The off-season in the SuperMotocross World Championship (SMX) paddock is now in full swing. The 2025 SMX regular season (AMA Supercross and Motocross) schedules have been announced and fans are anticipating which race(s) are closest to them. And as usual, a majority of the field of riders will have different numbers for the all-new upcoming season. With the 2025 season kickoff just 106 days away with the Anaheim 1 Supercross set for January 11, 2025, the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) has released the full 2025 National and Career Pro Numbers for Supercross and Motocross list. Check out some notes we gathered on the new numbers followed by the full list of top 99 numbers.
Defending Champions
Monster Energy AMA Supercross
#1 in 450SX | Jett Lawrence | Will Look to Defend Title
The Austrialian won the premier class Monster Energy AMA Supercross title and will be back with Honda HRC Progressive for 2025, where he will have a big #1 plate on his CRF450R. When Lawrence lines up for the first AMA Pro Motocross Championship of 2025, he will be back as #18, his career number.
#1W in 250SX West Region | RJ Hampshire | Will Look to Defend Title
Hampshire earned his first professional title by claiming the 250SX West Region Championship in May. Hampshire has stated his goal is to try to defend his #1W plate in supercross then move to the 450 Class full time starting in the 2025 Pro Motocross. In the 250 Class or the 450 Class, either way when Hampshire lines up for Pro Motocross in May 2025 he will be back to his career number, #24.
#1E in 250SX East Region | Tom Vialle | Will Look to Defend Title
Vialle earned his first title in the U.S. after a breakout sophomore season in supercross. While he will be #1E in supercross starting next February, Vialle will switch back to #16—his now career number—for Pro Motocross.
AMA Pro Motocross Championship
#1 in 450 Class | Chase Sexton | Will Look to Defend Title
After switching to his career number #4 for 2024, Sexton claimed the 2024 Pro Motocross Championship. So, Sexton will be #4 in supercross, then #1 in Pro Motocross.
#1 in 250 Class | Haiden Deegan | Will Look to Defend Title
Racing as #38, Deegan claimed his first Pro Motocross title, which will give him the #1 plate for 2025. He will start the season off in supercross as #38 before making the switch to #1 in Pro Motocross.
SuperMotocross World Championship
#1 in 450SMX Class | Jett Lawrence | Will Look to Defend Title
Lawrence will race as #1 in supercross, #18 in Pro Motocross then put the #1 back on his bike for the three-round SMX Playoffs next fall as he is the two-time 450SMX champion.
#1 in 250SMX Class | Haiden Deegan | Will Look to Defend Title
Similar to Lawrence, Deegan is a two-time champion in the 250SMX Class, meaning he will run the #1 plate for the SMX Playoffs in 2025.
Career Numbers Lost
Per the rulebook, a rider can only request to keep their career number one time. The AMA has noted the following riders appealed to keep their number last year and did not meet the minimum 25 points to maintain the number:
#10 Justin Brayton
#19 Justin Bogle
#25 Marvin Musquin
These numbers then became available for the current field to pick from.
New Career Numbers and Other Number Highlights
There was one rider who earned a new career number (highlighted by **).
#5 | Not Taken
#8 | Not Taken
#9 Adam Cianciarulo
Cianciarulo remains attached to his career number he started running in 2020, #9, although he has retired from racing full-time.
#10 Chance Hymas
Hymas was the lowest non-career number and with Justin Brayton’s #10 up for grabs, Idaho native Hymas was the first rider able to jump at the first two-digit number for 2025. Hymas was #832 as a pro in 2022 and 2023 then ran #48 this year in his breakout year.
#13 | Not Taken (Out of superstition)
#16** Tom Vialle
Vialle scored his 250SX East Region title and finished 10th in combined season points. He raced with #128 in 2023 before jumping down to #16 for 2024. He will keep that number for 2025 and beyond.
#19 Jordon Smith
Smith opted to pass on #13—which the AMA does allow—so the North Carolina native will be #19 in 2025. Smith was #31 in 2024. This #19 will be Smith’s lowest national number in his long career.
#20 Pierce Brown
Broc Tickle had this number as his career number for around a decade before moving into a testing role with Kawasaki. After Maximus Vohland ran #20 in 2024, Brown will now be #20 for 2025.
#22 Jalek Swoll
The #22 was attached to Chad Reed like peanut butter to jelly until he lost the number due to not racing. Fredrik Noren was the first rider NOT named Chad Reed to run the #22 in 20 years. Now, the second non-Chad Reed #22 goes to Jalek Swoll.
#23 Julien Beaumer
After Chase Sexton moved to career number #4 for 2024, Grant Harlan was slotted into #23. After a great rookie season, Arizona native Beaumer, who is Red Bull KTM teammates with Sexton, will run #23.
#25 Ryder DiFrancesco
DiFrancesco will take on #25 for 2025, meaning a rider not named Marvin Musquin will run the number for the first time since 2012.
#29 Phil Nicoletti
Of course, one week after Nicoletti’s final race as a professional after his long career, the “Grump” earned his lowest national number to date. Before this, Nicoletti’s lowest was #30 in 2019, although he never actually raced a main event/moto with that number that year, as he raced in Canada.
#36 Garrett Marchbanks
The 2025 season will be Marchbanks’ third different year as #36. He was also national #36 in both 2020 (on Kawasaki, the year he won the Daytona SX) and 2023 (on Muc-Off/FXR/ClubMX Yamaha).
#39 Nick Romano
Romano ran #411 as a rookie in Pro Motocross in 2022 and earned #54 for 2023, but never lined up at all that year due to a knee injury. Now, Romano has been slotted into #39 after his first full year of supercross and motocross.
#42 Harri Kullas
Kullas raced the premier class in Pro Motocross as #79 this summer and did 1) well enough to qualify for the SMX Playoffs and 2) earn a national number inside the top 50 this time! Well done, Harri!
#59 Cullin Park
Park was ONE digit off his 2024 number (#58) and in 2025 will be the first rider to run #59 that does not ride a Yamaha since Cole Martinez was on a Husqvarna as #59 in 2018.
#59 Yamaha riders since 2019:
2019: Nick Gaines
2020: Josh Osby
2021: Jarrett Frye
2022: Levi Kitchen
2023: Robbie Wageman
2024: Daxton Bennick
#70 Jorge Prado
The Spanish rider competed in the first four rounds of supercross this year as #111, finishing 13, 7, 11, 12, respectively, in the California swing to start the season. Prado has his final MXGP race of the season this weekend as he looks to make it two straight premier class titles in that series, then he is rumored to be racing in the U.S. full-time starting in 2025. When he does return for 2025, Prado will be #70. Ricky Carmichael and Ken Roczen have run #70 before, so this number has some history!
#71 Broc Tickle
As mentioned, Tickle moved into a test riding role and did not lineup for an AMA SX/MX race for about four years, therefore losing his career number. But after racing two events and earning 42 points as #938 this summer, Tickle secured #71. We have no idea if he will race any rounds in 2025, but if he does, he will have a new number.
#83 Austin Forkner
Since turning pro as #214 in 2016, Forkner has had a variety of national two-digit numbers, ranging from lower numbers to mid-50s—although he never had to go back to a three-digit number. For 2025, the Missouri native will be his highest national number to date: #83.
Austin Forkner’s national numbers since turning pro as #216 in 2016:
2017: #24
2018: #35
2019: #24
2020: #52
2021: #38
2022: #33
2023: #55
2024: #64
2025: #83
#98 Drew Adams
Adams raced only one round of Pro Motocross (the Ironman Naitonal finale) as #593 but earned 18 points by finishing 15-11 for 12th overall. Although we are not sure of when we will see the Tennessee native race pro in 2025, his long-time amateur number (#300) will be gone as he will be #98.
#99 Brock Bennett
Bennett raced as #273 in 2024 but earned the final two-digit number for 2025: #99.
Look A Like
Some riders will be running their teammate’s number from the previous year, so don’t get confused…
#26 Garrett Marchbanks in 2024
#26 Ty Masterpool for 2025
#31 in 2024: Jordon Smith on Monster Energy Yamaha Star Racing
#31 in 2025: Max Anstie on Monster Energy Yamaha Star Racing
#36 in 2020: Garrett Marchbanks on Monster Energy/Pro Circuit Kawasaki
#36 in 2025: Garrett Marchbanks on Monster Energy/Pro Circuit Kawasaki
From Three Digits to Two Digits
(Rider: 2024 number to 2025 number)
Julien Beaumer: #929 to #23
Nick Romano: #511 to #39
Casey Cochran: #166 to #40
Anthony Bourdon: #100 to #52
Mark Fineis: #705 to #62
Lux Turner: #473 to #65
Kyle Webster: #762 to #69
Preston Boespflug: #128 to #73
Gage Linville: #602 to #75
Ryder McNabb: #107 to #76
Matti Jorgensen: #245 to #81
Ryder Floyd: #296 to #82
Max Sanford: #162 to #85
Trevor Colip: #174 to #89
Jorgen-Matthias Talviku: #108 to #90
TJ Albright: #216 to #91
Alvin Östlund: #290 to #95
Drew Adams: #593 to #98
Brock Bennett: #273 to #99
Below is the full announcement from the AMA, along with the release of the national numbers.
2025 AMA Supercross and Motocross National Numbers
PICKERINGTON, Ohio — The American Motorcyclist Association announced the professional competition numbers for the pro-licensed riders participating in the 2025 AMA Supercross and AMA Pro Motocross Championship.
Professional numbers are assigned and used in competition. The reigning champion races with the No. 1 plate when competing in the class or region in which the plate was earned, while the assigned professional number is used when outside the champion’s title class or region.
Official List of 2025 Top 100 and Career Pro Numbers for AMA Supercross and Motocross
*Career Numbers
**New Career Numbers for 2025
1 – 450SMX Jett Lawrence
1 – 450SX Jett Lawrence
1 – 450MX Chase Sexton
1 – 250SMX Haiden Deegan
1 – 250MX Haiden Deegan
1E – Tom Vialle
1W – RJ Hampshire
2*– Cooper Webb
3* – Eli Tomac
4* – Chase Sexton
6* – Jeremy Martin
7* – Aaron Plessinger
9* – Adam Cianciarulo
10 – Chance Hymas
11* – Kyle Chisholm
12* – Shane McElrath
14* – Dylan Ferrandis
15* – Dean Wilson
16** – Tom Vialle
17* – Joey Savatgy
18* – Jett Lawrence
19 – Jordon Smith
20 – Pierce Brown
21* – Jason Anderson
22 – Jalek Swoll
23 – Julien Beaumer
24* – RJ Hampshire
25 – Ryder DiFrancesco
26 – Ty Masterpool
27* – Malcolm Stewart
28* – Christian Craig
29 – Phillip Nicoletti
30* – Jo Shimoda
31 – Max Anstie
32* – Justin Cooper
33 – Fredrik Noren
34 – Daxton Bennick
35 – Marshal Weltin
36 – Garrett Marchbanks
37 – Coty Schock
38* – Haiden Deegan
39 – Nicholas Romano
40 – Casey Cochran
41 – Nate Thrasher
42 – Harri Kullas
43 – Grant Harlan
44 – Dilan Schwartz
45* – Colt Nichols
46* – Justin Hill
47* – Levi Kitchen
48 – Talon Hawkins
49 – Mitchell Oldenburg
50 – Cameron McAdoo
51* – Justin Barcia
52 – Anthony Bourdon
53 – Romain Pape
54 – Jett Reynolds
55 – Henry Miller
56 – Seth Hammaker
57 – Benny Bloss
58 – Derek Kelley
59 – Cullin Park
60 – Carson Mumford
61 – Cole Thompson
62 – Mark Fineis
63 – Hunter Yoder
64 – Robbie Wageman
65 – Lux Turner
66 – Vince Friese
67 – Joshua Varize
68 – Jeremy Hand
69 – Kyle Webster
70 – Jorge Prado
71 – Broc Tickle
72 – Anthony Rodriguez
73 – Preston Boespflug
74 – Lorenzo Locurcio
75 – Gage Linville
76 – Ryder McNabb
77 – Jerry Robin
78 – Cade Clason
79 – Max Miller
80 – Derek Drake
81 – Matti Jorgensen
82 – Ryder Floyd
83 – Austin Forkner
84 – Guillem Farres
85 – Max Sanford
86 – Mitchell Harrison
87 – Hardy Munoz
88 – Devin Simonson
89 – Trevor Colip
90 – Jorgen-Matthias Talviku
91 – TJ Albright
92 – Maximus Vohland
93 – Michael Mosiman
94* – Ken Roczen
95 – Alvin Östlund
96* – Hunter Lawrence
97 – Bryce Shelly
98 – Drew Adams
99 – Brock Bennett