RACING DRIVER

Luca Filippi

1985 - Today

Photo of Luca Filippi

Icon of person Luca Filippi

Luca Filippi (born 9 August 1985 in Savigliano, Italy) is an Italian former auto racing driver. He competed in GP2 Series from 2006 to 2012, and the IndyCar Series from 2013 to 2016. In 2008 he was the official Honda Racing F1 test driver. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 18 different languages on Wikipedia. Luca Filippi is the 1,057th most popular racing driver (down from 1,005th in 2024), the 5,055th most popular biography from Italy (down from 4,922nd in 2019) and the 135th most popular Italian Racing Driver.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Luca Filippi by language

Loading...

Among RACING DRIVERS

Among racing drivers, Luca Filippi ranks 1,057 out of 1,080Before him are Lukáš Pešek, Andy Soucek, Pato O'Ward, Simona de Silvestro, Dave Mirra, and Alex Hofmann. After him are Robin Frijns, Marco Andretti, Urmo Aava, Sean Edwards, Romano Fenati, and Miguel Molina.

Most Popular Racing Drivers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1985, Luca Filippi ranks 1,034Before him are Faris Haroun, Ibrahima Touré, Eamon Farren, Alison Cerutti, Qasem Burhan, and Bradley Wright-Phillips. After him are Jeong Gyeong-mi, Ha Seung-jin, Shubhanshu Shukla, Rahul Kohli, Rie fu, and Nikša Dobud.

Others Born in 1985

Go to all Rankings

In Italy

Among people born in Italy, Luca Filippi ranks 5,056 out of 5,161Before him are Marco Innocenti (1978), Chiara Appendino (1984), Anzhelika Terliuga (1992), Danilo Cataldi (1994), Gennaro Delvecchio (1978), and Aleandro Rosi (1987). After him are Gabriele Bosisio (1980), Ultimo (1996), Andrea Masiello (1986), Andrea Cassarà (1984), Lorenzo Carboncini (1976), and Francesca Conti (1972).

Among RACING DRIVERS In Italy

Among racing drivers born in Italy, Luca Filippi ranks 135Before him are Mirko Bortolotti (1990), Mattia Pasini (1985), Fabio Di Giannantonio (1998), Davide Rigon (1986), Antonio Fuoco (1996), and Giandomenico Basso (1973). After him are Romano Fenati (1996), Simone Corsi (1987), Matteo Bobbi (1978), Lucas Auer (1994), Claudio Corti (1987), and Alessandro Giardelli (2002).