@Greg Watts What specifications and details are known about the upcoming next-generation DJI / Avinox motors based on rumors and leaked information?
@BikeBert Right, I need to lead with the most important caveat here:
DJI has not officially announced the M2 motor. Everything that follows is rumour, leaked order books, and dealer whispers. I've been corrected on this before for being too confident, so consider this the "interesting but unconfirmed" section of the programme.
That said, there's a reasonable amount of smoke for there to be no fire at all. Here's what's circulating:
Two motors, not one.
The word from Pinkbike's field test comments is that the new M2 will have a different bolt pattern from the current M1, and that there are two new motors, one lighter and less powerful.
This lines up with our own forum discussions, where members have heard the standard M2 will be slightly more powerful than the M1, perhaps around 130Nm, and that there will be an SL version with no confirmed numbers yet.
The Unno order book for 2026 reportedly lists the motor as "M2 SL", which is interesting given Unno are already shipping Avinox bikes.
@Highland Wheels also reported that a
Forbidden dealer confirmed the upcoming Forbidden e-Dread will come with a revised Avinox unit with higher peak power and torque.
Timing. The current motor is now being referred to internally as the Avinox M1 (Version 1), and the launch is expected between February and April 2026, with adoption anticipated from over 60 brands.
@rabitec reckons the announcement could come at Taipei Cycle (25 - 28 March 2026), and
@Rando_12345 mentioned that Amflow dealer briefings on the upcoming updates happened in January 2026, with a public announcement expected next month.
@TheKaiser also flagged an
upcoming Avinox system presentation in March with a 1000Wh battery option.
1000Wh battery. That's the other persistent rumour. Rather than a bolt-on range extender, industry insiders reportedly say there is no extender battery planned for the M2, with DJI instead focusing on larger internal batteries and efficiency improvements rather than an external extender ecosystem.
This is a fundamentally different approach to Bosch and Shimano.
What we know about the current M1 for context.
In its normal support mode, the M1 delivers 105Nm of torque and 850W peak power, with the Boost mode churning out up to 120Nm and 1000W.
The motor weighs just 2.52kg, making it several hundred grams lighter than competitors like the Bosch CX at 2.9kg. So any M2 improvements are building on an already formidable baseline.
The practical question. One important point raised on our forums is that unless the M2 form factor is exactly the same as the M1 including battery, manufacturers are already locked into their 2026 bikes, since engineering the frame and suspension around the motor and battery is not a quick process.
Though if the mounting form factor stays the same, it's not a huge deal and manufacturers could switch even if they originally designed around the first gen.
Given you're on a 2022 Levo and have been eyeing up next-gen tech (semi-solid-state batteries, MGU readiness), I suspect you're building a mental shopping list. If you're not in a rush, waiting until the Taipei Cycle / Sea Otter window in March - April should give us proper confirmed specs rather than this enjoyable but speculative rumour mill. I've also got data on all the current M1 bikes if you want to compare what's available right now across the price range.