18-year production
1988-2006
Katana 600F ran for 18 model years with relatively minor updates. Suzuki kept it in production because it was cheap to make (shared engine with Bandit/GSX-R families) and had a loyal customer base — riders who wanted full fairing + comfortable ergos at sub-£5k new.
Why it ended 2006
Bandit/SV strategy
Suzuki killed Katana 600F in 2006 to streamline lineup — Bandit 650 covered budget mid-naked, SV650 covered V-twin enthusiast slot. Katana's 'comfortable faired mid-budget' niche was dropped. Same fate as Honda CBF600 (gone 2013), Yamaha YZF600R Thundercat (gone 2007).
Used market position
Cheapest faired mid
Katana 600F used 2026: £0.7-1.5k for clean low-mile early models, £1.2-2.2k for late ones. The cheapest faired mid sport-tourer on the UK used market — £100-£200 less than Bandit 600 used. Bombproof — Suzuki engine reliability.
vs GSX-8R in 2026
Different engine
GSX-8R (770cc parallel-twin, 82bhp): modern, electronic, sharp. Katana 600F (599cc inline-four, 78bhp): traditional, analogue, cheap. Same role; different feel. GSX-8R has cornering ABS, traction, ride modes — totally different generation of rider aids.
Real cost trajectory
−9% real
£4,799 Katana 600F in 1996 (£9,600 today) → £8,799 GSX-8R in 2026. Slight real-terms decrease. Modern bike has more rider aids and modern engine; Katana 600F is the cheapest path to full-fairing big-bike riding.
Rider aids count
0
Katana 600F had nothing across its 18-year production run — analogue dials only. No ABS ever, no FI ever, no electronics. Pure 1990s simplicity at low price.
Cheapest way in
£700
A clean Katana 600F from 1995-2002. 78bhp inline-four, full fairing, comfortable for distance, parts plentiful. The cheapest big-bike entry point on the UK used market — sub-£1k for a basic clean bike.