There have been thirty content updates released for Gran Turismo Sport since November 2017, along with some minor/quality-of-life patches (usually released after a major content update). They are detailed below:
Content Updates[]
- See also: Downloadable Content/Gran Turismo Sport
2017-2018[]
- November 27, 2017 (1.06)
GT Sport received its first major update with 3 new cars, the Audi R18 (Audi Sport Team Joest) '16, the IsoRivolta Zagato Vision Gran Turismo, and the Shelby Cobra 427 '66.
- December 22, 2017 (1.10)
The second major update with the re-introduction of the traditional single player campaign as in the previous titles, in the form of GT League, alongside 15 new cars.
- January 26, 2018 (1.11)
The third major update featured 10 new cars, a new track (Monza), and new track layouts for Autodrome Lago Maggiore.- Some of the returning cars featured on the update were teased as prize cars for Gran Turismo 6's Seasonal Events held the day before the update was released.
- February 28, 2018 (1.13)
The fourth major update featured 12 new cars, new track layouts for Blue Moon Bay and an expansion to GT League.
- March 29, 2018 (1.15)
The fifth major update featured 13 new cars, a new group (Gr.2) for the three new GT500 cars, a new track (Tsukuba Circuit), and an expansion to GT League.
- April 9, 2018 (1.17)
A sixth update saw the addition of the two new cars Audi e-tron Vision Gran Turismo and Audi Vision Gran Turismo.
- April 30, 2018 (1.18)
The seventh update saw the addition of the GR Supra Concept to the game alongside three new GT League events with the "Garden" variation of the Dragon Trail circuit.
- May 30, 2018 (1.19)
The eighth content update included the Circuit de la Sarthe (which hosts the 24 Hours of Le Mans) and nine new cars, 3 Group C Le Mans race cars, two of which (the Jaguar XJR-9 and Sauber Mercedes C9) won the 24hrs of Le Mans in 1988 and 1989, respectively.
- July 30, 2018 (1.23)
The ninth update saw the appearance of the Mercedes-AMG F1 W08, Lewis Hamilton's Formula 1 2017 contender, the return of the Mazda 787B '91 and Ford GT LM Spec II Test Car, five other cars, a new original track (Circuit de Sainte-Croix), microtransactions for car purchases in Brand Central, major updates to the Livery Editor (including the ability to add decals to outfits and helmets) and Scapes, and an expansion to GT League.
- August 29, 2018 (1.25)
The tenth content update saw the return of Red Bull Ring and eight new cars, including a tuned S2000, and an expansion to GT League.
- September 26, 2018 (1.28)
The eleventh update saw the return of Fuji Speedway (F and GT), the formal appearance of the Porsche 911 GT3 (996) from Gran Turismo 3 (formerly hidden), eight other cars, and an expansion to GT League.
- November 6, 2018 (1.29)
The twelfth content update includes the addition of several new event races and nine new cars, including three new Gr.2 cars. Examples of vehicles that were added were the Jaguar E-TYPE Coupe '61, the Ferrari GTO '84, and the MINI COOPER S '05. The famous Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix Layout has also been added.
- December 5, 2018 (1.31)
The thirteenth content update includes the South Inner Loop and South Outer Loop variants of Tokyo Expressway. Also added were 7 new cars, 7 new event races, new "Scapes", and FIA being added to the "Museum" area.
2019[]
- January 17, 2019 (1.32)
The fourteenth content update saw the return of the Special Stage Route X and eight new cars, including the Aston Martin DB3S. The update also added new event races to GT League.
- March 5, 2019 (1.34)
The fifteenth content update saw the introduction of the Autopolis International Racing Course and five new cars, including the Toyota GR Supra, and new event races to GT League.
- March 28, 2019 (1.36)
The sixteenth content update saw five new cars added to the game, including two Dallara SF19 Super Formula '19 vehicles. New event races were added to GT League. An 'Overtake' feature was also added that could be mapped to a button through the options menu; along with this was the addition of varying boost features for some vehicles that are compatible with the 'Overtake' function, including KERS and DRS.
- April 23, 2019 (1.38)
The seventeenth content update saw five new cars added to the game, including the Porsche 962 C '88 and Toyota SPRINTER TRUENO GT-APEX (AE86) '83. New event races were added to GT League.- On the release date of the previous update, the cars intended to appear on this update were accidentally leaked using the car filter option in the shared content search settings on the Gran Turismo website. The list also mentions Red Bull X2014 Competition, which was renamed the X2019 Competition and released in the June update instead.
- May 30, 2019 (1.39)
The eighteenth content update saw the introduction of the Goodwood Motor Circuit. New event races were added to GT League. For the first (and only) time in GT Sport history, there were no new cars added in this content update.- The disc of the Gran Turismo Sport Spec II budget re-release features all content and quality-of-life fixes up to this update, ostensibly to speed up installation/first-run update process.
- June 27, 2019 (1.40)
The nineteenth content update saw the introduction of a new original track (Sardegna - Road Track) and five new cars, including the Red Bull X2019 Competition. New event races were added to GT League.
- July 31, 2019 (1.41)
The twentieth content update saw five new cars added to the game, including the Porsche 911 Turbo (930) '81. New event races were added to GT League, as well as the addition of the Time Trial events to Sport Mode, essentially marking the return of time trial Seasonal Events from PlayStation 3-era games.- Four of the five cars appearing in the update leaked early due to New Zealand PlayStation Store's listings for car microtransactions appearing too early; typically, these are listed on the PlayStation Store when the game update are being deployed to players.
- August 27, 2019 (1.43)
The twenty-first content update saw the introduction of wet conditions on the Red Bull Ring and five new cars, including the Honda S2000 '99. New event races were added to GT League.
- September 26, 2019 (1.45)
The twenty-second content update saw the introduction of wet conditions for the Central and East Loops of the Tokyo Expressway and four new cars, including the Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE Package '18. New event races were added to GT League.
- October 31, 2019 (1.47)
The twenty-third content update saw the introduction of the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps and four new cars, including the Porsche Taycan Turbo S '19. New event races were added to GT League.- A patch released before this update, 1.46 (released on October 3rd) added a new opening movie and new PlayStation 4 system menu icon, in commemoration of an updated re-release of the game called Gran Turismo Sport Spec II. In it, Spa and the Taycan appears, with both being playable one update later (1.47).
- November 28, 2019 (1.50)
The twenty-fourth content update saw five new cars added to the game, including the Jaguar Vision Gran Turismo Coupé. New event races were added to GT League. This update also features the game's paid DLC challenge mode, the Lewis Hamilton Time Trial Challenge.
- December 18, 2019 (1.53)
The twenty-fifth content update saw the introduction of WeatherTech Raceway Laguna Seca, and seven new cars, including the Ford GT '17. New event races were added to GT League. As of January 2021, Laguna Seca is the last track to be added to the game.
2020-2021[]
- February 27, 2020 (1.56)
The twenty-sixth content update saw three new cars added to the game, including the Aston Martin DBR9 GT1 '10. New event races were added to GT League.
- April 23, 2020 (1.57)
The twenty-seventh content update saw one new car added to the game, the Toyota GR Supra RZ '20, along with several rule changes to Sport Mode.
- May 22, 2020 (1.59)
The twenty-eighth content update saw one new car added to the game, the Mazda RX-Vision GT3 Concept. This update also marks the end of TAG Heuer partnership, as it's Brand Central was quietly removed from the game; a new waiting screen was added to Sport Mode as a result.
- November 13, 2020 (1.62)
The twenty-ninth content update - a surprise update given the six-month gap between the release of the previous content update and having released after the announcement of Gran Turismo 7 - saw one new car added to the game, the Toyota GR Yaris 1st Edition RZ “High Performance” '20, in addition to the addition of an updated Nissan logo.
- July 7, 2021 (1.66)
The thirtieth and final content update saw one new car added to the game, the Toyota GR 86 '21, to support the 2021 Toyota Gazoo Racing GT Cup event.- This update breaks the record for the longest gap between the release of the previous content update (eight months).
Quality-of-Life Updates[]
2017[]
- October 25, 2017 (1.03)
The game's first quality-of-life update, this update fixes several crashes, such as when deleting the player's registered email address for use in Sport Mode, when exiting a Drift Trial event with a car with a custom paint job from the Livery Editor, and certain issues with Thurstmaster steering wheels.
- November 3, 2017 (1.05)
Released before the game's first major update, this update refines the game's traction control, ABS, wheel force feedback (FFB), and DualShock 4 controls. It also marks the debut of Broadcasting Mode, which features menu music from previous games as a copyright-free menu music when enabled. Additionally, players can also what cars are compatible with a wheel being purchased at the Mileage Exchange as well as in-game server and maintenance status from the game's front menu.
- December 6, 2017 (1.07)
This "emergency update" improves car stability with TCS enabled at corner exits when the throttle is on. Coincidental to this update, Daily Race schedules were also adjusted.
- December 9, 2017 (1.08)
This update, released three days after the previous minor update, fixes issues relating to friend rankings in the game's campaign mode, as well as save data corruption relating to race photos marked as favorites.
2018[]
- February 9, 2018 (1.11)
This update improves stability of some mid-engined race cars (mainly Gr.1 cars), as well as some softlocks relating to Garage and Discover features.
- March 12, 2018 (1.14)
This update adds two new Scape locations exclusive to Mazda cars (accessible from the manufacturer's Brand Central) and readjusts the penalty sensitivity.
- April 4, 2018 (1.16)
This update fixes issues with the Thrustmaster T500RS wheel introduced in the previous update, as well as some sound issues.- When the update originally came out, the update was suspiciously large (at 24 GB, instead of the intended 107 MB) due to the update being set to re-download all patches, instead of being differential patch (only updated files are downloaded). Patches for other games were also reportedly affected as the issue occurred in Sony's central patching services, such as Fortnite.
- June 7, 2018 (1.20)
This update fixes a bug where the player can lose all of their cars in the Garage if the game is played across multiple PlayStation 4 consoles with all of them using the same PlayStation Network account. It also fixes issues relating to "slowest first" and "reverse grid" start types in the Lobby.
- June 20, 2018 (1.21)
This update adds promotion for Gran Turismo World Tours in the main menu screen, as well as fixing interior issues affecting Nissan R92CP '92 and Audi R8 4.2 FSI R tronic '07.
- August 7, 2018 (1.24)
This update fixes default decals on the Mazda 787B '91 and various decal-related issues in the Livery Editor. It also fixes a glitch where the Mercedes-AMG F1 W08 EQ Power+ 2017 could not shift down while braking, as well as having infinite acceleration when the fuel is empty.
- September 6, 2018 (1.26)
This update fixes game crashes when the player accesses My Menu or Discover modes, as well as an issue where rotation angle setting did not apply correctly for Fanatec CSL Elite wheel users.
- November 15, 2018 (1.30)
Releasing before the 2018 Gran Turismo World Finals, this update fixes starting grid issues in Sport Mode races, where player cars "that should be in motion is stopped and stuck at the start position" or finding themselves starting "from halfway through the track".
2019[]
- February 7, 2019 (1.33)
The first minor update of 2019 saw a fix to an issue where the game would fail when pressing the Confirm button repeatedly during warm-up or qualifying sessions in Sport Mode, as well with refueling speed for stored Lobby settings.
- March 12, 2019 (1.35)
The second minor update of 2019 fixes issues with Point Rankings in Sport Mode, as well as re-fixing refueling speeds for stored Lobby settings.
- April 4, 2019 (1.37)
This update reverted manual-clutch and H-pattern shifter behavior changes added in version 1.35, due to negative reception to that particular change.
- September 5, 2019 (1.44)
This minor update contains fixes to Thai language option for Asian version of the game.
- October 3, 2019 (1.46)
This version adds a new opening movie and new PlayStation 4 system menu icon, in commemoration of an updated re-release of the game called Gran Turismo Sport Spec II. The new opening movie features highlights from previous year's Gran Turismo World Tour events, as well as showcasing updated content, including Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps and Porsche Taycan Turbo S '19, with both being playable one (content) update later.
- November 7, 2019 (1.48)
This update fixes the "rain glitch", where if the lobby owner changes the track from a wet track to a non-wet track, the newly chosen track behaves as if it is a wet track.
- December 10, 2019 (1.52)
This update fixes an issue where the player cannot obtain cars (due to the game thinking the player's garage is full) if the game attempts to read save data created from, or last saved with, version 1.18 or lower.- Note that, if the save is affected and the update is installed, all cars in the garage except for the player's starter car will be lost.
2020[]
- January 29, 2020 (1.55)
This update tightens the penalty algorithm relating to collisions between cars.
- June 4, 2020 (1.60)
This update fixes issues with the Mazda RX-Vision GT3 Concept, such as issues with the car's hood in the Livery Editor and the car appearing to use the Balance of Performance settings of Porsche 911 RSR (991) '17 on oval courses. It also adjusts collisions in Sport Mode races, to reduce the bouncing/"pinball" effect.
- July 16, 2020 (1.61)
This update refines "Real" slipstream/drafting and penalty algorithm relating to light collisions. It also adds a third Michelin (specifically, the Pilot Sport variant) tire decal to the Livery Editor.
2021[]
- February 24, 2021 (1.63)
This update refines the penalty algorithm relating to light collisions once more to allow for leeway for players with high-latency connections, and increases the time loss when the player enters the pit lane. It also prepares for changes to regional division in Manufacturer Series races.
- March 25, 2021 (1.64)
This update fixes issues relating to penalties where players may receive penalty for overtaking under a yellow flag, even though the player did not actually do so.
- May 11, 2021 (1.65)
The largest non-major update at 3.3 GB, this update prepares for the Olympic Virtual Series, where event-only versions of certain tracks and cars used in the event are added. (These additions are necessary because the finals are held online, even though most of the general public could only play two of the added content when they were part of a qualifier Time Trial event.)
- September 9, 2021 (1.67)
This update updates Toyota logo branding and in process removes the red text/silver logo version of the Toyota decal.- The particular decal was reinstated in Gran Turismo 7, however.
- September 28, 2021 (1.68)
This update, released eighteen days after GT7 was shown at the PlayStation Showcase event, simply improves online stability of the Open Lobby mode.
End of Online Service[]
- January 31, 2024 (1.69)
This update is the end-of-online services patch for GT Sport, informing the player that the game's online services have ended and allowing certain features, such as saving, to be available offline.