The Toyota GR Supra A90/A91 is faster — 1.6s quicker on average across 14 shared tracks.
The BMW M4 F82 DCT and Toyota GR Supra A90/A91 are fraternal twins of the modern sports coupe world—each built around a turbocharged inline-six, rear-wheel drive, and a shared thread of BMW engineering DNA. But on track, their personalities diverge dramatically, shaped by intent, weight, and the type of driver each aims to satisfy.
The M4 F82 is unapologetically a “big” M car—long, wide, and muscular, with 466 PS and the S55’s signature wallop. Its dual-clutch gearbox delivers shifts with a clinical snap, but the car’s real story lies in its chassis engineering. The M4’s wide track, advanced damper tech, and robust brakes give it the confidence to attack high-speed sweepers and late braking zones with the composure of a sledgehammer wielded by a surgeon. On a classic driver’s circuit like Nürburgring - BTG, this recipe shines: Robin Plato’s 7:21.8 lap, achieved on medium mods and sticky Trofeo Rs, is a testament to the M4’s ability to exploit its power, stability, and braking on a circuit that punishes excess and rewards balance. Here, the Supra’s best effort—08:03—is left trailing by over 40 seconds, with the Supra’s lighter weight and torquey B58 unable to compensate for less outright grip and composure at the limit.
Yet, the landscape shifts as you move to tighter, more technical circuits where agility and mod potential can rewrite the script. The Supra’s shorter wheelbase, 130-lb weight advantage, and more modern electronic nannies make it a remarkably adaptable platform, especially in the hands of tuners. Once the B58 is uncorked, the Supra transforms from a polite sport coupe into a time attack scalpel. At Thunderhill - East 3 Mile w/ Bypass, a heavily modified Supra with 600 PS and Nankang CR-S tires clocks a 01:49.6, demolishing the M4’s best medium-modified lap (02:04.56) by nearly 15 seconds. It’s a pattern repeated at circuits like Sonoma Raceway—where the Supra’s 1:40.737 puts it over 14 seconds ahead of the M4—and at Laguna Seca, where the Supra’s 01:31.385 makes the M4’s 1:41.765 seem almost ponderous.
What’s at play isn’t just power, but philosophy. The M4’s platform is built for high-speed authority and driver engagement—the steering is weighty, the rear end always asks for respect, and the car rewards those who can modulate throttle and trail-brake with intent. It feels like a big car, but one that shrinks around you when you trust the chassis. Its limitations emerge as you try to hustle it through rapid transitions or low-speed complexes—the mass and wheelbase that bring calm at 140 mph can feel like baggage in a hairpin, and extracting that last tenth requires patience and subtlety.
The Supra, especially once modified, morphs into a car that flatters aggression. The B58’s torque is almost digital in its delivery, coming on early and hard, letting you slingshot out of corners and mask small mistakes. The chassis is inherently neutral, but with a tendency for safe, predictable oversteer as you add power. In its stock form, it can feel a bit anesthetized—precise, but filtered. But unlock the suspension, add stickier tires, and the Supra becomes eager, darty, and devastatingly quick, especially for drivers who like to lean on electronics and let the car sort out the edge. There’s less communication than the M4, but more forgiveness—perfect for extracting lap times in the heat of competition.
In the end, the M4 F82 DCT is the “conversation” coupe—a car that tells you exactly what’s happening beneath you, rewards the methodical, and thrives on big, flowing circuits. The Supra A90/A91, once unleashed, is the “algorithmic” assassin, remapping its DNA into whatever the driver or builder demands—especially potent at sprint circuits and in the hands of those who want to let power and modern chassis tuning rewrite the rules. For the purist, the M4 is still the more transparent and involving tool; for the lap-time chaser, the Supra’s flexibility and explosive pace are hard to ignore.
Specifications
| Specifications | BMW M4 F82 DCT M4 F82 DCT | Toyota GR Supra A90/A91 GR Supra A90/A91 |
|---|---|---|
| Model Years | 2015-2019 | 2019-2026 |
| horsepower | 425 | 387 |
| torque (N_M) | 406 | 500 |
| forced Induction | Yes | Yes |
| weight (KG) | 1,580 | 1,520 |
| Power to Weight | 0.27 | 0.25 |
| Rank | #69 | #80 |
| Tire |
300 PILOT SUPER SPORT
265/30/20 / 285/30/20 |
300 PILOT SUPER SPORT
255/35/19 / 275/35/19 |
| engine Description | 3.0 L S55 twin-turbo I6 | 2,998 cc (2.998 L; 182.9 cu in) BMW B58B30O1 I6 |
| gearbox | 7-SPEED M-DCT TRANSMISSION | 8-SPEED ZF 8HP AUTOMATIC |
| drive Type | RWD | RWD |
| wheelbase (MM) | 2812 | 2469 |
| width (MM) | 1870 | 1864 |
| length (MM) | 4672 | 4379 |
| height (MM) | 1392 | 1295 |
| 0 - 60 MPH | 4 SECs | 4 SECs |
| top Speed (KPH) | 249 | 249 |
| price MSRP | $ 74,845 | $ 55,250 |
| Current Value | $ 45,000 | $ 55,000 |
| OVERALL VS AVERAGE LAP TIMES | -3.59s | -5.72s |
BMW M4 F82 DCT M4 F82 DCT — Lap Times vs Average
Lap Times
| Track Name | M4 F82 DCT M4 F82 D… | GR Supra A90/A91 GR Supra… | Diff | Mod | Treadwear TW | Video |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Laguna Seca (Current) | 1:35.7 | 1:37.76 | -2.06 | Light | 141–200 | |
| Sydney Motorsport Park (GP Circuit) | 1:39.35 | 1:45 | -5.65 | Stock | >200 | |
| Sonoma Raceway (Long) | 1:45.4 | 1:41.691 | +3.7 | Medium | 141–200 | ▶ VS ▶ |
Additional Lap Times
| Track Name | M4 F82 DCT M4 F82 D… | GR Supra A90/A91 GR Supra… | Diff | Mod | Treadwear TW | Video |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Laguna Seca (Current) | 1:35.7 | 1:30.18 | +5.52 | Light / Heavy | 200 / 200 | |
| Sydney Motorsport Park (GP Circuit) | 1:39.35 | 1:35.595 | +3.75 | Stock / Heavy | 300 / 100 | ▶ VS ▶ |
| Watkins Glen International (Full Circuit w/ Loop) | 2:11 | 1:59.22 | +11.78 | Med / Race | 300 / 300 | |
| Sonoma Raceway (Long) | 1:45.4 | 1:39.2 | +6.2 | Med / Heavy | 200 / 200 |