KTM and its satellite partner Tech3 have jointly unveiled their 2026 MotoGP challengers, confirming a continued strategy of visual and technical unity as the Austrian manufacturer prepares for a pivotal season in the premier class. Revealed via an online launch, the four KTM RC16s will once again carry identical liveries, reinforcing the impression of a single, cohesive factory effort spread across two teams.
As in 2025, Tech3 will effectively operate as an extension of KTM Factory Racing, giving the marque a fully aligned four-bike presence on the grid. All machines feature KTM’s familiar orange and dark blue colour scheme, complemented by prominent Red Bull branding. While the livery itself has seen only subtle evolution since KTM’s MotoGP debut in 2017, its adoption by Tech3 marks a relatively recent shift.
Since joining forces with KTM in 2019, Tech3 has experimented with several identities, most notably promoting the Pierer Mobility Group’s GasGas brand between 2023 and 2024. Last season saw a return to the Tech3 KTM name and a visual convergence with the factory squad, a move that now appears firmly embedded in KTM’s long-term MotoGP strategy.
The rider line-ups also remain unchanged from 2025. KTM Factory Racing will once again field Pedro Acosta and Brad Binder, while Tech3 continues with Enea Bastianini and Maverick Viñales. Notably, all four riders are directly contracted to KTM, further blurring the distinction between the factory and satellite operations.
The 2026 campaign carries additional significance as it represents KTM’s first full season under new ownership following Bajaj Auto’s takeover. Earlier concerns regarding KTM’s financial stability and the future of its MotoGP programme appear to have eased, with the manufacturer already conducting private testing of its 2027 prototype. That early work underlines KTM’s commitment to the forthcoming regulations overhaul, even as attention increasingly turns towards the next technical era.
Nevertheless, the upcoming season remains crucial. Acosta, who contributed the majority of KTM’s points haul last year, continues to be heavily linked with a future move to Ducati’s factory team. His potential departure would leave a sizeable gap in KTM’s line-up and force the marque to identify another young rider capable of leading its post-2026 project.
On track, KTM’s 2025 season was one of contrasts. Early struggles gave way to a marked improvement following a significant upgrade introduced at the Austrian Grand Prix. Acosta became a regular podium contender thereafter, helping KTM secure third place in the manufacturers’ championship behind Ducati and Aprilia. Binder, meanwhile, endured what he described as his most difficult MotoGP season, though late-year gains lifted him to 11th overall.
Tech3 finished ninth in the teams’ standings after a year of transition. Bastianini claimed a solitary podium in Barcelona, while Viñales showed flashes of promise before injury curtailed his momentum.
KTM MotoGP Line-up for 2026
| Team | Rider | Nationality |
|---|---|---|
| KTM Factory Racing | Pedro Acosta | Spain |
| KTM Factory Racing | Brad Binder | South Africa |
| Tech3 KTM | Enea Bastianini | Italy |
| Tech3 KTM | Maverick Viñales | Spain |
As KTM enters 2026 with a unified identity and renewed corporate stability, the season promises to be a defining chapter—both for its current stars and for the shape of its future in MotoGP.