The 32-year-old Scot is a trailblazer for her sport and her gender: the first woman to score points in the DTM (German touring cars) series for 20 years, the first to ever at the Race of Champions and, most tellingly, the first to compete in a competitive session at a grand prix for 22 years when she tested for Williams at Silverstone last season.
As the team's official test driver for next season, she will become an F1 regular although admits the next step to a fully fledged race seat may never materialise.
"I'm very ambitious but realistic," she says. "I'm happy to have made it to F1. I'd love to get on the start and do a race, and I'd like that to be in a Williams. We have two great racing drivers and, if something should happen, yes, it would be great to race. I'm a great believer that if you knock on enough doors and stay at the level maybe an opportunity comes."
To get to that point, there have been critics, those suggesting she has only made it to certain positions because of her gender as a marketing tool for teams and sponsors.
David Coulthard disputes that. Coulthard has raced against Wolff at DTM and partnered her to the runners-up spot at the Race of Champions Nations Cup at the weekend.
"She's talented, she's got speed," he says. "The difficulty, which is the same as any other racer male or female, is that being good isn't enough - being exceptional is what Lewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso are. That's the big challenge."
Wolff's parents met when her mother Sally walked into a shop to buy a motorbike from her father John, and motoring was in the lifeblood for the Stoddart (her maiden name) family from her day one.
Her parents instilled in her the idea that she had as much right from day one as any boy to be on any grid.
"I have an older brother only 18 months older and they never differentiated: 'you play Barbie and your brother's on the motorbike'," she recalls. "I was well into racing before I realised there weren't any girls and they never made me believe as a woman I couldn't have the same possibilities."
There have been tough moments on the way up to F1. There were the Mercedes team-mates asking how her breasts coped with the bumps on the track or the pink car she was made to drive in DTM.
She hated it but at the same time, as always seems to be her custom, she saw the positives. "It was such a clich? - blonde girl in pink car - and I didn't like it at all but the sponsor wanted it. Then so many girls came up to me and their fathers said 'we only came to the race to see the pink car'."
Growing up, there were few female motor-racing idols to aspire to but Wolff hopes she can be one, even if, "it is just one little girl watching on TV and thinking F1 is not just for boys".
At Williams, now, there are two in her and deputy team principal Claire Williams, the two bonding over those that have questioned their place in the sport, with Williams' critics pointing out that she is the daughter of team founder Frank.
Both have had to work harder than their male counterparts to earn respect, Williams doing so with an integral part in the team's turnaround in fortunes in 2014 and Wolff with what she does in the cockpit.
"Coming to new environments people look at you and think 'what's this blonde lady doing, she thinks she can drive a racing car' but you work hard, keep your head down and show that you're actually capable," she says.
"As a woman people judge you on your looks regardless of the fact you're just there to race. So you have this very fine line of trying to look good as you're representing your team and sponsors but then people say 'she's only there for marketing'. So you say 'who cares?', go out and carry on and let them talk about it."
Watching Wolff over the course of a race weekend, were it not for the fact she is constantly asked about it, one suspects she would not give her gender a thought when racing. But a driver labelled "the fastest woman in the world" cannot escape that fact.
Having fought to get to that point, she and her husband, Mercedes executive director Toto Wolff, have delayed plans for a family.
As well as sexism towards her, she has also had to deal with suggestions of nepotism - Wolff was on the Williams board when his wife was first signed by the team.
He left the boardroom when any discussions turned to his wife and she says: "I'm a racing driver and he's a private investor so there's no conflict of interest as they're completely different roles. Rather than it being a difficult situation it's a huge advantage. He understands what I'm up against in the world of F1."
On the rare weekends they have off the F1 circus, they like to go ice racing, the end result normally spent with the loser sulking for the evening.
But it is Wolff's husband who has truly given her the self-belief to continue with her quest to F1. He said to me: "Don't care what anyone says, you have to walk into the paddock with your head held high. You make sure you look good and you do a good job in the car. That freed up a lot of things for me."
- THE INDEPENDENT