The stage is set for another intense year of competition in the Yamaha Australian Off-Road Championship presented by MXstore (AORC), with a raft of new locations locked in for the 2024 instalment. Check out all the dates and venues the exciting championship will be heading this season. Release: MA. 

Josh Green is the 2023 AORC Outright Champion. After 13 years of trying, Green finally made it happen and can add that title to a long list of achievements he has notched up over his racing career.

The battle for AORC honours will begin in Roma (Qld) on March 9-10, and conclude in Nowra on September 14-15.

The 12-round AORC Championship will welcome five new venues across Queensland, Victoria, New South Wales and South Australia, while Queensland Moto Park retains its spot on the calendar. The battle for AORC honours will begin in Roma (Qld) on March 9-10, and conclude in Nowra (NSW) on September 14-15.


• Rounds 1-2: March 9-10, Roma, Qld (note change of date from previous correspondence)

• Round 3-4: April 20-21, Enfield, Vic

• Rounds 5-6: May 18-19, Edenhope, Vic

• Rounds 7-8: July 27-28, Queensland Moto Park, Coulson, Qld

• Rounds 9-10: August 24-25, TBA, SA

• Rounds 11-12: September 14-15, Nowra, NSW


With the full catalogue of men’s and women’s championship and support classes returning in 2024, the competition will be fierce as the seasoned stars of enduro go into battle with the new wave of emerging talent.

Reynders’ victory is also Sherco’s first A4DE title, just weeks after capturing the first-ever AORC outright victory for the French marquee.  

With the full catalogue of men’s and women’s championship and support classes returning in 2024, the competition will be fierce as the seasoned stars of enduro go into battle with the new wave of emerging talent.

Peter Doyle, the CEO of Motorcycling Australia, is looking forward to another stellar year of AORC action. “Now that we’ve locked in the dates and venues for 2024, we can look forward to the championship build-up and of course the kick-off in Roma,” he said. “The quality and depth of talent in the AORC Championship continues to increase year after year, with riders pushing each other to the limit across some of the most amazing Aussie terrain. A championship victory in AORC is always hard-fought, and that will certainly be the case again in 2024.”


Editor’s Note: If you are reading this article on any website other than BikeReview.com.au, please report it to BikeReview via our contact page, as it has been stolen or re-published without authority.


Share this article