Indeed. Look at Hodge structures as finite dimensional vector spaces $V$ over $\mathbb Q$ together with an action of the Deligne torus $\mathbb S$ on $V \otimes \mathbb C$, i.e. a morphism of algebraic groups $\rho: \mathbb S \to \mathrm{GL}(V \otimes \mathbb C)$. The Mumford--Tate group of $V$ is then just the Zariski closure over $\mathbb Q$ (!) of the imagr of $\rho$.
Now take $V$ of dimension $\geq 4$ and a representation $\rho: \mathbb S \to \mathrm{GL}(V\otimes \mathbb C)$ of pure weight $k$ say, such that the Zariski closure over $\mathbb Q$ of the image of $\rho$ is $\mathrm{GL}(V)$. So the resulting Mumford--Tate group is $\mathrm{GL}(V)$ which is reductive. But the Hodge--structure $V$ is not polarisable, indeed, any polarisation $\psi: V \otimes V \to \mathbb Q(k)$ would confine the Mumford--Tate group to the Goup of symplectic similitudes $\mathrm{GSp}(V,\psi)$ which is strictly smaller than $\mathrm{GL}(V)$.