Original Bantam was 1948-1971
Half a million sold
BSA produced the original Bantam from 1948 to 1971 in 125cc, 148cc and 175cc two-stroke variants. Around 500,000 were built — making it BSA's best-selling model ever. Postwar Britain rode on Bantams. Cheap, simple, accessible, two-stroke. Original peak power: 4.5bhp (D1) to 12.6bhp (D14). The 2025 revival makes 29bhp from 334cc — more than double any original Bantam.
Engine shared with Jawa
Mahindra parts-bin
The 2025 Bantam's 334cc liquid-cooled DOHC single is the same engine used in the Mahindra-owned Jawa 42 FJ and Yezdi range. Same parts bin. Critics see this as cynical badge engineering; BSA argues that the engine is well-developed and reliable, and that platform sharing is exactly what allows the bike to be sold at £3,499.
Doesn't look like a Bantam
Styling
The 2025 Bantam doesn't look like the original. Round headlight aside, it's a generic modern retro roadster. BSA didn't go for period-correct styling (which they did with the Gold Star). At the launch, original-Bantam owners told reviewers they were 'quietly disappointed' in the new bike's lack of true classic styling. The bike looks more like a generic Indian-market retro than a heritage homage.
Aimed straight at Royal Enfield Hunter 350
Pricing war
The Bantam at £3,499 directly attacks the Royal Enfield Hunter 350 (£3,899 in UK). Honda GB350S is £3,849. Royal Enfield Bullet 350 is £4,499+. The BSA is the cheapest A2-compliant retro 350 on the UK market. £400 cheaper than its closest equivalent.
Power: 4.5bhp → 29bhp
Six-fold gain
Original 1948 Bantam D1: 4.5bhp from 125cc two-stroke. 2025 Bantam 350: 29bhp from 334cc four-stroke. Power gain: 6.4×. Weight gain: roughly 50% (was ~80kg, now 185kg). Simple character is gone — replaced by modern reliability, electronic fuel injection, ABS, six-speed transmission. Different bike entirely; same name.
A2 licence target
Beginner positioning
The Bantam is positioned as an A2-licence bike — under 35kW (47bhp), suitable for European 19-24-year-olds on restricted licences. Real competitors: KTM 390 Duke, Royal Enfield Hunter/HNTR 350, Honda CB350, Triumph Speed 400. The Bantam's USP is brand heritage + low price; the KTM has more performance, the Triumph has better fit-and-finish, the Royal Enfield has the established dealer network.
Where it sits
Cheap and cheerful, not collectible
The Bantam 350 is for new riders, returning riders on restricted licences, and budget-conscious commuters who like the BSA badge. It's a competent commuter at a sharp price. It's not a future classic — too modern, too generic, no period-correct styling, parts shared with Jawa. Buyers should treat it as a sensible cheap bike, not a heritage investment.