37-year production
1987-2024
KLR650 ran for 37 model years with one major redesign in 2008. Continuously updated for emissions (carbs through 2018, FI 2022+) but never fundamentally changed. Among the longest production runs in motorcycling history. Cult following including extensive aftermarket support, RTW touring bikes, US military preference.
The Doohickey
37-year known issue
KLR650's counterbalancer chain tensioner (the 'Doohickey') is the bike's well-known weak point — fails on high-mile bikes, easy aftermarket fix. Kawasaki never re-engineered the part across 37 years. Owner forums and aftermarket suppliers solved the problem decades ago. Iconic part of KLR ownership culture.
Why it ended 2024
Euro 5+ emissions
Euro 5+ emissions banned the air/oil-cooled SOHC single without expensive redesign that Kawasaki chose not to fund. Same fate as Yamaha XT660 (gone 2016), Honda XR650L (US only, gone 2025). The mid-cubed dual-sport class is essentially extinct in EU markets in 2026.
vs modern adventure bikes
Different category
KLR650 (651cc single, 42bhp, 191kg wet, ~£6,499 last new): rugged, simple, properly off-road, RTW-capable. Modern equivalents (KTM 390 Adventure, BMW G310GS, Royal Enfield Himalayan): smaller engines, more electronics, but less rugged for serious off-road. KLR650's 'big single dual-sport' niche is uniquely missing in 2026.
Real cost trajectory
−9% real (vs KLX300)
£3,999 KLR650 in 1996 (£8,000 today) → £5,899 KLX300 in 2026. Significant real-terms decrease. Modern KLX300 is smaller/lighter and 250cc-class, so it's a different bike entirely. Used market in 2026: 1996-2007 KLR650 £1.5-3k, 2008-2024 KLR650E £3.5-5.5k for clean low-mile.
Rider aids count
0
KLR650 across all 37 years had nothing — analogue dials, no ABS, no FI until 2022, no electronics. Pure 1987-era simplicity. Modern adventure bikes (Africa Twin, R1300GS) have full IMU electronics — different generation entirely.
Cheapest way in
£1,500
A clean KLR650 from 1996-2005 (carb era). 42bhp single, 21-inch front wheel, dual-sport ergonomics, proven RTW capability. Pay attention to Doohickey condition (replacement standard owner-modification), reg/rec, fork seals. Vast aftermarket support — every part is available and tested. Best £1,500 ADV bike on either market.