
BMW Motorrad has built 115 units of the M 1000 RR Limited Edition Isle of Man TT to mark the 115th running of the Tourist Trophy in 2026. The edition is based on the M 1000 RR M Competition and adds TT-specific design elements, exclusive equipment, and serialized collector attributes. A very limited number will reach U.S. customers, with pricing expected to approach $50,000.
The standard M 1000 RR carries an MSRP of $42,895. This limited edition builds on the M Competition package and adds British Racing Green Matte paint, Mountain Course graphics mapped to the fairing sides (left-hand turns on the left, right-hand turns on the right), a carbon airbox cover with the TT course and logo, and an Alcantara seat. The aluminum tank is finished in Satin Chrome with graphics. Each bike carries milled numbering on the top yoke and a certificate of authenticity.
The 999cc inline-four makes 205 hp at 13,000 rpm and 83 lb-ft at 11,100 rpm. That powertrain is unchanged from the M Competition spec the limited edition is built on. BMW Motorrad CEO Markus Flasch framed the model as a bridge between the brand’s TT heritage and its M lineup, calling it “a strong expression of racing DNA, technical precision and exclusivity.”

The TT connection is more than marketing scaffolding. Georg Meier won the Senior TT in 1939 on the BMW RS 255 Kompressor. Helmut Dähne and Hans-Otto Butenuth took the 1,000 cc Production class in 1976 on the R 90 S. In the modern era, Michael Dunlop won the 1,000cc class on the S 1000 RR in 2014. Peter Hickman delivered a hat-trick in 2022 across the Superbike, Superstock, and Senior TT races on BMW motorcycles, then set the all-time lap record on the Mountain Course in 2023: 16 minutes, 36.115 seconds at an average speed of 136.358 mph on an M 1000 RR in Superstock specification. Davey Todd added a Superbike victory in 2025.
The limited edition includes the M Race Cover Kit, a black swingarm, TT branding on the rear frame, a rear wheelstand with mounting equipment, and a 98-by-41-inch M motorcycle mat with M and TT logos. The Alcantara seat and matte-finish carbon airbox cover carry the motorsport aesthetic through to the rider contact points.

BMW sold 28,408 four-cylinder motorcycles in 2025, a figure that includes the M 1000 R, M 1000 RR, and M 1000 XR. The limited edition splits that volume across 115 units globally, with U.S. allocation described only as “very limited.” BMW Motorrad has not disclosed how many of the 115 will reach U.S. dealers.
Pre-order information will be posted at bmwmotorcycles.com. If you want one, watch that page. A 115-unit run built around the most demanding road race in the world will not last long.
BMW M 1000 RR Limited Edition Isle of Man TT Photo Gallery
Source: BMW. Images courtesy of BMW.










