of someone who understood that fast doesn’t mean rushed. In 2010, she won the NHRA Hot Rod Heritage Racing Series championship in the Nostalgia Funny Car class[7], proving she could handle serious horsepower with style.

By 2011 and 2012, she was piloting a Pro Mod during the NHRA Pro Mod Drag Racing Series seasons[8], racking up three career wins in the category and building a reputation as a driver who wasn’t afraid of anything with wheels and an engine. She transitioned to professional Top Fuel in 2013[9], and in 2016, Bob Vandergriff Racing came calling with a Top Fuel ride that would change everything. That same year, she won her first Top Fuel event in Phoenix, beating Brittany Force in an all-female final round—the first in Top Fuel since 1982[10]. She finished seventh in points in 2016 with one win, then fifth in 2017 with four wins[11], announcing herself as a force nobody could ignore.

NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENTS

  • 2010: Won the NHRA Hot Rod Heritage Racing Series championship in Nostalgia Funny Car[12].
  • 2016: Won first Top Fuel event in Phoenix, defeating Brittany Force in the first all-female Top Fuel final round since 1982[13].
  • 2016: Joined Don Schumacher Racing and finished seventh in Top Fuel points with one win[14].
  • 2017: Finished fifth in Top Fuel points with four wins at the Winternationals, Chandler, Houston, and Brainerd[15].
  • 2018: Won the NHRA Factory Stock Showdown World Championship[16].
  • 2021: Joined Tony Stewart Racing[17].
  • 2021: Set an unofficial record with a 3.654-second pass at 331 mph during testing[18].
  • 2023: Finished third in the Top Fuel championship standings—the highest finish of her career—with two victories[19].
  • 2023: Finished runner-up in the Top Fuel championship before stepping aside to start a family with husband Tony Stewart[20].
  • Career: 11 career wins across multiple categories[21].

INSPIRATIONS

Pruett’s biggest inspiration was right in front of her growing up—her father, Ron Pruett, a drag racer who gave her both the tools and the permission to chase speed without apology[22]. Watching her dad work in the shop and compete at the track taught her that racing wasn’t just about going fast; it was about the discipline, the mechanics, and the grit required to do it right every single time. That foundation shaped her into a driver who respects the machine as much as she respects the craft.

REPUTATION

In the hypermasculine world of Top Fuel drag racing, Pruett has earned respect not by demanding it, but by delivering results that speak louder than any press release ever could. She’s known for her technical precision—a driver who understands the engineering behind the chaos and treats every pass like a symphony of controlled violence. Competitors know she’s not just fast; she’s smart, calculated, and unflinching under pressure. Standing at 5-foot-9 and weighing 130 pounds[23], she proves that piloting 11,000 horsepower has nothing to do with size and everything to do with skill and nerve.

Beyond the track, she’s become a vocal advocate for female racers, pushing the NHRA to create policies that address the unique challenges women face when balancing racing careers with family planning[24]. She’s not just racing; she’s actively working to make the sport more accessible and equitable for the women coming up behind her. That combination of fierce competitiveness and genuine advocacy has made her one of the most respected figures in NHRA, both in and out of the cockpit.

FUTURE GOALS/PLANS

After stepping aside in 2024 to focus on starting a family with husband Tony Stewart—whom she married after their engagement in March 2021[25]—Pruett welcomed their son, Dominic James Stewart, on November 16, 2024[26]. The new parents navigated the 2025 season from a different vantage point, with Stewart taking over driving duties in the TSR Top Fuel dragster while Pruett focused on motherhood. But retirement was never the plan—just a strategic pit stop.

In 2026, Pruett will return to NHRA Top Fuel competition, climbing back into the cockpit of the TSR Dodge//SRT Direct Connection Top Fuel dragster[27] while Stewart steps out of the seat. It’s a testament to their partnership—both personal and professional—and proof that Pruett’s racing story is far from over. She’s not just returning; she’s returning on her own terms, showing that you can be a champion, a wife, a mother, and a badass behind the wheel, all at the same time.

REFERENCES

[1] Who is Tony Stewart’s wife? Get to know more about Leah Pruett
[2] Women Drag Racers in History: Leah Pruett
[3] Leah Pruett’s Journey: From Repair Shop to Racing Star
[4] Gumout Partners With Leah Pritchett, Dote Racing Top Fuel Team
[5] Leah Pruett – NHRA Driver Bio
[6] Leah Pruett Celebrates 25th NHRA Anniversary
[7] Leah Pruett – Official Website Bio
[8] Leah Pruett Through the Years
[9] On her 33rd birthday, Leah Pruett celebrates her 25th year in drag racing
[10] Leah Pritchett wins first Top Fuel Wally in Phoenix
[11] Leah Pruett – Wikipedia
[12] Leah Pruett – NHRA Notable Achievements
[13] Leah Pruett – All-Female Final Round 2016
[14] In the Fast Lane with Leah Pruett
[15] Leah Pruett – 2017 Season Results
[16] Leah Pritchett 2018 Factory Stock Showdown Champion
[17] The Top Fuel Seat at Tony Stewart Racing Was Always Leah Pruett’s
[18] Leah Pritchett’s 11000hp Top Fuel Dragster testing
[19] Pruett stepping aside in 2024 to focus on starting a family
[20] Pruett’s exit from the cockpit was deliberate
[21] Leah Pruett Career Highlights
[22] Women Drag Racers in History: Leah Pruett – Father’s Influence
[23] Leah Pruett – Physical Stats
[24] Pruett: New policy should have ‘a positive impact on female racers’
[25] Tony Stewart Engaged To Pro Drag Racer Leah Pruett
[26] New parents Stewart and Pruett again navigating new roles
[27] Pruett returning to NHRA Top Fuel competition in 2026