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Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario (2026)

Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario: The Carbon Beast Unleashed!

One hundred years of Ducati, and they chose to celebrate with what might be the most audacious road-legal motorcycle ever bolted together. I’ve been tracking the Superleggera lineage since the original V4 dropped, and when the Centenario was officially unveiled at COTA during the 2026 MotoGP round, I genuinely had to read the spec sheet twice.

Only a few units exist worldwide, making it one of the most collectible carbon beasts ever created.

Why The Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario Exists

Ducati was founded in Bologna in 1926. For its centenary in 2026, the brand didn’t release a commemorative T-shirt or a special paint option on the Monster. They built a motorcycle from scratch one that had never been attempted before and limited it to 600 units worldwide. The Superleggera V4 Centenario is the fourth generation of the “super-light” Superleggera series, but it goes so far beyond its predecessors that calling it an evolution feels dishonest. This is a complete reimagination.

At the heart of it is the all-new Desmosedici Stradale R 1100 engine a 1,103cc, 90-degree V4 developed exclusively for this motorcycle, shared with no other model in the Ducati range. It displaces more than the previous R engine (up from 998cc), tips the scales at 3.6kg less than the comparable 1,103cc unit in the standard Panigale V4, and breathes through an Akrapovič Pro titanium full-system exhaust in race configuration. In road legal trim it produces 228hp. Fit the race kit and you’re looking at 247hp pushing a motorcycle that, without fuel, weighs just 173kg. That is a power-to-weight ratio of 1,480hp per tonne in race specification a figure that makes your brain do a small emergency reboot.

Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario 2026 – Full Specifications

Category Details
Engine Type Desmosedici Stradale R 1100, 90° V4
Displacement 1103 cc
Cooling System Liquid-cooled
Power 247 hp
Torque 116–119 Nm
Fuel System Ride-by-wire electronic fuel injection
Transmission 6-speed gearbox with Ducati Quick Shift (DQS)
Clutch Slipper clutch (race-derived)
Weight 381 lb (173 kg)
Top Speed 300+ km/h (186+ mph estimated)
Frame Full carbon fiber monocoque-style chassis
Front Brakes Brembo carbon-ceramic discs
Key Feature 450g lighter per disc vs steel
Riding Modes Street / Sport / Race
ABS Cornering ABS EVO
Seat Height 835 mm
Fuel Capcity 4.22 gal (16 L)
Tires Pirelli Diablo Supercorsa (est.)
Production 500 units (Base) + 100 units (Tricolore)
Estimated Price $200,000 USD
Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario 2026
Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario 2026

Carbon-Ceramic Brake Discs for Road Use

The Centenario is the first road legal motorcycle in the world to feature carbon ceramic brake discs approved for public roads. The 320mm front rotors clamped by Brembo GP4-HY monoblock calipers machined from solid aluminium with integrated cooling fins are built around a CSiC (carbon fibre reinforced ceramic) core. Compared to steel, they shed significant rotational mass, maintain consistent performance at extreme temperatures, and eliminate the fade that plagues conventional discs in repeated hard braking zones. The specific pads are engineered to work with this surface, providing modulation that Ducati says matches what WorldSBK riders experience.

Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario 2026
Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario 2026

Öhlins Carbon-Fibre Fork Tubes

The pressurised Öhlins NPX 25/30 front fork on the Centenario features carbon-fibre outer sleeves made from unidirectional layers another world first for a production motorcycle. The weight saving versus the standard Panigale V4 is around 10%, but the more meaningful benefit is in front end feel. Carbon’s stiffness to weight ratio translates directly into steering precision and feedback, qualities that matter enormously when you’re pushing into a corner at three figure speeds. It’s the kind of detail that separates this bike from a heavily specced Panigale V4 R even though the V4 R itself is an extraordinary machine.

Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario 2026
Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario 2026

The Only Full Carbon Chassis in Production

The frame, swingarm, subframes, and wheels are all carbon fibre. Ducati claims a 17% weight saving over the Panigale V4’s aluminium chassis. When you combine this with the carbon bodywork fairings, mudguards, tank cover, seat base, even the licence plate holder the weight reduction is cumulative and relentless. The result is a motorcycle that, with its racing kit installed, weighs less than some 800cc naked bikes in full road trim. Titanium fasteners are used throughout, and the engine itself is a stressed member of the chassis, contributing to rigidity without adding a gram it doesn’t have to.

Comparison Table

Specs Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario MV Agusta Rush Titanio Ducati Panigale V4 R
Category Hypersport (track-focused) Hyper Naked (street + race styling) Homologation Superbike (WSBK base)
Engine 1103cc V4 998cc inline-4 998cc V4
Max Power 247 hp 201–206 hp 215–240 hp
Torque 380 lbs (173 kg) 410 lbs (186 kb) 367 lbs (167 kb)
Frame Full carbon fiber chassis Steel trellis + carbon parts Aluminum perimeter frame
Brakes Brembo carbon-ceramic Brembo Stylema / high-spec steel Brembo Stylema R
Suspension Öhlins racing carbon fork system Öhlins Smart EC 3.0 semi-active Öhlins NPX + TTX36
Electronics MotoGP-level suite + GPS lap tools Advanced IMU + ride modes Full WSBK electronics package
Aerodynamics Winglets + ground-effect pods Minimal aero (naked design) Winglets + race aero
Production 500 units + 100 Tricolore 300 units Limited production
Price (est.) $150K–$200K $45K $45K–$60K
Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario (2026)
Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario (2026)

Standard vs. Tricolore: Which Edition Are We Talking About?

Beyond the 500 standard Centenario units, Ducati produced a further 100 Tricolore examples priced at €200,000 (approximately $250,000). The Tricolore wears the iconic Italian racing red, white, and green livery, directly referencing the Ducati 750 F1 two-valve models of the 1980s. It also carries the race number 618 the number used by 1981 500cc World Champion Marco Lucchinelli to win the 1986 Battle of the Twins race at Daytona.

Both variants were sold out before the official global reveal. Ducati US CEO Jason Chinnock confirmed pre-sales opened six months before the March 2026 COTA launch, and the order book exceeded production capacity almost immediately.

The MotoGP Experience: What 26 Lucky Owners Get

Twenty-six owners of the Centenario will receive an invitation to the exclusive MotoGP Experience a two day track event at the Misano World Circuit “Marco Simoncelli” on 6–7 July 2026, immediately following World Ducati Week 2026. Under the guidance of Ducati factory instructors, participants will first explore the Centenario’s performance on track, before a final session aboard the Desmosedici GP26 the actual MotoGP machine. This experience costs an additional €40,000 and is restricted to the first 26 registered owners across both Centenario and Tricolore variants. It is, without question, the most extraordinary ownership package in modern motorcycling.

Essential Gear for the Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario

A motorcycle at this level deserves equipment that matches its capability and ambition. Here are the categories and specific recommendations we’d pair with the Centenario without hesitation.

Helmet

Full carbon shell, FIM homologated, MotoGP-derived ventilation. The same lid worn by factory Ducati riders it’s the natural pairing for a MotoGP-derived street bike.

Gloves

Full kangaroo leather construction, titanium knuckle protectors, and dual compound palm slider. The carbon-fibre fork on the Centenario delivers exceptional feedback these gloves ensure that feedback reaches you unfiltered.

Boots

Carbon-fibre heel and toe cups, microfibre upper, multiple closure systems. The dry clutch on the Centenario gives distinct tactile engagement boots with precise feel and rigid sole are non-negotiable when learning its character.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does the Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario cost?
The standard Centenario starts at $165,000 in the US (approximately €150,000 / £130,000). The exclusive Tricolore edition commands $250,000 (approximately €200,000 / £174,000).
How many Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario units were made?
Ducati produced 500 standard Centenario units and 100 Tricolore variants, for a total worldwide production run of just 600 motorcycles all of which sold out before the official launch.
What makes the Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario different from the Panigale V4 R?
The Centenario uses an exclusive new 1,103cc engine (not shared with any other Ducati), a world-first full carbon chassis, carbon-ceramic brake discs, and carbon-fibre Öhlins fork tubes none of which appear on the Panigale V4 R.
Is the Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario street legal?
Yes, it is fully road homologated to Euro 5+ standards in road trim, producing 228hp. The racing kit (Akrapovič exhaust, track ECU) is not road-legal and intended for closed-circuit use only.
Can you still buy a Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario new?
No. All 600 units both standard and Tricolore sold out before the March 2026 global reveal. Your only option now is the secondary/pre-owned market, where prices are already exceeding the original list price.

Final Thoughts

The Ducati Superleggera V4 Centenario is the most technically advanced road-legal motorcycle ever built and its instant sell-out status proves the market agrees. Three world firsts, a new exclusive engine, a power to weight ratio that defies reason, and a centenary heritage story that adds irreplaceable collectible value. For those fortunate enough to have secured one: congratulations. For everyone else: this is the benchmark everything that follows will be measured against.

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