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MotoGP, Calendar 2025: 22 Grand Prix, Mugello on June 22, Misano on September 14

It will start in Thailand on March 2 and end in Valencia on November 16. There will be no hat-trick, but 7 one-two wins. All 4 GPs in Spain confirmed.

MotoGP: Calendar 2025: 22 Grand Prix, Mugello on June 22, Misano on September 14

The International Motorcycle Federation has released the provisional MotoGP calendar for 2025. There are 22 Grand Prix on the schedule, with a total of 18 countries involved. As previously announced, it will start on March 2 from Thailand, ending, as is now tradition, in Valencia on November 16.

The first four races will be outside Europe, and with slightly schizophrenic logistics: after the leg in Asia, MotoGP will in fact go to South America for the Argentine GP (on March 16) before moving to the US (Austin is scheduled for March 30) and then flying to Qatar, with the race set for April 13.

Welcoming the MotoGP to the Old Continent will be Jerez (April 27), then Le Mans (May 11) and Silverstone (May 25), earlier than the usual summer date. Confirmed Aragon on June 8, with Mugello put at the end of the month (on the 22nd) before Assen (on the 29th).

Before the summer break, there will be the Sachsenring and Brno races (although the contract for the Czech circuit is still awaited) on July 13 and 20.

There will then be nearly a month's break before racing again in Austria on Aug. 17, with a debut at Balaton Park (which has yet to be homologated) scheduled the following week.

The Barcelona and Misano GPs ( on Sept. 7 and 14) will be the last in Europe before the Asian trips. They begin with Japan on Sept. 28, followed by Indonesia on Oct. 5. A weekend off and then the Australia-Malaysia doubleheader on October 19 and 26. The grand finale will be on the Iberian Peninsula: Portimao is scheduled for November 9, a week before Valencia.

What's new for 2025 is that there will be no more triplets, but many one-two-three, as many as 7 (Italy-Holland, Germaia-Czech Republic, Austria-Hungary, Catalonia-San Marino, Japan-Indonesia, Australia-Malaysia, Portugal-Valencia).

What will not change is the large presence of Spanish GPs. Although there has long been talk of rotation, all four (Jerez, Aragon, Barcelona, and Valencia) have been confirmed. Adding Portimao as well, there will be five Grands Prix on the Iberian Peninsula.

Automatic Translation by DeepL

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