BSA collapsed 1972
50-year gap
Birmingham Small Arms (BSA) was once the world's largest motorcycle manufacturer. By the late 1960s it was struggling against Japanese competition. The company collapsed financially in 1972 and was absorbed into the Norton-Villiers-Triumph group, which itself folded in 1977. The BSA brand was dormant for 50 years — owned by various holding companies but producing nothing. The 2022 Gold Star is the first new BSA motorcycle since 1972.
Mahindra rescued the badge
2016 acquisition
Indian conglomerate Mahindra Group bought the BSA brand in 2016 through its Classic Legends subsidiary (which also owns Jawa). Mahindra established a UK design HQ to manage development. Six years passed between the acquisition and the launch — far longer than expected, suggesting development challenges or strategic patience.
Engine is a Rotax-derived single
Heritage
The Gold Star's 652cc DOHC single is fundamentally derived from the Rotax single that's been used over the years in BMW F650 Funduro and G650, Aprilia Pegaso 650, and others. BSA's contribution is the four-valve, twin-spark head and the styling. This isn't shameful — the Rotax single is a known reliable engine — but it does mean the bike is less 'bespoke' than the heritage marketing suggests.
Looks identical to 1956 DBD34
Styling
The Gold Star's silhouette is deliberately almost identical to the 1956 DBD34 Gold Star — round headlight, tank shape, side panel, exhaust line. Take off the radiator and front disc and most riders couldn't tell them apart. This is the strongest period homage in the modern retro segment, more committed than Triumph Bonneville or Royal Enfield Interceptor.
Built in India, designed in UK
Globalised production
Like Norton (TVS-owned, UK-built) and Royal Enfield (UK-designed, India-built), the Gold Star is a globalised heritage brand. Designed at Mahindra's UK Classic Legends HQ in Banbury, manufactured at the Pithampur plant in India. The long-term plan is to move production to the UK but no firm timeline.
Priced to fight Royal Enfield
£6,500 entry
The Gold Star starts at £6,500 — directly competitive with the Royal Enfield Interceptor 650 (£6,039 → £6,500 by 2023). Triumph Speed Twin 900 is £9,395, Kawasaki W800 is £8,499 — both significantly more expensive. BSA is positioned as the heritage-British alternative to Royal Enfield: same price bracket, more period-correct styling, single-cylinder character vs the Enfield's twin.
Launch success, momentum slowing
Sales
The Gold Star sold strongly through 2022-2024, almost rivalling Interceptor 650 sales in the UK. By late 2024 momentum had slowed somewhat — partly due to limited dealer network (~24 UK dealers) and partly due to the model not getting an updated version. The 2025 Scrambler 650 is BSA's answer to keep the brand visible.