30-Year Arcs / A2 Naked / Royal Enfield Hunter 350 Lineage
Royal Enfield India

Royal Enfield Hunter 350. a 60-year-old design.

Royal Enfield Bullet 350 was launched in 1955 and made literally unchanged for over 60 years. Same engine, same chassis, same brakes, same everything until the J-platform replaced it 2020-2022. The Hunter 350 (2022+) is part of that modern J-platform reset. 1996/2006 = essentially identical Bullet 350; 2016 = Classic 350 (still Bullet platform); 2026 = Hunter 350 (modern J-platform).

1996
Bullet 350 (1955 design)
2006
Bullet 350 (still!)
2016
Classic 350 (Bullet platform)
2026
Hunter 350 (J-platform)
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 Bullet 350 · 1996

Royal Enfield Bullet 350

346cc air-cooled single (literally 1955 design)
Last bike still in production from 1950s

346cc air-cooled single (literally 1955 design)
18 bhp
27
163
800
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesLCD only346cc air-cooledHand-shift /
Known issues
  • Bullet 350 (cast iron) — oil leaks (well-known character) — all years
  • Magneto/dynamo electrics dim — all years
  • Carb gumming — all years
$3,495
$7,262
$1.8–3k
2006 Bullet 350 · 2006

Royal Enfield Bullet 350 (literally same)

346cc air-cooled single
Identical to 1996 bike — still in production

346cc air-cooled single
18 bhp
27
163
800
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesLCD only346cc air-cooled50+ years
Known issues
  • Bullet 350 (still cast iron) — same patterns as earlier — all years
  • Oil leaks — all years
  • Production unchanged for decades — issues are well-known
$3,995
$6,460
$2–3.5k
2016 Classic 350 · 2016

Royal Enfield Classic 350

346cc air-cooled single (UCE engine, 2008+)
Modernised but still old-school

346cc air-cooled single (UCE engine, 2008+)
20 bhp
28
187
800
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesLCD only346cc UCEClassic styling,
Known issues
  • Classic 350 (UCE engine) — oil leaks largely cured — 2008-on UCE
  • Stator failure on early UCE — 2008-12
  • Cam chain rattle — 2008-on
$5,499
$7,469
$3–4.5k
2026 Current · 2026

Royal Enfield Hunter 350

349cc air-cooled single (J-platform, 2020+)
Modern Royal Enfield — proper engineering at last

349cc air-cooled single (J-platform, 2020+)
20 bhp
27
181
790
ABSFuel injectionTraction controlRide modesTripper navigation349cc J-platformModern engineering,
Known issues
  • Hunter 350 (J-platform) — fuel pump priming issues — 2022-on
  • Some reports of cam chain rattle — 2022-23
  • Otherwise simple modern platform
$3,999Verified MSRP
$3,999
$4.1k new
// 30-Year Delta

What actually changed.

1996 → 2026 · 30 years of "progress"
Engine architecture Single throughout Every Royal Enfield 350 has been a 346-349cc air-cooled single. The engine architecture has not changed in 70 years — but the engine itself has been redesigned twice. The original 1955 Bullet engine ran until 2008. The UCE (Unit Construction Engine) ran 2008-2020. The J-platform engine launched 2020. Same architecture, three completely different engines.
The bike that did not change 50+ years unchanged The original Bullet 350 was launched in 1955 and made virtually unchanged until 2008 — 53 years of essentially identical motorcycle. Same engine, same chassis, same brakes, same instruments. Made in Madras (later Chennai) India by Enfield India. 1996 and 2006 are essentially the same bike. The Bullet 350 is widely considered the longest-running production motorcycle in history.
Why it survived unchanged India market + nostalgia The Bullet 350 survived because: India was a vast market for cheap, simple, reliable bikes; the engine was basically agricultural in its simplicity (made by hand, fixable by anyone); the British heritage gave it a premium positioning in India; and the design had been amortised over decades. By the 2010s the Bullet was being sold to Western buyers as a deliberately retro experience.
The J-platform reset Modern at last Royal Enfield killed the old Bullet engine in 2020 and replaced it with the J-platform — a properly modern 349cc air-cooled single with double-overhead cams, fuel injection, ABS, modern materials. Same character (slow-revving, torquey, characterful exhaust) but with modern reliability. The Hunter 350 (2022+) is a J-platform bike — modern engineering wrapped in retro bodywork.
Power similar throughout +2bhp 18bhp 1996 Bullet → 20bhp Hunter 350. Almost identical peak power — Royal Enfield deliberately kept the bike low-power, low-revving, easy to ride, easy to maintain. The character is the point. Modern bike has slightly more torque deeper in the rev range, more usable.
Real cost change −$2.3k Bullet 350 was $3,780 in 1996 ($7,560 today). Hunter 350 is $5,264 — about 30% cheaper in real terms. Indian manufacturing keeps prices low. The Hunter 350 is one of the cheapest brand-new motorcycles on the UK market.
Cheapest way in $2.4k A clean Bullet 350 from the 90s/2000s. The original — 1955 design, made in India, simple, slow, characterful, occasionally infuriating. Probably the cheapest way to put a proper old-school motorcycle in your garage. Pre-686 bikes have the hand-shift / right-foot brake legacy chassis (most converted by export but check). Maintenance is constant but cheap — the engine is genuinely simple enough to fix yourself.
// Sources

Where these numbers come from

Prices are real US MSRPs from Royal Enfield North America press releases / Motorcycle.com archives. Used-market from Cycle Trader, May 2026. Inflation calculated using US BLS CPI-U.

1996 Royal Enfield Bullet 350 Manufacturer specs · Cycle World · Motorcycle.com
2006 Royal Enfield Bullet 350 (literally same) Manufacturer press · Cycle World · autoevolution
2016 Royal Enfield Classic 350 Manufacturer US specs · Motorcycle.com · Total Motorcycle
2026 Royal Enfield Hunter 350 Manufacturer US · Cycle World · RevZilla Common Tread