Engine architecture
Inline four throughout
Every bike on this page is an inline four. Kawasaki has stayed loyal to the four-cylinder layout for the Z range for 30 years. The Z H2 keeps the four-cylinder format but adds a Roots-type supercharger — borrowed from the Ninja H2 superbike.
Power gain
+91bhp
106bhp ZRX1100 → 197bhp Z H2 SE. Nearly doubled. The supercharger is the headline difference — without it the Z H2 would make about 140bhp like the old Z1000. With it, 197bhp from a litre-class four-cylinder.
Why a supercharger
Brand differentiator
No other production motorcycle has a supercharger. Kawasaki invested heavily in the H2 platform and uses the supercharger to give the Z H2 unique character — boost-fed power delivery, a distinctive whine from the impeller, and the marketing story of being unique. The Z1000 was Kawasaki traditional hyper-naked; the Z H2 is the show-off version.
Real cost change
+£6.8k
ZRX1100 was £6,500 in 1997 (£13,000 today). The 2026 Z H2 SE is £19,799 — about 52% more in real terms. The supercharger and Showa Skyhook semi-active suspension justify the premium; standard Z H2 (non-SE) is £17,549.
Weight gain
+16kg
224kg dry ZRX1100 → 240kg wet Z H2. The supercharger and intercooler add weight. The Z H2 is the heaviest hyper-naked currently on sale — but the brutal mid-range torque from the supercharger makes the weight invisible in real-world riding.
Where the Z1000 went
Replaced 2020
Kawasaki discontinued the Z1000 in 2020. The Z H2 is its replacement at the top of the Z hyper-naked range; the Z900 fills the middleweight slot below. Kawasaki reorganised the Z lineup around the supercharger story for the 2020s.
Cheapest way in
£3k
A clean ZRX1100 from the late 90s. Air-cooled inline four, characterful, simple, indestructible. Becoming sought-after — the muscle naked era is back in fashion.