30-Year Arcs / Sport / Kawasaki ZX-9R Lineage
Kawasaki Japan

Kawasaki ZX-9R. The 900cc sportsbike that fell between two stools.

Kawasaki's response to Honda's FireBlade was the 1994 ZX-9R B model — 139bhp, 477lbs, sport-tourer ergonomics. The 1998 C model dropped 43lbs and went pure sport, and the 2000 E/F model refined the recipe to 144bhp at 195kg dry. Then Kawasaki killed it in 2003 to go all-in on the ZX-10R for 2004. The 900cc sportsbike class — Honda CBR900RR included — is essentially extinct in 2026.

1996
ZX-9R B model
2006
Already gone (2003)
2016
Still gone — ZX-10R rules
2026
No 900 class · ZX-10R closest
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 ZX-9R B · sport-tourer era
1996 ZX-9R B

ZX-9R B (1994-1997)

899cc liquid-cooled inline-four
Heavy at 477lbs (216kg dry) — built for road, not track

899cc liquid-cooled DOHC inline-four (carbs)
139 bhp
92
216
805
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesAnalogue dialsLiquid-cooled fourAluminium twin-spar frame
Known issues
  • ZX-9R B — too heavy to compete with FireBlade — all years
  • Stock front-end too soft for sport riding — all years
  • Carb sync drift on high-mile bikes — all years
  • R&R failure (Kawasaki big-bore pattern) — all years
£8,400
£16,800
£2.5–4k
2006 Killed 2003 · 3 yrs gone
No bike for this era

No ZX-9R

Last ZX-9R built in 2003
ZX-10R replaced it with 175bhp at 170kg dry — proper litre-class

STATUS · GONE
GONE
ZX-10R 2004
2016 Still gone · 13 yrs
No bike for this era

No ZX-9R

ZX-10R is now the litre-class flagship
The 900cc sportsbike class is essentially extinct

STATUS · GONE
GONE
Z900 (naked)
2026 No ZX-9R · 23 yrs gone
No bike for this era

No ZX-9R

No 900cc Kawasaki sportsbike in 2026
ZX-10R covers litre-class; Z900 is the 900 four (naked, not sport)

STATUS · GONE
GONE
ZX-10R £17,499
// 30-Year Delta

What actually changed.

1996 → 2026 · 30 years of "progress"
The 900cc sportsbike class Extinct in 2026 In 1996 the 900-1000cc sportsbike class was the most contested in motorcycling: Honda CBR900RR (893cc), Kawasaki ZX-9R (899cc), Suzuki GSX-R750 (then jumped to 1000 in 2001), Yamaha YZF1000R Thunderace. By 2026 it's: 1000s only — ZX-10R, GSX-R1000, CBR1000RR-R, R1, Panigale V4. The Honda CBR900RR became CBR1000RR in 2004; the ZX-9R died for ZX-10R in 2004. The 900cc class lost.
ZX-9R B → ZX-9R C/E/F −43 lbs, 1998 The 1994-97 B model (216kg dry) was widely beaten on track by the FireBlade. Kawasaki responded with the 1998 C model: same 899cc engine, lighter chassis, 197kg dry — 19kg shed in one generation. The 2000 E model went further still: 195kg dry, 144bhp, properly competitive. By the time it was good, Kawasaki was already planning the ZX-10R.
Why it ended ZX-10R, 2004 WSBK rule changes in 2003-04 moved the limit from 750cc to 1000cc, and the marketing battle moved with it. Kawasaki killed the ZX-9R after 2003 to focus all R&D on the new 998cc ZX-10R for 2004 — 175bhp claimed at 170kg dry, designed for the new WSBK rules. The 900 became surplus. Same fate as the GSX-R750's near-death in 2001 (it just barely survived).
The ZX-9R-shaped hole 23 years and counting No Kawasaki sportsbike between 636cc and 998cc in 2026. The Z900 (£9,549, 124bhp inline-four) is the same 948cc engine but in a naked, not a sport. The ZX-6R (636cc) is the closest sport. The whole 900-class died with the ZX-9R; only Honda's CBR1000RR-R and similar 200bhp+ litre bikes survived.
Real cost trajectory £16k → £17k (real) £8,400 ZX-9R B in 1996 (£16,800 today). The 2026 ZX-10R is £17,499 — basically the same money in real terms, but for a 200bhp Euro 5+ litre superbike with cornering ABS, IMU, electronic suspension. Used market in 2026: ZX-9R B £2.5-4k, C/E/F models £3-5k for clean low-mile. Cheapest entry to 140bhp anywhere.
Rider aids count (1996 → 2026) 0 → 12+ ZX-9R B had nothing — no ABS, no FI, no electronics, no quickshifter. The 2026 ZX-10R has cornering ABS, traction control, launch control, anti-wheelie, engine brake control, ride modes, IMU, quickshifter, cruise control, electronic suspension on SE, lap timer, full LCD dash. The shift on rider aids is the single biggest 30-year delta in motorcycling.
Cheapest way in £2.5k A clean ZX-9R B from the late 90s. 139bhp inline-four, sport-tourer ergonomics, comfortable enough for distance, fast enough for trackdays. Look for stock front-end condition (most have been re-sprung), R&R replacements, full carb-rebuild history. The ZX-9R is criminally undervalued — properly fast for the money in 2026.
// 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.

1996 Kawasaki ZX-9R B Manufacturer specs · MCN archive · Cycle World road test
2003 ZX-9R F (final) Manufacturer press · MCN · Visordown
2026 ZX-10R (closest replacement) Kawasaki UK 2026 spec sheet · MCN · Bennetts BikeSocial