Direct Goldwing/Ultra Limited rival
Three-bike segment
UK 2026 has three flagship full-luxury tourers: Honda Gold Wing (£29,295), Indian Roadmaster (£30,495), Harley Ultra Limited (£31,495). Roadmaster is the air-cooled V-twin choice; Ultra Limited the air-cooled V-twin Harley alternative; Gold Wing the Japanese liquid-cooled flat-six. Three different philosophies, three different sounds, three nearly identical prices.
408kg wet — heaviest UK 2026 production motorcycle apart from Ultra Limited
Real concern for U-turns
The Roadmaster Limited tips scales at 408kg fully fuelled — heavier than every UK 2026 production bike except Harley Ultra Limited (411kg). Both bikes are at the limit of what most riders can manage at low speed. Practice U-turns matter.
Premium audio + nav for 2026
PowerBand 200W + 7in TFT with maps
2026 Roadmaster Limited gets the PowerBand 200W system with 4 speakers (front fairing + saddlebag-mounted), full GPS navigation on the 7in TFT, Apple CarPlay integration. Same level of multimedia as a luxury car. Honda Gold Wing offers similar; Harley's Boom Box 6.5GT is smaller-screen.
Thunderstroke 116 — bigger 2022 update
Same architecture, more displacement
Pre-2022 Roadmaster: 1811cc Thunderstroke 111. From 2022: 1890cc Thunderstroke 116. Polaris bumped displacement to make Euro 5 emissions without sacrificing the iconic torque curve. Peak torque jumped from 139Nm to 162Nm. Same air-cooled architecture, better real-world performance.
Quick-release lower fairings — split-personality bike
Tourer in summer, cruiser in winter
Roadmaster's lower fairings (knee bolsters) are quick-release. Removed in 30 seconds without tools. With them: full weather protection. Without: the bike still has top fairing + windshield, but airflow on the legs is freer in hot weather. Lets the same bike serve summer cruiser and winter tourer roles.
£30,495 — competitive at the top end
Cheaper than Ultra Limited, dearer than Goldwing
Roadmaster: £30,495 (Limited £32,495). Honda Gold Wing: £29,295. Harley Ultra Limited: £31,495. The Indian is £1,000-2,000 dearer than Goldwing, £1,000 cheaper than Ultra Limited. Real selling points are the audio, the brand heritage, and the V-twin engine character — not value-for-money.