Engine architecture
Inline four (then nothing)
Both GSF1200 (1996-2006, oil-cooled SACS) and GSF1250 (2007-2016, liquid-cooled) were 4-valve DOHC inline fours. 20 years of Bandit production with the same fundamental layout, just an engine technology refresh in 2007. After 2016 Suzuki kept inline-fours alive in the GSX-S1000 but moved to a 999cc K5-derived motor — different bike, different segment positioning.
1200 → 1250 transition
Oil-cooled → liquid-cooled, 2007
The 2007 transition from GSF1200 to GSF1250 was the biggest change in Bandit history: capacity up 98cc, oil/air cooling replaced by liquid cooling, carbs replaced by SDTV fuel injection, ABS arrived. Power went from 97bhp to 99.7bhp — modest gain, but torque jumped from 92Nm to 108Nm. The 1250 was a much more flexible, useable engine.
Why it ended
Euro 4 emissions, 2016
Euro 4 came in January 2017 and the Bandit's homologation couldn't be cost-effectively updated. Suzuki killed it after the 2016 model year. The economics didn't work — the Bandit was always positioned as the budget UJM, and updating the engine for Euro 4 would have pushed prices into territory where it competed directly with more sophisticated nakeds (MT-09, Z900, Street Triple).
Suzuki's everyman naked-shaped hole
10 years and counting
Suzuki has not built a Bandit-class bike since 2016. The GSX-S1000 (£10,999, 152bhp) is far more powerful and more expensive — premium naked territory, not budget UJM. The closest spiritual successor is now the GSX-8S (£8,499, 81bhp parallel twin) — but it's a different architecture entirely. The 1200cc inline-four budget naked segment is essentially dead: Bandit gone, Z1100 also gone, only Honda CB1300 (Japan-market only) survives.
Real cost trajectory
Always cheap, always practical
£5,500 GSF1200 in 1996 (£11,000 today) → £8,500 GSF1250 in 2016 (£11,050 today). Suzuki priced the Bandit cheaper than the equivalent Honda CB1300 / Yamaha XJR1300 throughout its life — about 15-20% less. That positioning is what made it a UK courier, commuter, and despatch favourite. Used market in 2026: GSF1200 £1.5-3k, GSF1250 £3.5-5.5k.
Rider aids count (1996 → 2026)
0 → 0
GSF1200 had nothing — no ABS, no fuel injection, no traction. GSF1250 added ABS in 2007 (a big deal at the time for a budget bike). 2026 Bandit equivalent: nothing — because Suzuki doesn't make one. The successor GSX-S1000 has cornering ABS, traction, ride-by-wire, ride modes, IMU — but it's a £11k bike, not a £5.5k bike.
Cheapest way in
£1.5k
A clean Mk 1 GSF1200 from the late 90s. Oil-cooled, 4-into-1 exhaust, twin-shock or monoshock options through the run, no electronics to break. The cheapest 1200cc UJM naked on the UK used market in 2026 — and the most reliable way to feel what nakeds were like before electronics took over.