curated by GRRL! updated: January 25, 2026

Bio Excerpt: Christina Orr-West has been terrorizing New Zealand race tracks since she was five years old, which means she’s been at this longer than most drivers get to dream about it. The Whakatāne native cut her teeth in Formula First at fifteen, then worked her way through... (full bio below ↓↓)

Christina Orr-West

Touring racer

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Christina's Socials:

Link to female motorsports racer Christina Orr-West's Instagram account

I started racing when I was five and as I don’t tell anyone how old I am, all I can say is that I’ve been racing a long time and still love every second

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Christina's Details:

nickname:
Crusher
Birthday:
February 11, 1987 (38)
Birthplace:
Whakatane, New Zealand
racing type:
Touring racing
series:
team(s):
racing status:
Pro
height:
173cm
residence:
Whakatane, New Zealand
inspiration(s):
guilty pLEASURES:
FOLLOWING:
FACTIOD:
GRRL! Number:
GRRL-0325

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YouTube VIDS about Christina:

Dayle ITM 6hr Race – Highland’s Park 2023 | Christina Orr-West

Christina's full bio:

(last updated January 24, 2026

Christina Orr-West is a New Zealand racing veteran who’s been behind the wheel since she was five years old, carving out a decades-long career across everything from formula cars to utes to GT endurance racing—and she’s still not done.

EARLY YEARS

Born November 2, 1987, in Whakatāne, New Zealand, Christina Orr-West started racing at an age when most kids are just learning to ride bikes[4]. She began at five, which means she’s been strapping into racing seats for over three decades now—longer than many professional drivers get in an entire career[4]. Whakatāne, a regional town on New Zealand’s North Island, provided the backdrop for her early motorsports education, though details about her family, schooling, and what initially sparked her interest in racing remain elusive. What’s clear is that she didn’t wait around to figure out if racing was her thing. She jumped in early and stayed in.

OTHER INTERESTS

If Christina has hobbies outside of motorsports, she’s kept them to herself. There’s no public record of other sports, creative pursuits, volunteer work, or side businesses. No mention of pets, collections, or what she does when she’s not at the track. For a driver with such a long career, the silence is notable—but maybe that’s the point. When you’ve been racing since kindergarten, maybe racing is the hobby.

EARLY SUCCESS

Christina’s documented racing career begins in 2002 with the NZ Formula First Championship, when she was around fifteen[1]. From there, she moved through the ranks: the Toyota Racing Series in 2006 with Mark Petch Motorsport, then into the BNT V8s in 2010, where she ran a full season of 23 races and finished 22nd overall[1]. In 2011, she competed in the BNT NZV8s, though results were modest[1]. Her first documented major result came in 2009 at the Bathurst 12 Hour Race, where she finished second in Class G—a significant achievement at one of the region’s most grueling endurance events[1]. It wasn’t a win, but it was a statement: she could run with the best, and she could do it for twelve hours straight.

NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENTS

  • 2009: 2nd place, Bathurst 12 Hour Race – Class G[1].
  • 2015: 3rd overall, SsangYong Actyon Ute Racing Series[1].
  • 2016: 2 wins, 6 podiums, 1 pole position, and 2 fastest laps in the SsangYong Actyon Ute Racing Series, driving a Mercedes-Benz 2.3 on Hankook tires across 23 races[1].
  • 2023: 2 wins and 11 podiums in the NZ South Island Endurance Series – Three Hour – Overall, driving a Mercedes-AMG GT4, finishing 6th overall with 152 points[1].
  • First woman to make history in an unspecified racing category, pioneering female participation in New Zealand motorsports[5].
  • 2024-25: Competing in the Toyota 86 Championship New Zealand with Dayle ITM Racing, car #55, in both the Masters Championship and overall points[2].

Orr-West’s career has been defined by versatility. She’s raced formula cars, V8s, utes, GT4 machinery, and spec series like the Toyota 86 Championship[1][2]. Her 2016 season in the SsangYong Actyon Ute Racing Series stands out—two wins and six podiums in a series known for hard racing and heavy contact[1]. She followed that up in 2023 with a strong endurance season, proving she could still mix it up in a Mercedes-AMG GT4 against younger competition[1]. She’s also competed in Indy Lights and GT3, marking her as one of the few Kiwi women to race across such a broad spectrum of categories[2].

INSPIRATIONS

No information is available about who inspired Christina Orr-West to race, whether family, other drivers, or moments that shaped her path. Given that she started at five, it’s likely someone in her circle saw the spark early—but if there were mentors, heroes, or pivotal figures, she hasn’t shared those stories publicly.

REPUTATION

Christina Orr-West has been called “one of the finest racing women NZ has ever produced” and “New Zealand’s speedqueen”—titles that carry weight in a country with a proud motorsports tradition[2][4]. She’s regarded as a veteran with a “long and impressive career as an amateur,” which in motorsports parlance often means someone who races for the love of it, not for a paycheck[2]. That longevity and consistency have earned her respect. She’s a pioneer, though the specifics of what barriers she broke are frustratingly vague in the historical record[5]. What’s clear is that she’s been a visible, competitive presence in New Zealand racing for over twenty years, and she’s still out there proving she belongs. Her relationship with long-time supporter Dayle ITM and regular engineering support from James Marshall Motorsport speaks to the trust she’s built within the industry[2]. The iconic yellow livery of her Toyota 86 is a rolling advertisement for staying power.

FUTURE GOALS/PLANS

At 38, Orr-West is running a full season in the 2024-25 Toyota 86 Championship New Zealand with Dayle ITM Racing, competing in both the Masters Championship and overall points[2]. She’s stated her sights are set on adding to her career tally of podium finishes and race wins[2]. There’s no talk of retirement, no winding down. She’s still hunting wins, still pushing, still showing up. For a driver who started at five, that’s the only way she knows how to do it.

References:

DriverDB – Christina Orr-West
Toyota NZ – Christina Orr-West Driver Profile
Legacy DriverDB – Christina Orr-West
RNZ – Christina Orr-West Interview
Women in Racing – Christina Orr-West Archive