30-Year Arcs / Mid Adventure / Honda Transalp Lineage (Old Gen)
Honda Japan

Honda Transalp XL600V / XL650V / XL700V. The original mid-cubed adventure bike.

Honda invented the mid-cubed adventure bike in 1987 with the XL600V Transalp — 583cc 52° V-twin, light weight, properly off-road capable. Three generations across 26 years (XL600V/XL650V/XL700V). Killed in 2013, leaving a 10-year gap before the parallel-twin XL750 Transalp returned in 2023. The old V-twin generation is the cult-buy in 2026 — light, simple, properly capable.

1996
XL600V · 9 yrs into mid-life
2006
XL650V · final years
2016
Killed 2013 · 3 yrs gone
2026
XL750 (different bike) since 2023
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 XL600V Transalp · 9 yrs in
1996 Honda XL600V Transalp

Honda XL600V Transalp

583cc liquid-cooled 52° V-twin, twin carbs, kick + electric start
21-inch front wheel, properly off-road capable, single-shock rear

583cc liquid-cooled SOHC 52° V-twin (carbs)
55bhp
50
175
840
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesAnalogue dials21in front wheelOff-road capable
Known issues
  • XL600V — carb sync drift (twin carbs) — all years
  • Reg/rec failure (Honda pattern) — all years
  • Fork seal weep on high-mile — all years
  • Side stand cut-out switch failure — high-mile bikes
£5,500
£11,000
£1.5–3k
2006 XL650V Transalp · final years
2006 Honda XL650V Transalp

Honda XL650V Transalp (2000-2007)

647cc 52° V-twin, twin carbs, 19-inch front wheel
4kg lighter than XL600V, more comfortable, slightly less off-road capable

647cc liquid-cooled SOHC 52° V-twin (carbs)
52bhp
54
171
840
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesAnalogue + LCD inset21in front wheelOff-road capable
Known issues
  • XL650V — same carb sync issues as XL600V — all years
  • Reg/rec carry-over (Honda pattern) — all years
  • Fork seal weep — all years
  • Otherwise extremely mature, parts plentiful
£6,200
£10,400
£2–3.5k
2016 Killed 2013 · 3 yrs gone
No bike for this era

No old Transalp

Honda killed the V-twin Transalp in 2013
10-year gap before XL750 Transalp parallel-twin returned in 2023

STATUS · GONE
GONE
2026 Old gen gone · XL750 different
No bike for this era

No old Transalp

XL750 Transalp (2023+) is parallel-twin, 91bhp, modern electronics
Different bike entirely from old V-twin Transalps

STATUS · GONE
GONE
£9,499
// 30-Year Delta

What actually changed.

From XL600V to XL750 · 38 years of Honda mid-adventure
The mid-cubed adventure pioneer 1987 → category-defining When the XL600V Transalp launched in 1987, the adventure category was BMW R80GS only. The Transalp showed the world that a Japanese factory could build a proper off-road-capable touring bike at half the price. Yamaha XT600Z Tenere (1983) and Suzuki DR-Big (1989) followed; KTM's adventure programme started in earnest in the late 1990s. Transalp made it mainstream.
XL600V → XL650V → XL700V 3 V-twin gens, 26 yrs Each generation kept the 52° V-twin but bumped capacity (583cc → 647cc → 680cc), refined the chassis, and gradually shifted from off-road focus to road-tour focus. XL700V (2008-2013) added ABS, fuel injection, lost the 21-inch front wheel for a 19. By the end the bike was more road-tour than dual-sport.
Why it ended 2013 Africa Twin reset, 2016 Honda killed the XL700V Transalp in 2013 as part of a strategic adventure-line reset. The 2016 CRF1100L Africa Twin (parallel-twin, modern electronics, proper off-road) took the upper segment. The mid-tier was abandoned for 10 years until 2023's XL750 Transalp parallel-twin filled the gap. Different bike entirely.
vs XL750 (new gen) V-twin → parallel-twin Old XL700V (2008-2013): 680cc 52° V-twin, 60bhp, 215kg wet. New XL750 (2023-): 755cc parallel-twin 270° crank, 91bhp, 208kg wet. Same Transalp name, different engine entirely. Modern XL750 has cornering ABS, traction control, ride modes, full TFT — completely different bike.
Real cost trajectory −14% real £5,500 XL600V in 1996 (£11,000 today) → £9,499 XL750 in 2026. Slight real-terms decrease. Modern bike has more electronics but parallel-twin engine costs less to make than V-twin. Used market in 2026: XL600V £1.5-3k, XL650V £2-3.5k, XL700V £3-5k for clean low-mile.
Cheapest way in £1.5k A clean XL600V from 1996-2000. 583cc 52° V-twin, properly off-road capable, light enough to drop and pick up. The cheapest path to a proper Honda adventure bike — and arguably the most off-road-capable Transalp ever made. Pay attention to carb sync, reg/rec, fork seals.
Why riders miss it Light weight, simplicity The old V-twin Transalps were 175-220kg wet — light enough to ride genuinely off-road. Modern adventure bikes are 230-260kg wet, focused more on touring than off-roading. The XL600V/650V hit a sweet spot of capability + weight that 2026 mid-adventure bikes can't quite match. Cult bike for riders who prioritise simplicity.
// 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.

1987-2000 XL600V Transalp Manufacturer specs · MCN archive · Cycle World
2000-2013 XL650V/XL700V Transalp Manufacturer press · MCN · Visordown
2026 XL750 Transalp (different bike) Honda UK 2026 spec sheet · MCN · Bennetts BikeSocial