Yamaha confirms V4 engine plans for MotoGP
Yamaha is developing a V4 🦹MotoGP engine whicꩵh could be seen on track during 2025.

Yamaha, which has raced Inline four-cylinder engines since the start of the MotoGP era, is ‘busy developing a V4 powerplant’.
Yam✃aha Racing managing director Lin Jarvis confi𒅌rmed the news in an interview with MotoGP.com.
Jarvis stopped short of giving a timeframe for the V4's debut, which will be "when it is quicker t🐲han the Inline".
But the engine👍 is already being bench-tested and could be on track "in the middle of next𒅌 year".
“I can confirm that we are busy d𝓡eveloping a V4 powerplant,” Jarvis said.
“It’s something that goes back a while, because when Suzuki was still here, there were two manufacturers running with the Inline4. And ob꧑viously the other competitors running wit✤h the V[4].
“In the last years, however, we've🅠 seen many, many technical developments in this sport and of course Suzuki stepped out. So we've been the only manufacturer remaining with the Inline4.
“The Inline4, in our opinion, stiജll has plenty of capacity to 🅰be developed and to be improved.
"Bu♑t when you have all of your competitors using V4s and now as we look towards the 2027 regulations, it's important f🍌or us to fully understand the potential of a V4 versus the Inline4.
“So based on that, some time ago we took the decision to start the project. The proj꧑ect is on schedule… The engine is a🏅lready being bench-tested.
"We've not run it in a bike yet but when it is ready with its durability testing, then we'll finally start to track test it.♔”
Jarvis also indicated that Yamaha stil⭕l has an open mind on whether to use an Inline or V4 engine for the new 850cc era.
“When [the V4 is] quicker than 🐭the Inline4, we'll bring it in. So let's see!
"Obviously, one of our intentio🍰ns is to look and to check what type of engine we need for 2027.
“But at the moment ‘27 is too far away for us, so we need to start now. We need to get﷽ experience. I don't know when you will see it racing, but track testing will not be so far away.
🐼“Based upon the development and hopefully positive developments, ꦬthen maybe in the middle of next year, you might see it on a track.
“We've got a lot of work ahe🔴ad of us but I think with the two strong teams, with four strong riders, plus a lot of very good🦄 engineers working for us, I think that we will return.”
Following Suzuki’s🔯 withdraw, Yamaha is the only manufacturer still using an Inline4 engine against the V4 powerplants o𒊎f Ducati, Aprilia, KTM and Honda.
Although Yamaha won the world championsh𒐪ip as recently as 2021, with Fabio Quartararo,ඣ it hasn’t won a race since mid-2022.
That leaves Suzuki’s pair of wins at the end of🐻 2022 as the most recent victorie♈s by an inline engine. Today’s news means they might also be the last inline MotoGP wins for the foreseeable future.
Quartararo, just 13th in the present world championship standings, as the top rider on a Japanese bike, hinted at b𓂃ig decisions being made behind the scenes when he re-signed earlier this year.
Quizzed recently on the V4 rumo🌱ur𝓰s, the Frenchman said:
“I think we have to consider all the options… I never rode a V4 but if we look at the bikes that are working, they are V4s. Okay, Honda is struggling, but 𒀰we are the only ones with the Inline. Maybe it is something to 🥃consider.”
Alꦯthough the switch from 1000cc to 850cc engine capacity in 2027 is the obvious moment for such a change, other riders - including future Pramac signing Miguel Oliveira - have underlined that Yamaha does not want to wait that long.
“Even though the [technical] rules are changing in two years’ time, Yamaha wants to come back to t𓆏he top as soon as p🐽ossible,” Oliveira said.
Si𓆉nce Yamaha and Honda are in the lowest concession ranking, they are free to modify their MotoGP engines throughout 🐽the year.
That means they can start 2025 with the latest evolution of their💃 current Inline engine, then switch across to the V4 if and when they consider it to be race ready.
Ducati, Aprilia and KTM must homologate their engin🍌e design at the start of each season.
The arrival of Oliveira and Jack Miller for the new Pram▨ac satellite project means Yamaha will soon have riders with V4 experience at Ducati (Miller), Honda (Alex Rins, Miller), KTM (Oliveira, Miller) and Aprilia (Oliveira).
Rins, Miller and Oliveira have also won MotoGP ra🔯ces on V4s at Honda, Ducati an🐠d KTM.
Yamaha can also count on its partnership with Marmotors, headed by ex-F1 designer Luca Marmorini, to aid in its V4 design. Marmorini previously contributed toꦉ Aprilia’s RS-GP V4 engine.
However, Honda’s onꦦgoing woes show that fitting a V4 is unlikely to be a magic fix for Yamaha, whose M1 is also seen as lacking in areas such as aerodynamics and electronics comparedꦏ to the European machines.
Honda raced a V5 engine during the initial꧂ 990cc MotoGP era, from 2002-2006, but MotoGP rules now state🧜 a ‘maximum 4 cylinders’.
The last time Yamaha raced a V4 engine in grand prix was the YZR5📖00 two-stroke, before switching to the same Inline format as its production Superbikes for the start of the four-stroke MotoGP era.
After struggling in 2002 and 2003, the M1 made a breakthrough when Masao Furusaဣwa introduced the ‘big bang’ crossplane crankshaft tꦉo coincide with Valentino Rossi’s arrival in 2004.
Although never the fastest bike on the straight, sweet handling and corner speed soon became the hallmarks of the M1, which won four rౠiders’ titles with Rossi, then three more for Jorge Lorenzo before Qua🍒rtararo’s 2021 triumph.
However, the arrival of advanced aerodynamics had alr♉eady begun to paper over the V4’s cornering cracks. The narrower V4’s top speed advantage also allows higher levels of drag-inducing downforce to be used.
Yamaha has pushed hard to increase engine performance, making power the top priority for Marmotors, but it has come at the cost of rideability and the team’s best GP result this season is seventh place.

Peter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi com꧟e and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Ma♐rquez’s injury issues.