I'm not saying this is definitely the cause, all of the posts above are good value and worth considering, but here's another one that many forget/ignore, until they've exhausted every other potential issue,
when it should be amongst the very FIRST things you do on a Spyder that fails to crank. At the risk of sounding more'n just a bit like a broken record,
Load Test the battery when it's warm and
look for a cranking voltage of at least 12 volts!!
While higher temperatures
should increase the % of it's rated max voltage that a battery can supply when compared to what it can supply at lower temps closer to 0°C, those same higher temps that encourage us to go riding, also shorten the potential life of the battery!

And from about 2020 on, the cheap arsed excuses for batteries that BRP installed at the factory and issued as replacements were
barely able to keep cranking the motor for too much longer than about 6 months anyway!!
So if your battery is one of those piss-ant 300 CCA Haiju excuses for a battery with minimal capacity and less longevity, and your Spyder is getting close to or is already more than 6 months old, chances are pretty good that your Spyder's battery is no longer up to cranking a warm, high compression motor,
AND starting up all the computers, sensors, changing gears to Neutral, etc all at the same time!!

And then there's also the increase in resistance in all the wires and computers etc that happens as the temp rises/things warm up that you need to factor in, too; so a battery that isn't too great to start out with and can barely start your extremely power hungry Spyder in mild conditions when it's brand new and fully charged anyway, rapidly starts to become increasingly incapable of doing the job!!
So Load Test it, and don't accept a report of 'it's good' from a dealer - ask to see the voltage while it's cranking, and if it's not maintaining at or very near to 12 volts while it's cranking,
get an new battery,
only make sure it's got AT LEAST 350 CCA & 21 A/hr capacity; that it's been initialised properly (it takes about an hour for the 'acid' to soak into all the places it's needed if your battery has a 'BS' in or on the end of it's part number); and that it gets charged properly before installation - which means it hasta spend
AT LEAST 8 hours on charge on a
proper battery
charger, NOT just on a battery tender or a maintainer!! If you fail to get/do all this, or if you blindly take the dealer's/retailer's word that it's been done, then expect to need to replace the battery again within a year or maybe two!!
Good Luck!
