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16/01/2026

New 911 GT3 RS facelift shows its wild side in the snow

Porsche’s next-forged track missile is out in the cold again. A fresh prototype of the 911 GT3 RS has been caught testing in frosty Scandinavia, throwing dramatic slides on snow and showing off a silhouette that’s familiar yet quietly evolved. At first glance it could pass for the current car, but the closer you look the more purposeful the changes become — a GT3 RS that’s been sharpened for the racetrack and the rules that govern it.

The nose is the first place you notice evolution. The vented bonnet appears more sculpted than before, with two new scoops cutting toward the tip of the car. They give the front a more aggressive face while hinting at refined airflow management beneath the skin. At the rear the prototype wears a full-width lightbar that aligns it with other 992.2 variants. The swan-neck, DRS-capable wing has been reworked too: instead of the current two horizontal profiles, this version stacks three elements, suggesting greater adjustability and downforce potential. Look under the wing and the diffuser has been redesigned with a more combative stance. An additional pair of vertical fins and what appear to be larger exhaust outlets dominate the center, and at the diffuser’s outer edges there are a couple of new outlets. They could be auxiliary exhausts intended to lower back-pressure, or they may point to more fundamental changes to the powertrain or its packaging. Either way, the rear end reads as if Porsche is intent on extracting more flow efficiency and more bite from the aero package. Under the bonnet sits the big question.

Porsche has been frank about the difficulty of keeping a naturally aspirated 4.0-litre flat-six compliant with tightening European emissions regulations. That has led to speculation that the RS could adopt turbocharging or hybrid assistance like some other 911 derivatives. Such a switch would be seismic for the GT3 RS, a model with a fanatical following that has traditionally celebrated a naturally aspirated character. For context, the new 911 GT3 sticks with a free-breathing 4.0-litre that produces the equivalent of roughly 500 hp and spins to 9,000 rpm. If Porsche can preserve that visceral, high-revving nature in the RS, purists will be relieved. Chassis work will be just as critical as whatever sits on the dyno. Expect intensified suspension tuning, revised anti-roll geometry and further stiffness upgrades to make the car even more incisive on lap after lap. Inside, changes are likely to follow the direction of the current 992.2 GT3: a fully digital control cluster and the option of folding carbon-fibre bucket seats to strip weight and secure occupants. Those interior options underline Porsche’s commitment to blending race-bred functionality with everyday ergonomics when needed.

Timing is another piece of the puzzle. Porsche’s 2026 docket is crowded: a new 911 Turbo S, the all-new Cayenne Electric and, potentially, the long-awaited next-generation 718 Cayman and Boxster. With so many headline launches, the RS program could be quieter than hardcore fans hope; substantial details about the newest GT3 RS might not surface until 2027. That delay wouldn’t be surprising — bringing a car of this calibre into compliance while preserving its essence is a complex task. For now, these spycams give us the clearest hint yet that Porsche is refining the GT3 RS in measured steps: more sophisticated aero, a bolder rear end and packaging changes that could support either powertrain continuity or a new direction entirely. If the test mules are any indication, when the production RS finally arrives it will look like a more extreme, more focused version of what current owners already adore — but with the potential for technical surprises under the skin.

Keep an eye on prototype activity and dealer inventories if you’re in the market; the next chapter in Porsche’s track-focused story is being written, one cold lap at a time.

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