Maverick Vinales Confirms MotoGP Exit: 'I Already Know I'm Out'
Maverick Vinales has spoken bluntly about his MotoGP future, saying he already knows he is out of the series and sees no point in talking to KTM boss Pit Beirer.

Vinales Breaks Silence on His MotoGP Future
Maverick Vinales has made his position clear: he already knows his time in MotoGP is over. The Spanish rider addressed speculation about a potential conversation with KTM motorsport director Pit Beirer, dismissing the idea with a candid admission that there is nothing left to discuss.
"Talk to Beirer? I already know I'm out of MotoGP," Vinales said, according to reporting by gpone.com. The quote leaves little room for interpretation. Vinales is not waiting for a phone call or a meeting to confirm what he says he already understands to be his reality.
The statement is significant because it effectively closes the door on any last-minute rescue deal from the KTM camp, which has been one of the names circulating in discussions about where displaced riders might land. Vinales is not entertaining that route.
What Led to This Point
Vinales has had one of the more turbulent careers in the premier class. After his well-documented split from Yamaha mid-season in 2021, he joined Aprilia and showed genuine pace at times, reminding the paddock of the talent that once made him a title contender. But results were inconsistent, and his relationship with the project ultimately ran its course.
His contract situation left him without a confirmed seat for the upcoming season, and the window for securing a competitive MotoGP ride has been narrowing. With manufacturer lineups largely settled and the silly season winding down, the options available to a rider of his experience have become limited.
The mention of Beirer is telling. KTM and its satellite structure under the Tech3 banner have been one of the few organizations still potentially shuffling their rider arrangements. But Vinales is signaling he has no expectation that those conversations would go anywhere, or that he is even pursuing them.
A Rider Facing Life Outside the Grid
For a rider who won races with both Suzuki and Yamaha and arrived in MotoGP as one of the most hyped prospects of his generation, the prospect of stepping away from the grid is a sobering one. Vinales is still in his late twenties, an age where many riders are at or near their peak.
His tone suggests he has made peace with the situation, at least publicly. There is no anger in the reported remarks, no finger-pointing at teams or manufacturers. Just a flat acknowledgment that the door has closed.
What comes next for Vinales is unclear. Riders who exit MotoGP at his level often look at World Superbike as a continuation, and several former grand prix names have rebuilt their careers there. Others step away from top-level racing altogether. Vinales has not publicly outlined any alternative plans based on available reporting.
What is clear is that one of the more gifted riders of his era appears set to exit the world's top motorcycle racing series, and he is not pretending otherwise.
MotoGP Correspondent
Luca Moretti is 21.fun's MotoGP correspondent, following the championship from free practice to the podium with an eye for race strategy and tech.










