30-Year Arcs / Sport / Honda CBR600 Lineage
Honda Japan

Honda CBR600. 30 years of middleweight sport.

Four generations of Honda middleweight sport four-cylinder, side by side. Same factory, same 600cc class, same nameplate. Different bike entirely. 1996 = CBR600F3 (sport-tourer style); 2006 = CBR600RR (peak supersport era); 2016 = Honda kills the CBR600RR for EU/UK; 2026 = no CBR600RR sold new in EU but Hornet 750 fills the spiritual gap.

1996
CBR600F3
2006
CBR600RR
2016
CBR600RR (final)
2026
GONE — discontinued
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 CBR600F3 era · 1996

CBR600F3

599cc liquid-cooled inline 4
Sport-tourer style with full fairing

599cc liquid-cooled inline 4
100 bhp
64
186
810
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesLCD only599cc inlineSport-tourer fairing,
Known issues
  • Carb gumming after sitting — all years, especially 1995-98
  • Reg/rec failure (overheats, melts harness plug) — all years
  • Steering head bearings wear — high-mile bikes
  • Coil pack failure causing single-cylinder dropout — all years
$7,699
$15,997
$2.5–4k
2006 CBR600RR · 2006

CBR600RR

599cc liquid-cooled inline 4
Peak supersport era — Honda race-replica

599cc liquid-cooled inline 4
117 bhp
66
164
820
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesLCD only599cc inlineUnder-seat exhaust,
Known issues
  • Cam chain tensioner wear (rattle, can skip teeth) — 2003-09 especially
  • Reg/rec failure (overheats) — 2007-12, well-documented
  • Fuel pump relay sticking — 2003-08
  • Fork seal weeping — hard-ridden examples
  • Kill-switch contacts corrode (won't start) — all years
$8,999
$14,552
$4–7k
2016 CBR600RR final · 2016

CBR600RR (final EU year)

599cc liquid-cooled inline 4
Last EU year — Honda quietly killed it

599cc liquid-cooled inline 4
118 bhp
66
186
820
C-ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesLCD only599cc inlineLast EU
Known issues
  • Reg/rec carry-over from 2007-gen (still failure-prone) — 2013-16
  • Cam chain tensioner — Honda revised the part but earlier-spec replacements still in the parts chain — 2009-16
  • C-ABS module faults (rare but expensive when they happen) — 2013-16
  • Otherwise mature, low-issue bike — bulletproof inline-four reputation
$11,490
$15,607
$7–10k
2026 Current · 2026
No bike for this era

GONE — CBR600RR killed

Honda killed CBR600RR for EU/UK 2017
Japan/USA still sells it but no new bikes here

STATUS · GONE
GONE
CBR650R
// 30-Year Delta

What actually changed.

1996 → 2026 · 30 years of "progress"
Engine architecture Inline 4 throughout Every CBR600 has been a 599cc liquid-cooled inline four. The architecture has not changed across 30 years. What has changed is the tune — early F3 was tuned for road usability, the RR was tuned for racetrack peak power, late-RR was tuned for emissions compliance.
Why Honda killed it Supersport class died Honda killed the CBR600RR for EU/UK in 2017. Reasons: Euro 4 (then Euro 5) emissions regulations made the screaming high-revving inline-4 uneconomic to update; the supersport class had been dying for years (sales declining since 2008); and Honda engineering resources went to the CBR1000RR-R Fireblade SP development. Yamaha killed the R6 same period for the same reasons. The supersport 600 class is essentially dead in 2026.
Peak power gain (F3 → RR) +18bhp 100bhp F3 → 118bhp final-year RR. About 18% more peak horsepower from the same 599cc — better breathing, higher redline (13.3k → 15k rpm), race-derived combustion chamber design.
Real cost change −$5kflat F3 was $8,370 in 1996 ($16,875 today). Final RR was $11,879 in 2016 ($15,458 today) — about 8% cheaper in real terms. Honda held middleweight sport-bike pricing steady across two decades, despite the bike getting much more sophisticated. Then they killed it.
Weight trajectory 186kg → 164kg → 186kgflat 186kg dry F3 → 164kg dry mid-RR → 186kg wet final RR. The mid-2000s RR was the lightest middleweight sport-bike on sale. The final-year RR added 22kg back through Euro emissions kit, ABS hardware, and slightly heavier chassis. A 30-year-old F3 weighs the same wet as a final-year RR.
Why this matters A category extinction The supersport 600 was a defining motorcycle category for 20 years. CBR600RR, R6, ZX-6R, GSX-R600 — bikes everyone wanted, race-replicas you could buy. By 2026 only the ZX-6R is still sold new in EU/UK. CBR600RR, R6, GSX-R600 all dead. The category that defined sport-bikes for a generation is essentially gone. Cheap track-day weapons live on used.
Cheapest way in $2.7k A clean 1996-1998 CBR600F3 today. A 30-year-old 100bhp Honda inline four for the price of a half-decent 125. Carb cleaning and patience required, but the bike that beat the GSX-R600 in its day is now a budget weekend toy. The CBR600F-series (F3, F4i, F-sport) are some of the most underpriced sport bikes on the UK used market.
// Sources

Where these numbers come from

Prices are real US MSRPs from American Honda press releases / Motorcycle.com archives. Used-market ranges from MotoHunt / Cycle Trader / KBB, May 2026. Inflation calculated using US BLS CPI-U.

1996 CBR600F3 Manufacturer specs · Cycle World · Motorcycle.com
2006 CBR600RR Manufacturer press · Cycle World · autoevolution
2016 CBR600RR (final EU year) Manufacturer US specs · Motorcycle.com · Total Motorcycle
2026 GONE — CBR600RR killed Manufacturer US · Cycle World · RevZilla Common Tread