30-Year Arcs / Hyper Nakeds / MV Agusta Brutale Lineage
MV Agusta Italy

MV Agusta Brutale. Tamburini's naked masterpiece.

The Brutale launched in 2001 as a 750cc naked F4 — designed by the legendary Massimo Tamburini. Has run continuously through 750, 910, 990, 1090, and 1000cc evolutions. 2026 Brutale 1000 RR makes 208bhp from a Ferrari-derived inline-four with titanium valves. The hyper-naked benchmark when you measure by sound and design rather than spreadsheets.

1996
None
2006
Brutale 910
2016
Brutale 800
2026
Brutale 1000 RR
Continual audits are underway to verify local pricing for every bike in every market. Apologies for any gaps you see while this is in progress.
1996 30 yrs ago · None
No bike for this era

No Brutale yet

MV Agusta was bankrupt
The brand was dormant — F4 still a year from launch

STATUS · NONE
NONE
Bankrupt 1996
2006 Gen 1 · 2006
2006 Brutale 910 S

Brutale 910 S

5-year-old design, freshly enlarged
909cc inline-four, six-piston brakes

909cc inline-four
136 bhp
96
199
810
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesTFT /Single-sided swingarmSix-piston brakes
Known issues
  • Reg/rec failures common
  • Sprag clutch can fail
  • Service intervals short
£10,995
£18,000
£3–4k
2016 Gen 3 · 2016
2016 Brutale 800 RR

Brutale 800 RR

Three-cylinder era
798cc triple, 140bhp, full electronics suite

798cc triple
140 bhp
87
175
810
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesTFT /QuickshifterCounter-rotating crank
Known issues
  • Early MVICS fuelling jerky
  • Electronic gremlins from gen 1 still possible
  • Servicing expensive vs Japanese
£11,690
£16,500
£5–7k
2026 Brutale 1000 RR · 2026
2026 Brutale 1000 RR

Brutale 1000 RR

Top-spec inline-four hypernaked
998cc, 208bhp claimed, Öhlins Smart EC 3.0

998cc inline-four
208 bhp
117
186
845
Cornering ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modes5.5" TFTQuickshifterSemi-active Öhlins
Known issues
  • Service costs higher than rivals
  • Dealer network thin in UK
  • Fuel range short with 16L tank
£32,000
£32,000
£32k new
// 30-Year Delta

What actually changed.

1996 → 2026 · 30 years of "progress"
Designed by Massimo Tamburini 2001 The Brutale was designed by Massimo Tamburini — the same designer behind the Ducati 916, Bimota DB1 and the MV Agusta F4. The naked Brutale and faired F4 share the same trellis frame, single-sided swingarm and engine. Tamburini's brief: take the F4's race-derived chassis and strip it back to its visual essentials.
Engine traces to a Ferrari F1 motor Heritage The Brutale's inline-four was developed by Andrea Goggi and is loosely derived from the 1990–1992 Ferrari Formula One engine — Ferrari engineers assisted MV Agusta in early design. Radial valves, short stroke, very high revs. The lineage is genuinely there in the architecture.
Five different engines used 750→910→990→1090→1000 The Brutale has used: 749cc (2001-06), 909cc (2005-08), 998cc (2010), 1078cc (2007-11), 989cc (2010-15) and the current 998cc (2020-now). Plus the 798cc triple (2012-now) which was sold in parallel. No motorcycle name has run through more displacement variants in modern times.
Power: 127 → 208bhp +64% in 25 years 2001 Brutale 750 made 127bhp. 2026 Brutale 1000 RR makes 208bhp — peak figure with Akrapovic kit. Real-world peak gain: ~64% over 25 years, almost entirely from electronics, valve materials and fuel system rather than displacement.
Bankruptcy and ownership churn 5 owners MV Agusta has been owned by: Cagiva (1996-2008), Harley-Davidson (2008-2010), back to Castiglioni family (2010-2014), Mercedes-AMG (2014-2017), Russian/Chinese investors briefly, Pierer Mobility/KTM AG (50.1% from 2024). The Brutale survived all five regime changes — that's the story of the bike.
Reliability reputation Mixed Brutales have a reputation for needing care. Reg/rec failures, sprag clutches, electronic glitches and short service intervals are recurring themes on owner forums. Late-model bikes (2020+) are reportedly much improved, but the brand still carries the legacy reputation.
Price now vs then £10,995 → £32,000 2001 Brutale 750 was £10,995. 2026 Brutale 1000 RR is £32,000. Inflation-adjusted, the new bike is roughly 75% more expensive in real terms — but the spec, electronics, suspension and power are unrecognisable from the 2001 bike.
// Sources

Where these numbers come from

Every figure on this page is from a published manufacturer spec sheet or a reputable review publication. No press junkets, no opinions in the spec data. Inflation calculated using Bank of England's CPI tool.

1996 No Brutale Wikipedia (MV Agusta history) · MCN brand history
2006 Brutale 910 S MCN reviews · Wikipedia (MV Agusta Brutale series) · autoevolution
2016 Brutale 800 RR MCN reviews · Bennetts BikeSocial · autoevolution
2026 Brutale 1000 RR MV Agusta UK · Drysdale Motorcycles UK · Cycle World