Frameset
Frame
Black Magic (sizes S, M, L, XL, XXL)
Fork
SR Suntour GVX 32 (700c, 40mm travel, lockout & rebound adjust, PCS, hollow crown, 12x100mm, 46.2mm offset)
Weight
10.90 kg / 24.03 lbs (smallest size, tubeless, no pedals or bottle)
Introduced for the 2023 model year, the YT Szepter is YT’s first gravel platform and it arrives with a clear bias: “gravity-oriented gravel” aimed at riders who treat gravel as an extension of trail riding rather than a trimmed-down road race. The frame is built around a short-travel suspension fork and a 1x-only drivetrain, with service-friendly external brake-hose routing that fits the brand’s owner-maintenance mindset.
This generation’s identity comes from its mountain-bike-leaning stance and its built-in practicality. Clearance is quoted to 45mm, fender solutions are designed into the frame and fork, and mounts include under-top-tube rivets for storage. It’s a rigid rear triangle with engineered compliance, but the intent stays descend-first: composed on rough ground, less concerned with aero posture or paved-road snap.
| Stack | 568mm |
| Reach | 384mm |
| Top tube | 558mm |
| Headtube length | 125mm |
| Standover height | 740mm |
| Seat tube length | 450mm |
The Szepter’s fit starts with a high front end and a notably slack head angle for a drop-bar bike, shaping a posture that’s closer to modern trail expectations than a low, stretched gravel race position. That extra stack changes where you naturally ride the bike: many testers describe spending more time in the drops off-road because the bar height makes that position usable for descending without feeling overly compressed.
Reach numbers are fairly conventional for the category, but YT pairs them with a consistently short stem across sizes, which influences both steering feel and how “big” the bike presents on the road. At slower speeds, that combination can feel more reactive than the wheelbase suggests, and it’s the sort of front end that rewards a relaxed grip rather than over-correcting.
The steep seat angle puts you forward over the bottom bracket and tends to suit seated climbing and steady torque on loose, technical grades. Sizing can be less intuitive for riders between sizes because the bike’s upright bias and generous standover make both options plausible; riders on the cusp may want to pay extra attention to cockpit length and how much seatpost they’ll have showing, especially if considering a longer-travel dropper later.
Frameset
Frame
Black Magic (sizes S, M, L, XL, XXL)
Fork
SR Suntour GVX 32 (700c, 40mm travel, lockout & rebound adjust, PCS, hollow crown, 12x100mm, 46.2mm offset)
Weight
10.90 kg / 24.03 lbs (smallest size, tubeless, no pedals or bottle)
Groupset
Shift levers
Shimano GRX 12-speed shift/brake levers (BR-RX610 listed)
Rear derailleur
Shimano GRX RD-RX822 (12-speed, Shadow+)
Cassette
Shimano SLX CS-M7100 (10-51T, 12-speed, Hyperglide+)
Chain
Shimano 12-speed (not specified)
Crankset
Shimano GRX FC-RX610 (40T, 12-speed; crank length: 170mm (S), 172.5mm (M-L), 175mm (XL-XXL))
Bottom bracket
Shimano BB-RS500 (Press Fit, 86.5 Road Wide)
Front brake
Shimano GRX BR-RX610 hydraulic disc (resin pads with fins)
Rear brake
Shimano GRX BR-RX610 hydraulic disc (resin pads with fins)
Front rotor
Centerlock (rotor size not specified)
Rear rotor
Centerlock (rotor size not specified)
Wheelset
Front wheel
DT Swiss G1800 (700c, 12x100mm, 24mm internal?, Centerlock)
Rear wheel
DT Swiss G1800 (700c, 12x142mm, 24mm internal?, Centerlock, Ratchet LN, Microspline)
Front tire
WTB Resolute 700x42c (TCS Light/Fast Rolling, 60 tpi, Dual DNA)
Rear tire
WTB Resolute 700x42c (TCS Light/Fast Rolling, 60 tpi, Dual DNA)
Cockpit
Stem
Easton EA50 (70mm, 31.8mm, +/-7°, Black)
Handlebars
Easton EA50 AX (31.8mm, 80mm reach, 120mm drop, 16° flare; width: 420mm (S), 440mm (M-L), 460mm (XL-XXL))
Saddle
SDG Bel-Air V3 Overland (YT Custom, 140mm width, steel rails)
Seatpost
Easton EA50 (Ø30.9mm, 350mm)
Grips
Velo VLT-5049 bar tape (anti-slip, shockproof, diamond pattern, black)
The range breaks into three Core builds that share the same underlying carbon frame concept, with the biggest ride-defining differences coming from fork, shifting ecosystem, and whether you get a dropper. Core 4 is the full statement build with RockShox Rudy Ultimate XPLR and SRAM Force XPLR eTap AXS, plus a Reverb AXS XPLR dropper. Core 3 keeps the Rudy fork but steps down to SRAM Rival XPLR eTap AXS and deletes the dropper, which will appeal to riders who want the fork’s comfort and control without adding another service item. Core 2 shifts the value focus further, using a SR Suntour GVX 32 fork and a Shimano 1x12 drivetrain with a wider-range 10-51 cassette, again without a dropper.
Across the SRAM builds, gearing is XPLR 10-44 with a 38T ring, which some riders find adequate for mixed terrain but may feel tall if your rides skew toward sustained steep trail climbs. Braking on the SRAM builds uses a larger front rotor than many gravel bikes, matching the bike’s rough-terrain intent. Stock wheels are alloy across the line; several reviewers point out that wheel weight is a noticeable limiter relative to how capable the frame and fork feel, making wheels a logical performance upgrade if you’re trying to sharpen acceleration without changing the bike’s core character.
Core 2 Shimano GRX RD-RX822
Price TBD
Core 3 SRAM Rival XPLR eTap AXS
Price TBD
Core 4 SRAM Force XPLR eTap AXS
Price TBD
Reviewers tend to describe the Szepter less as a fast-gravel specialist and more as a drop-bar trail bike that still covers distance. BikeRadar called it “a mountain biker’s gravel bike” and noted the fit felt “miles apart from most gravel bikes” on first acquaintance, before it made sense on singletrack (BikeRadar). That theme carries into Cyclist’s longer test, where the exaggerated numbers suggested “the nimbleness of a barge” but the bike instead felt “surprisingly light” in its handling (Cyclist Magazine). The same piece also sums up the ride character neatly: it “carries its bulk lightly” despite being heavy by gravel norms (Cyclist Magazine).
The short-travel suspension fork is repeatedly credited with changing how rough surfaces feel, especially washboards and chatter. MTBR went so far as to say the fork “far exceeds what its travel promises,” tying that to reduced fatigue over long, rough days (MTBR). On the other hand, reviewers are frank about tradeoffs: Granfondo found it “rather restrained on normal gravel roads” and that it “doesn’t really do fast starts or finish line sprints” (Granfondo).
Opinions split most clearly on the dropper and its small travel. Singletrackworld was “unconvinced” by both the limited drop and the ActiveRide “squish,” framing it as situational rather than universally useful (Singletrackworld).

Singletrackworld
YT Szepter Core 4 Review – Gravel For MTBers?

Magazinebike
First ride of YT Szepter – a gravel that changes the rules of the game? - Bike Magazine

Granfondo
YT Industries Szepter CORE 4 – Put to the test in our big ...

MTBR
Race Tested: YT Szepter for Unbound Gravel
Off
YT Szepter Core 4 gravel bike review
Cyclist Magazine
YT Szepter Core 4 review

Bike Rumor
YT Szepter Core 4 Review: A Gravel Bike with Singletrack ...

Rawcyclingmag
The YT Szepter: Gravel simply for fun

Outdoorgearlab
YT Szepter Core 4 Review | Tested & Rated

YouTube
My First Gravel Ride: The YT Szepter

Aibatedrillproducts
YT Szepter Core 4 First Ride Review - Gravel Bikes - Bikes

Road.cc
YT Szepter first-ride review - a drop-bar trail slayer

Roadbikeaction
YT SZEPTER GRAVEL BIKE FIRST RIDE

Velo
YT Szepter first-ride review: a gravity MTB brand goes gravel

Mountain Bike Rider
OMG! YT’s new Szepter is a gravel bike! Full details and first ride impressions…

BikeRadar
YT Szepter Core 4 first ride review

Cycling News
Hands on: We test out the gravity inspired design of the new YT Szepter in a first ride review

Cyclist Magazine
YT Szepter first ride review

Off
YT Szepter first-ride review - a drop-bar trail slayer