ABOUT THE FOUNDER

Stefan Chifan, racing driver and founder of MyRacingPath

MyRacingPath was built by Stefan Chifan, a competitive kart racer from the UK who is planning his transition to car racing. The idea came from a real problem: there was no tool that mapped out a clear path from where he was to where he wanted to be.

WHY HE BUILT IT

When Stefan started looking at what comes after karting, he hit the same wall every driver hits: there is no clear map. Which car championship should you target? What budget do you need? When is the right time to move up? What licences do you need? The answers were scattered across forums, Facebook groups, and expensive consultants.

So he built the tool he wished existed. MyRacingPath takes everything a driver needs to plan their career (championship data, budget ranges, licence requirements, coaching modules, setup tools) and puts it in one platform with AI that actually understands motorsport.

DRIVER AND DEVELOPER

Stefan taught himself to code specifically to build MyRacingPath. The platform runs on Next.js, Supabase, and AI models trained on real motorsport career data, not generic fitness or sports content. Every feature comes from a real problem he or his racing mates have faced.

He still races. That matters because the platform is not built by someone guessing what drivers need. It is built by someone who sits on the grid, deals with setup headaches, and has to justify budget decisions. The feedback loop between using the tool and building the tool is what makes it work.

THE VISION

Too many talented drivers drop out of motorsport because they do not have a plan, they run out of budget unexpectedly, or they make the wrong step at the wrong time. MyRacingPath exists to give every driver, regardless of budget, access to the kind of career guidance that used to be reserved for factory-backed drivers with professional managers.

The database of championships and career paths grows every month. The AI gets smarter with every conversation. And Stefan is still racing, still building, and still finding new problems to solve.