Key performance

139 ch
Power
🔧
998 cc
Displacement
⚖️
210 kg
Weight
🏎️
265 km/h
Top speed
💺
830 mm
Seat height
23.0 L
Fuel capacity
💰
15 500 €
New price
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Technical specifications

Engine

Displacement
998 cc
Power
139.0 ch @ 10600 tr/min (101.5 kW)
Torque
106.0 Nm @ 8000 tr/min
Engine type
In-line four, four-stroke
Cooling
Oil & air
Compression ratio
13.0:1
Bore × stroke
76.0 x 55.0 mm (3.0 x 2.2 inches)
Valves/cylinder
4
Camshafts
2 ACT
Fuel system
Injection. Sequential timed “Multipoint” electronic injection
Valve timing
Double Overhead Cams/Twin Cam (DOHC)
Starter
Electric

Chassis

Frame
CrMo Steel tubular trellis (TIG welded)
Gearbox
6-speed
Final drive
Chain   (final drive)
Front suspension
Upside-down telescopic hydraulic fork with rebound-compression damping and spring preload adjustment
Rear suspension
Progressive, single shock absorber with rebound compression damping and spring preload
Front wheel travel
130 mm (5.1 inches)
Rear wheel travel
120 mm (4.7 inches)

Brakes

Front brakes
Double disc. 4-piston
Rear brakes
Single disc. 4-piston
Front tyre
120/70-ZR17
Rear tyre
190/55-ZR17

Dimensions

Seat height
830.00 mm
Wheelbase
1438.00 mm
Ground clearance
150.00 mm
Length
2093.00 mm
Fuel capacity
23.00 L
Weight
210.00 kg
Dry weight
190.00 kg
New price
15 500 €

Overview

What drives a manufacturer to rework a motorcycle that nobody asked them to change? When Tamburini designed the Brutale, he set on wheels an object so accomplished that any modification felt like sacrilege. Yet in 2011, MV Agusta took the plunge with the Brutale 990R. Where Ducati had razed everything to reinvent its Monster, the Varese firm chose the surgical approach. The result, on paper, is paradoxical: 85% of the bike is new, but you have to crouch down and walk around it to notice. The headlight, still sculpted like a Porsche projector, now conceals dual-row LED running lights. The dashboard, unchanged since the original F4, gives way to a full instrument cluster that finally displays the selected gear, water temperature, and fuel gauge. Details, you might say. Except that these details, taken together, transform the riding experience.

MV Agusta Brutale 990R

On the chassis side, the TIG-welded CrMo steel trellis frame stays true to the original principle, but it has been significantly lightened and made more compact. The steering head angle opens by half a degree to reach 25°, the swingarm gains 20 mm, and the wheelbase stretches to 1,438 mm. The MV Agusta Brutale 990R clearly seeks more stability without sacrificing agility, aided by redesigned and lighter wheels. The inverted fork retains its 50 mm tubes but benefits from internal recalibration, as does the rear shock. A rotary steering damper, tucked under the handlebar, completes the setup. The brakes stick with a proven foundation: dual 310 mm discs up front with four-piston radial calipers, a single disc and four-piston caliper at the rear. No monoblocs here — MV reserves those for the bigger 1090 R sibling. At 190 kg dry and 210 kg wet, the machine stays right in line with the segment against a Streetfighter 1098 or a CB1000R, without matching the lightness of a Speed Triple.

The inline four-cylinder grows from 982 to 998 cc through a reversed bore-and-stroke ratio: the bore shrinks to 76 mm, the stroke lengthens to 55 mm. This rebalancing favors torque, which climbs to 106 Nm at 8,000 rpm. Power drops slightly to 139 hp at 10,600 rpm, with a 13:1 compression ratio that betrays a definite appetite for premium fuel. The real progress lies in the onboard electronics: an eight-level traction control system, two selectable engine maps, and new throttle bodies. MV also revised the cooling circuit and lubrication with a higher-capacity oil pump. For those who frequent forums dedicated to the MV Agusta Brutale 990R, these mechanical improvements matter as much as the aesthetics, since the early Brutales sometimes had a reputation for cooking their rider as much as their engine.

MV Agusta Brutale 990R

The ergonomics evolve toward greater accessibility, with adjustable footpegs and a reworked riding position, even though the 830 mm seat height won't do any favors for shorter riders. The 23-liter tank provides decent range for a roadster of this displacement, and the exhausts have been tamed to comply with the Euro 3 standard. At €15,500, the 990R positions itself as a premium naked, noticeably above a Street Triple R but in the same territory as a Ducati Streetfighter. The target audience remains experienced riders, lovers of noble engineering and lines that look like nothing else on the road. Some purists will lament that the MV Agusta Brutale 990R Anniversary and its variants like the 150th edition opened the door to a wider public. But when a motorcycle can combine a 265 km/h top speed, a jeweler's trellis frame, and that face from another planet, you readily forgive it for wanting to seduce beyond the inner circle of the initiated.

Practical info

  • La moto est accessible aux permis : A

Indicators & positioning

Weight-to-power ratio
0.66 ch/kg
🔄
Torque / weight
0.50 Nm/kg
🔧
Volumetric power
139.3 ch/L
In category Naked bike · 499-1996cc displacement (3709 motorcycles compared)
Power 139 ch Top 18%
50 ch median 100 ch 175 ch
Weight 210 kg Lighter than 56%
183 kg median 212 kg 256 kg
P/W ratio 0.66 ch/kg Top 16%
0.24 median 0.46 0.82 ch/kg

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