2026 Porsche 911 GT3 review: Track test


I ended my 2022 review of the 992-series Porsche 911 GT3 with this thought: “I can tell you, categorically, the ‘992’ 911 GT3 is the most complete naturally aspirated Porsche GT road car I’ve ever driven, and I can’t even begin to imagine a better one. But we all know the next one will indeed be better. That’s just how it is with Porsche.”

Fast-forward to Sydney Motorsport Park, for an evening track session under floodlights, and here it is: the 992.2 GT3.

On paper, the recipe hasn’t changed much – there’s still that screaming big-bore 4.0-litre flat-six that revs to 9000rpm, and still the choice between manual and PDK automatic transmissions.

But under the surface, the subtle, obsessive refinements Porsche is famous for are everywhere. RS-derived suspension geometry, shorter final-drive gearing, reprofiled aero, and a smattering of lightweight detail changes all conspire to make this car sharper yet calmer under pressure, and more rewarding at the ragged edge.

Up close, the 992.2 GT3 looks familiar yet unmistakably fresh. Porsche hasn’t messed with the GT3’s purposeful stance, but somehow it looked like it sat even lower to me as it left pit lane to enter the circuit proper, and the details tell the story.