The Kubota Tractor Corporation will continue to be a primary partner of Trackhouse Racing after inking a multi-year extension with the NASCAR Cup Series team.
Kubota, which has been the official Tractor Company of Trackhouse since 2022, will continue in this role through the 2027 season. The company will also continue to take over the company's Chevrolets during multiple races while supporting Ross Chastain, Daniel Suarez, and Shane van Gisbergen.
Chastain will have Kubota as his primary partner for six races this season, starting with Phoenix Raceway in March. The orange and black scheme will then return at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Homestead-Miami Speedway, Sonoma Raceway, New Hampshire Motor Speedway, and Kansas Speedway.
Kansas is the track where Chastain took the tractor corporation to victory lane last season.
Suarez will represent the tractor company during the May 4 race at Texas Motor Speedway. This is the same track where he delivered a fifth-place finish last season with Kubota's colors on the No. 99 Chevrolet.
While Chastain and Suarez will have the orange and black scheme in Cup Series races, van Gisbergen will do so during an Xfinity Series race. He will have Kubota as his primary partner on the No. 9 JR Motorsports Chevrolet at Watkins Glen International on Aug. 9.
"It's awesome to continue an authentic partnership with a world-renowned brand like Kubota," Chastain said in a press release. "Kubota's support of Trackhouse Racing and agriculture means the world to me, and I hope to get them back to victory lane this year."
Like in past seasons, the partnership will not solely feature primary schemes in several races. Chastain, an eighth-generation watermelon farmer, will continue to partner with the tractor corporation to support veteran farmers.
Every time that Chastain delivers a top-10 finish with the orange and black scheme on the No. 1 Chevrolet, a $10,000 donation will be made to the Farmer Veteran Coalition. This non-profit organization "assists military veterans and currently serving members of the Armed Forces to transition into careers in farming."
