30-Year Arcs / Sport-Tourer / BMW K-Series Sport Lineage
BMW Germany

BMW K1200S. BMW's first transverse inline-four sportsbike.

BMW launched the K1200S in 2004 — 1157cc transverse inline-four, 167bhp, Duolever front suspension, paralever rear shaft drive. BMW's first proper inline-four superbike after 25 years of boxer-twin and longitudinal-K-series sportbikes. Replaced by the K1300S in 2008 (1293cc, 175bhp). Both are now used-only — K-Series sport line ended in 2016 with the K1300S.

1996
Pre-K1200S (2004 launch)
2006
K1200S · launch year
2016
K1300S · final years
2026
K-Series sport gone since 2016
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 Pre-K1200S (2004 launch)

Pre-K1200S

BMW's 1996 sport flagship was the K1100RS (longitudinal four, sport-tourer)
K1200S launched 2004 with new transverse inline-four engine

K1200S not yet — 2004 launch
N/Apre-launch
£10,500
2006 K1200S · 2 yrs into mid-life
2006 BMW K1200S

BMW K1200S (2004-2008)

1157cc transverse inline-four, Duolever front, paralever shaft
BMW's first proper inline-four superbike — clean-sheet engine

1157cc liquid-cooled DOHC inline-four (FI · transverse)
167bhp
130
248
820
ABS (opt)Fuel injectionTraction controlRide modesAnalogue + LCDDuolever frontShaft drive
Known issues
  • K1200S — fuel pump failure (relay corrosion) — 2004-06
  • Reg/rec carry-over (BMW pattern) — all years
  • Front Duolever bushing wear — all years
  • Cam chain tensioner rattle — high-mile bikes
£10,995
£18,500
£3.5–5.5k
2016 K1300S · final year
2016 BMW K1300S

BMW K1300S (2008-2016)

1293cc engine bump from K1200S, 175bhp claimed
Refined fairings, ESA electronic suspension option, ABS standard

1293cc liquid-cooled DOHC inline-four (FI · transverse)
175bhp
140
258
820
ABSFuel injectionTraction control (ASC)ESA suspension (opt)Analogue + LCDDuolever frontShaft drive
Known issues
  • K1300S — fuel pump failure carry-over — 2008-12
  • Reg/rec carry-over (BMW pattern) — all years
  • ESA electronic suspension reliability — all years
  • Otherwise mature platform
£15,800
£20,500
£5–8k
2026 K-Series sport gone since 2016
No bike for this era

No K-Series sport

BMW killed K1300S in 2016 — focused all sport development on S1000RR (inline-four)
K1600 GT/GTL is the only K-Series flagship in 2026 (boxer-six tourer)

STATUS · GONE
GONE
S 1000 RR £20,990
// 30-Year Delta

What actually changed.

From K1200S to S 1000 RR · BMW's superbike transition
BMW's first transverse inline-four Major architectural shift BMW's K-Series before 2004 used longitudinal inline-fours (K100, K1100, K1200LT). The K1200S in 2004 was BMW's first transverse-mounted inline-four — the layout used by every Japanese sportbike. Major engineering investment to switch the K-Series architecture. Made the K-Series competitive with Japanese sportbikes for the first time.
K1200S → K1300S (2008) +136cc, +8bhp, 4 yrs K1300S (2008-2016) was the K1200S with 1293cc engine (up from 1157cc), 175bhp claimed (up from 167bhp), 140Nm peak (up from 130Nm). New fairings, ESA electronic suspension option, ABS standard. Same chassis architecture, more refined package. The K1300S is widely seen as the better bike — buy that over K1200S used.
Why it ended 2016 S 1000 RR consolidation BMW killed K1300S in 2016 to focus all sportbike development on the S 1000 RR (launched 2009). The S 1000 RR is a cleaner-sheet sportbike — proper twin-spar alloy frame, 199kg wet, race-rep ergonomics. K1300S was always more sport-tourer than sportsbike; S 1000 RR took the sportbike role and BMW stopped funding the K-Series sport line.
vs S 1000 RR (replacement) Sport-tourer → race-rep K1300S: 1293cc, 175bhp, 258kg wet, 820mm seat, sport-tourer ergos. S 1000 RR (2026): 999cc, 205bhp, 197kg wet, 815mm seat, race-rep ergos. Smaller engine, more power, much lighter, sharper. Different bikes — riders who liked the K1300S's sport-tourer comfort had no successor at BMW. Some moved to BMW R1300RT, others to Ducati Multistrada V4.
Real cost trajectory +12% real (vs S1000RR) £10,995 K1200S in 2006 (£18,500 today) → £20,990 S 1000 RR base in 2026. Modest real-terms increase. Modern S 1000 RR has 30bhp more, 60kg less wet, full IMU electronics, ride-by-wire. Used market in 2026: K1200S £3.5-5.5k, K1300S £5-8k for clean low-mile.
Rider aids count (2004 → 2026) 1 → 12+ K1200S had FI and optional ABS. K1300S added ASC traction control, optional ESA electronic suspension. 2026 S 1000 RR has cornering ABS Pro, traction control, slide control, anti-wheelie, 7 ride modes, launch control, M Quickshift Pro, 6.5-inch TFT, lap timer. Massive evolution in rider aids.
Cheapest way in £3.5k A clean K1200S from 2005-2007. 167bhp transverse inline-four, Duolever front, shaft drive, that classic BMW sport-tourer character. The cheapest path to a 167bhp BMW. Pay attention to fuel pump (relay), reg/rec, Duolever bushings, and ESA suspension (K1300S only) reliability. BMW dealer network strong for older bikes.
// 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.

2004-2008 K1200S Manufacturer specs · MCN archive · Cycle World
2008-2016 K1300S Manufacturer press · MCN · Visordown
2026 BMW S 1000 RR (closest sport) BMW UK 2026 spec sheet · MCN · Bennetts BikeSocial