Toyota Australia and Walkinshaw Group have said they’re open to expanding their current partnership to potentially produce more showroom models – such as potentially a Ford Ranger Raptor rival – should the opportunity arise.

The Toyota GR Supra will make its race debut at the opening round of the 2026 Repco Supercars Championship at Sydney Motorsport Park this weekend, with the Walkinshaw team having switched to Toyota after winning last year’s title in the Ford Mustang.

Yet the partnership could extend beyond the track and potentially give Toyota access to local engineering resources to produce special-edition sports cars, as well as the chance to build a flagship HiLux as a bona fide Ford Ranger Raptor and Nissan Navara Pro-4X Warrior rival.

One of Australia’s largest automotive employers, the flourishing Walkinshaw Group – which evolved out of Holden Special Vehicles (HSV) – has already worked on a variety of projects for multiple manufacturers beyond its highly visible Supercars operation.

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This includes developing road-going models for Volkswagen Australia and running successful race programs, including the Ford Ranger Raptor’s three-peat in the production class of the arduous Finke Desert Race.

At its newly expanded facilities in Clayton, Melbourne, Walkinshaw also remanufactures the Chevrolet Silverado, Ram 1500/2500/3500 and Toyota Tundra full-size pickups to right-hand drive for Australian showrooms for each respective automaker.

Speaking at the 2026 season launch of the Toyota Gazoo Racing Supercars Supra at Sydney Motorsport Park, Toyota Australia sales and marketing boss John Pappas and Walkinshaw co-owner Ryan Walkinshaw sang from the same songbook.

“Toyota are a major partner of the Walkinshaw Automotive Group and obviously we’ve got a successful program going on with the Tundra,” the team boss said.