If you thought Maserati’s motorsport ambitions ended with the spectacular MCXtrema and the increasingly successful GT2 program, think again. At the 2026 Goodwood Festival of Speed, the Italian marque pulled the wraps off Project GT4, a purpose-built race car that serves as both a preview of Maserati’s future and a declaration that the Trident intends to become a serious player in one of motorsport’s fastest-growing categories.

The timing couldn’t be more symbolic. As Maserati celebrates a century of the iconic Trident emblem and 100 years in motorsport, Project GT4 isn’t just another race car—it’s a statement that the company is ready to reconnect its road cars with the racetrack in a way enthusiasts have been hoping for.
Built From the GranTurismo, Designed to Win
Unlike manufacturers that build race cars sharing little more than a silhouette with their production counterparts, Maserati has taken a refreshingly authentic approach. Project GT4 is based directly on the new GranTurismo, using its aluminum architecture, body structure, and the now-famous Nettuno V6 as the foundation.
That matters because GT4 racing has always been about production relevance. Cars compete with relatively limited modifications, rewarding manufacturers that begin with an inherently capable road car. Maserati believes the GranTurismo is exactly that.
The powertrain remains front-mounted, driving the rear wheels through an architecture familiar to anyone who’s spent time behind the wheel of the production car. Under the hood sits the twin-turbocharged 3.0-liter Nettuno V6, complete with Formula 1-inspired pre-chamber combustion technology. While GT4 regulations will ultimately dictate final output, Maserati reminds us that the engine has already demonstrated more than 700 horsepower in other racing applications, leaving plenty of headroom for future development.
Learning From GT2 Instead of Starting From Scratch
Project GT4 isn’t arriving in isolation.
The biggest advantage Maserati brings into the category is experience. Since its debut, the Maserati GT2 has established itself as a competitive force in European GT competition, giving the factory invaluable knowledge about chassis setup, durability, aerodynamics, electronics, and race operations.

Instead of treating GT4 as a clean-sheet project, Maserati is effectively downsizing its GT2 expertise into a package that’s more affordable, easier to operate, and designed for privateer teams.
That’s exactly what successful GT4 programs are built upon.
Andrea Bertolini—one of the most respected GT drivers of the modern era and Maserati’s longtime chief test driver—is also deeply involved in development. Few people understand how to make a GT race car both fast and forgiving better than Bertolini, and his influence should help Project GT4 become as approachable as it is competitive.
Less Weight, More Grip
While the production GranTurismo is a refined grand tourer, Project GT4 has undergone a dramatic transformation.
Maserati says approximately 400 kilograms have been stripped from the road-going car, producing a machine that’s considerably lighter and far more focused. Suspension hardware is derived from the GranTurismo Trofeo but gains fully adjustable dampers, adjustable anti-roll bars, and race-specific calibration.
Aerodynamics have also evolved substantially. A deep front splitter, dive planes, revised hood vents, additional cooling solutions, and an optimized underbody work together to generate significantly more downforce while remaining compliant with GT4 regulations.

The braking package receives dedicated cooling, while inside you’ll find the expected FIA-approved roll cage, racing seat, safety fuel cell, and an ergonomically redesigned cockpit that still retains visual ties to the production dashboard.
It’s a reminder that although Project GT4 is unmistakably a race car, Maserati hasn’t abandoned the sense of style that distinguishes its road cars from virtually everything else on the grid.
Racing as Research and Development
Modern manufacturers increasingly use motorsport as a rolling laboratory rather than merely a marketing exercise, and Maserati openly acknowledges that philosophy.
Project GT4 is designed to strengthen the continuous exchange between racing and production engineering. Lessons learned from chassis tuning, cooling efficiency, aerodynamics, reliability, and powertrain calibration won’t remain confined to the paddock—they’re expected to influence future Maserati road cars as well.
It’s an approach Porsche, BMW, and Mercedes-AMG have refined for years, and Maserati appears determined to join that conversation.
Eyes on 2028
Although the prototype made its public debut at Goodwood, fans shouldn’t expect to see it lining up on GT4 grids immediately.
Development is only beginning, with Maserati targeting the 2028 racing season for its competitive debut. That extended timeline gives engineers ample opportunity to refine durability, performance, and drivability before customer teams take delivery.
The goal, according to Maserati Corse, is straightforward: build a race car that’s competitive enough to fight for victories while remaining accessible and economical for independent teams.
In GT4 racing, outright speed alone rarely guarantees success. Reliability, operating costs, and ease of maintenance are often just as important, and Maserati appears well aware of that balance.
A Livery Worth Celebrating
Project GT4’s debut livery is more than an attractive paint scheme.
The blue bodywork carries a giant Trident stretching from roof to tail, surrounded by one hundred subtle Trident emblems commemorating the company’s centenary. The contrasting white nose pays homage to legendary Maserati racers such as the 420M/58 Eldorado, while the blue-and-yellow accents celebrate Modena—the heart of Italy’s Motor Valley where the car was conceived and engineered.
It’s heritage without becoming nostalgic, honoring Maserati’s history while clearly pointing toward its future.

Project GT4 is perhaps the clearest indication yet that Maserati is rebuilding its motorsport identity step by step.
First came the spectacular but exclusive MCXtrema. Then the successful GT2 program. Now comes GT4, arguably the most commercially important customer-racing category in the world.
The strategy makes sense. GT4 grids continue to expand globally, attracting manufacturers because they place race cars directly into the hands of private teams and gentleman drivers—the very customers most likely to become lifelong brand ambassadors.
For Maserati, the opportunity extends beyond collecting trophies. It’s about re-establishing the Trident as a regular presence on racing circuits after years of relative absence.
If the legendary MC12 defined Maserati’s GT dominance in the 2000s, Project GT4 could become the foundation of its next competitive era.
There’s still plenty of development ahead before the green flag waves in 2028. But if Goodwood was any indication, Maserati isn’t simply returning to GT racing.
It’s planning to stay.
Source: Stellantis