30-Year Arcs / Heritage / Yamaha Heritage Naked Lineage
Yamaha Japan

Yamaha XSR900. a 10-year arc.

The XSR900 is too young for a 30-year arc. It launched in 2016 as a retro-styled MT-09. Yamaha had retro fours in the 1990s (XJR1200/1300) but with no direct lineage. Three columns are predecessor-concept rather than ancestor.

1996
XJR1200
2006
XJR1300
2016
XSR900 Gen 1
2026
XSR900
Continual audits are underway to verify local pricing for every bike in every market. Apologies for any gaps you see while this is in progress.
1996 Predecessor · XJR
1996 XJR1200

XJR1200

1188cc air-cooled four
Yamaha's 1996 retro naked

1188cc air-cooled four
97 bhp
95
236
795
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesTFT dash1188cc air-cooledTwin shocks,
Known issues
  • XJR1200 — carb sync drift — all years
  • Reg/rec failure — all years
  • Cam chain tensioner rattle — high-mile bikes
£6,800
£13,600
£3.5–5.5k
2006 XJR1300 · 2006
2006 XJR1300

XJR1300

1251cc air-cooled four
XJR1200's bigger successor

1251cc air-cooled four
99 bhp
108
236
795
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesTFT dash1251cc air-cooledSold until
Known issues
  • XJR1300 — final-drive splines wear — all years
  • Reg/rec failure — all years
  • Otherwise simple air-cooled four — durable
£7,500
£12,600
£3.5–5.5k
2016 Gen 1 XSR · 2016
2016 XSR900

XSR900

847cc CP3 triple
Retro-clothed MT-09

847cc CP3 triple
113 bhp
88
195
815
ABSFuel injectionTraction control3 D-modeLCD multi-function847cc CP3Aluminium frame
Known issues
  • XSR900 (first gen) — fuel pump pulse issue (CP3) — 2016-21
  • Snatchy throttle on early bikes — 2016-17
  • Reg/rec failure — 2016-20
£8,700
£11,300
£5.5–7.5k
2026 Current · 2026
2026 XSR900

XSR900

890cc CP3 triple
2022 redesign, full electronics

890cc CP3 triple
117 bhp
93
193
810
Cornering ABSRide-by-wireIMU-based traction4 ride5" colourQuickshifterSmartphone connectivity
Known issues
  • XSR900 (2022-on redesign) — quickshifter sensor failures — 2022-on
  • Otherwise CP3 platform mature
£10,775
£10,775
£10.5k new
// 30-Year Delta

What actually changed.

1996 → 2026 · 30 years of "progress"
Why no real 30-year story XSR launched 2016 The XSR900 only launched 2016 — it has a 10-year arc, not 30. The XJR1200/1300 was Yamaha previous retro naked but the XSR is essentially a different bike (triple vs four, MT-09 chassis vs old XJR frame).
Engine change Four → Triple The XJR was Yamaha last hurrah for the air-cooled inline four — a layout they perfected in the 80s and 90s. The XSR900 is a triple with totally different character. Same role (heritage naked); completely different engine.
Power gain +20bhp 97bhp XJR1200 → 117bhp XSR900. 21% more, with 300cc less capacity and one fewer cylinder.
Weight loss −43kg 236kg dry XJR1200 → 193kg wet XSR900. Very significant. The XJRs were heavy old-school muscle; the XSR uses the modern aluminium MT-09 chassis.
Real cost change −£3.1k £6,800 in 1996 ≈ £13,600 today. The 2026 XSR900 is £10,775 — about 23% cheaper in real terms, with full electronics suite added.
What "heritage" means Round tank, twin clocks The XSR900 has retro styling cues — round headlight, twin-clock-style dash, brushed aluminium tank — but underneath it is exactly an MT-09. Modern naked in old-school costume. The XJR was actually old-school.
Cheapest way in £3.5k A clean XJR1200 or 1300. Last of the air-cooled inline-four retros. Becoming collectible — Honda CB1300 and Yamaha XJR are both rising on the used market.
// Sources

Where these numbers come from

Every figure on this page is from a published manufacturer spec sheet or a reputable review publication. No press junkets, no opinions in the spec data. Inflation calculated using Bank of England's CPI tool.

1996 XJR1200 Manufacturer specs · MCN · Bennetts BikeSocial
2006 XJR1300 Manufacturer press · MCN Reviews · autoevolution
2016 XSR900 Manufacturer UK specs · MCN · Total Motorcycle
2026 XSR900 Manufacturer UK · Bennetts BikeSocial · Cycle World