
A new week brings a new set of Gran Turismo 7 Daily Races, with three fresh events now live and running through next Monday.
The headliner is Race C, which sends you out onto the full 24 Heures du Mans circuit in the new wave of Le Mans hypercars that Update 1.70 dropped into the game earlier this month.
The timing is a little after-the-fact, with the real 24 Hours of Le Mans now more than a week behind us, but better late than never for this meaty race.
Fourteen laps of the full circuit works out to the better part of an hour, and the field is the four new prototypes (the BMW M Hybrid V8 ’25, Porsche 963 ’24, Ferrari 499P ’23, and Peugeot 9X8 ’25) joined by the Toyota GR010 Hybrid ’21 that was already in the garage.

If that combination looks familiar, the same five cars lined up at La Sarthe for an Online Time Trial a couple of weeks back, so this is the racing follow-up to that. There’s a single mandatory pit stop, and with fuel running at 2x and tire wear cranked all the way up to 4x, that stop carries real weight.
On top of that the race runs through time-of-day changes with the chance of rain, so the Intermediate and Wet compounds in the regulations aren’t just there for show. This one’s going to be a popular pick.
Race B is Gr.3 cars at Autodrome Lago Maggiore. The twist is the Full Course Reverse layout. It’s a four-lapper on Racing Medium tires with Brake Balance the only setting left open.
Karts are back, too. Race A drops the Gran Turismo Racing Kart 125 Shifter onto the oval-ish Miyabi course at Kyoto Driving Park for eight laps on Sports Soft tires. There’s a False Start Check in effect, and it’s worth knowing there are no DR updates on offer this time around (SR still moves, so a scrappy race in these twitchy things can still bite you).
If this kart-and-Lago-Maggiore-reverse one-two is ringing a bell, that’s because we ran almost this exact pair of races just over a year ago. Karts have shown up since then too, most recently in a kart Online Time Trial back in May.

Gran Turismo 7 Daily Races June 22: Race A
- Track: Kyoto Driving Park Miyabi – 8 laps
- Car: Gran Turismo Racing Kart 125 Shifter – Garage/Specified Car
- Power/Weight/PP Limit: BOP (M)
- Tires: Sports Soft
- Settings: Specified
- Start Type: Grid Start with False Start Check
- Mandatory Pit Stop: None
- Fuel use: Off
- Tire use: Off
- DR/SR: No DR update (SR active)
Gran Turismo 7 Daily Races June 22: Race B
- Track: Autodrome Lago Maggiore Full Course Reverse – 4 laps
- Car: Gr.3 – Garage/Specified Car
- Power/Weight/PP Limit: BOP (M)
- Tires: Racing Medium
- Settings: Partially Allowed – Brake Balance
- Start Type: Rolling Start
- Mandatory Pit Stop: None
- Fuel use: 1x
- Tire use: 1x
Gran Turismo 7 Daily Races June 22: Race C
- Track: 24 Heures du Mans Racing Circuit – 14 laps
- Car: Gr.1 (BMW M Hybrid V8 ’25, Porsche 963 ’24, Toyota GR010 Hybrid ’21, Ferrari 499P ’23, Peugeot 9X8 ’25) – Garage/Specified Car
- Power/Weight/PP Limit: BOP (H)
- Tires: Racing Medium, Intermediate, Wet
- Settings: Partially Allowed – Brake Balance
- Start Type: Rolling Start
- Mandatory Pit Stop: 1
- Fuel use: 2x
- Tire use: 4x
Daily Races are the main ranked multiplayer events in GT7. Your Driver Rating (DR) and Sportsmanship Rating (SR) are determined by your performances, updating after each race, and these are used to set your ranking and league for the game’s flagship esports series each season.
To access the Daily Races you’ll need to unlock Sport Mode by completing Menu Book 9 (“Championship: Tokyo Highway Parade”) in the GT Cafe single-player hub. A PlayStation Plus subscription is required to take part. If you’re still working through the early game, our full unlock guide will get you there.
With GT7’s Daily Races updating every Monday, the next new set should arrive on Monday, June 29.



