Who is Dystany Spurlock? The Black Woman Breaking Barriers In NASCAR
Dystany Spurlock breaks barriers, becoming first Black woman to race in NASCAR's top 3 series after trailblazing in motorcycles.

Dystany Spurlock is not just pulling up to NASCAR — she is arriving there after years of proving she belongs in every space people tried to tell her wasn’t built for her. The Richmond, Virginia native is set to become the first Black woman to compete in one of NASCAR’s top three national series when she makes her NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series debut on May 8, 2026, at Watkins Glen International. For a sport that has long struggled with representation, especially when it comes to Black women behind the wheel, Spurlock’s moment is bigger than one race. It’s a barrier-breaking chapter that has been years in the making.
Before stock cars became the headline, Spurlock was already making noise on two wheels. She started racing motorcycles as a teenager and built a name for herself in motorcycle drag racing, eventually competing in NHRA Pro Stock Motorcycle. According to EURweb, she also made history as the first woman to win the DME Racing Real Street class in the XDA Series and, in 2024, set a Real Street Bike world record with a 7.32 ET at 178 mph. So when folks talk about her making history now, it’s important to understand this is not some random overnight story. Spurlock has been fast, fearless and focused for a long time.
Her path to NASCAR also feels personal because racing has been part of her life since childhood. Dystany Spurlock grew up near Richmond Raceway, and she has credited her grandfather’s love of NASCAR with helping spark her own interest in the sport. She told ARCA that her first vehicle after getting her license had two wheels instead of four, and that her family supported her passion early on, including her mother helping her get a motorcycle. That love of speed eventually turned into something bigger: a mission to move from motorcycle racing into stock cars, even after several opportunities fell through over the years.


Spurlock’s road has never been limited to one lane. She played cornerback and safety on boys’ football teams in middle school and high school, worked as a flight attendant, drove a tractor-trailer with a CDL, raced Formula 4 through Skip Barber, and built a career as a model, actress, and entrepreneur. In other words, she has been the type to step into spaces where people don’t expect her and make them adjust. That same energy followed her into motorsports, where she has had to fight for opportunities in a world that is still overwhelmingly male and not exactly overflowing with Black women racers.
The 2026 season has been Spurlock’s real stock-car breakthrough. In March, she became the first Black woman to race on the ARCA Menards Series platform when she competed at Hickory Motor Speedway, finishing seventh in her ARCA East debut. She followed that with a 12th-place finish at Rockingham, then made more history at Kansas Speedway by becoming the first Black woman to compete in a national ARCA Menards Series event and finishing 10th. Her official site highlighted that Kansas finished in the top 10 in her national ARCA debut, which only made the buzz around her NASCAR Truck Series opportunity even louder.
That is why her May 8 double duty at Watkins Glen matters so much. Spurlock is scheduled to race in both the ARCA Menards Series and the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series on the same day, with her Truck Series debut marking a first for Black women in NASCAR’s national series history. She will be racing with MBM Motorsports/Garage 66, with Foxxtecca backing her and helping tell her story through a docuseries focused on her journey from Pro Stock Motorcycle racing to NASCAR. She framed this moment as about access, representation, and preparation for the meeting.
For Spurlock, the history is huge, but the bigger picture is what it can unlock for whoever is watching next. NASCAR has had Black stars like Bubba Wallace and Rajah Caruth helping push the sport forward, and women like Brehanna Daniels have broken ground on pit crews, but Spurlock is now carrying that representation onto the track in a national series. That’s important because little black girls deserve to see someone who looks like them in a fire suit, in the driver’s seat, and chasing the same checkered flags as everybody else. Dystany Spurlock’s name might be pronounced like “Destiny,” but this run is not happening by accident — she earned her way here.
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