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Which is faster?

The Porsche 991.2 Carrera S is faster — 1.3s quicker on average across 24 shared tracks.

The rivalry between the BMW M4 F82 and Porsche 991.2 Carrera S is less about raw numbers and more about how each brand interprets the art of going fast. Both are rear-driven, turbocharged, and bristling with performance DNA, but their fundamental philosophies diverge at the first corner. The M4 is Munich’s vision of mastery by muscle and technology, while the Carrera S is Stuttgart’s ode to balance and feedback. Track after track, their personalities—and their limits—unfold in telling ways.

Start with the M4 F82. On paper, its 431 PS twin-turbo straight-six and 549 Nm of torque, wrapped in a 3,340 lb shell, suggest brute-force capability. And on the right circuit, that’s exactly what you get. The M4 thrives on tracks that reward power-down traction, high-speed stability, and the ability to put the hammer down early. You see this at Goiânia, where a lightly modified M4, riding on Trofeo Rs, clocks a 1:29.753—nearly nine seconds clear of the Carrera S. The M4’s broad torque band, coupled with its planted, confidence-inspiring chassis, lets even moderately skilled drivers exploit its strengths with relative ease. The steering is accurate but filtered; the conversation is more email thread than face-to-face debate.

But shift to a fast, undulating track that rewards agility, and the Porsche tells a different story. The 991.2 Carrera S, with its 420 PS flat-six, is lighter (3,164 lbs) and shorter, but—crucially—engineered for transparency. On Big Willow, a technical circuit with high-speed sweepers and big braking zones, the Carrera S laps in 1:23.94, nearly ten seconds faster than the M4’s best. Why? It’s not just the numbers. The Porsche’s rear-engine layout delivers uncanny traction out of slower corners, but it’s the way the chassis telegraphs grip loss and rotation that invites the skilled driver to push harder, deeper. The steering is a direct line to the tarmac, and the entire car pivots around the driver’s hips—rewarding patience, rhythm, and commitment.

This pattern is no anomaly. On the technical, rhythm-driven Chuckwalla Valley Raceway (CW), the Porsche again dominates, posting a 1:50.78 to the M4’s 2:02.1. Even on a power circuit like Paul Ricard, where you might expect the M4’s extra grunt to shine, a stock-tired Carrera S puts down a 2:22.68, a full 14 seconds ahead of a lightly tuned M4. The Porsche’s secret isn’t just outright grip; it’s the way the car manages transitions, the predictability at the very edge, and a suspension that seems to flatten mid-corner bumps into irrelevance.

Yet, the BMW isn’t without its strongholds. At Laguna Seca (Pre 2023), a race-prepped, 800 hp M4 ekes out a win with a 1:36.2 over a stock Carrera S. But here, the win comes from massive power and setup, not inherent poise. Across the database, the M4 is consistently more approachable—its limits broader, its feedback more muted, its on-throttle balance forgiving for those still learning to dance with 400+ horsepower. The Porsche, by contrast, is built for the committed: it demands trust, rewards the patient, and punishes the greedy. Its limits are narrower, but when met, the dividends are measured in tenths and grins.

In the end, the BMW M4 F82 is the tool for those who crave accessible speed, a chassis that flatters, and the ability to hustle with confidence on power circuits. The Porsche 991.2 Carrera S is for the driver who wants to have a conversation with the road—who values nuance, demands feedback, and finds joy in shaving every last tenth through precision and flow. The lap charts confirm it: the BMW is the hammer; the Porsche, the scalpel. Which you choose depends on the story you want to write each lap.

Last updated: Mar 6, 2026

Specifications

Specifications BMW M4 F82 M4 F82 Porsche 991.2 Carrera S 991.2 Carrera S
Model Years 2014-2020 2016-2019
horsepower 431 420
torque (N_M) 549 499
forced Induction Yes Yes
weight (KG) 1,515 1,435
Power to Weight 0.28 0.29
Rank #85 #102
Tire 300 PILOT SUPER SPORT
255/40/18 / 275/40/18
220 P-ZERO
245/35/20 / 305/30/20
engine Description Twin-power turbo, Intercooler twin-turbocharged 3.0-liter flat-6 engine
gearbox 6-SPEED MANUAL TRANSMISSION 7-SPEED MANUAL
drive Type RWD RWD
wheelbase (MM) 2812 2451
width (MM) 1870 1808
length (MM) 4671 4491
height (MM) 1392 1303
0 - 60 MPH 4 SECs 3.7 SECs
top Speed (KPH) 249 307
price MSRP $ 72,500 $ 115,700
Current Value $ 55,000 $ 95,000
OVERALL VS AVERAGE LAP TIMES -2.81s -4.75s

BMW M4 F82 M4 F82 — Lap Times vs Average

Treadwear/MOD LEVEL Stock/Light S/L Medium Med Heavy/Race H/R
>200 +0.91s +0.31s -6.16s
141–200 -0.24s -4.76s -6.52s
100–140 -2.43s -4.76s -6.52s
0–99 -2.43s -4.83s -7.68s

Porsche 991.2 Carrera S 991.2 Carrera S — Lap Times vs Average

Treadwear/MOD LEVEL Stock/Light S/L Medium Med Heavy/Race H/R
>200 -0.4s -2.29s
141–200 -3.2s -5.7s
100–140 -5.7s -9.75s
0–99 -3.76s -8.17s
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