Engine architecture
Parallel twin throughout
Every Kawasaki Ninja in this lineage has been a parallel twin. Capacity has grown 248 → 296 → 399cc — about 60% increase in 40 years. The architecture has not changed; the bike has just got bigger and more powerful with each redesign.
Power gain
+9bhp
36bhp Ninja 250R → 45bhp Ninja 400. 25% more horsepower from a 60% larger engine. The Ninja 400 sits right at the A2 limit (47bhp max). Power per litre has actually gone DOWN as displacement increased — the modern bike makes power lower in the rev range, more usable.
Why this lineage works
Continuous development
Kawasaki has continuously developed this Ninja entry-sport-bike lineage for 40 years. Most A2 sport-bikes are recent inventions (Duke 390 from 2013, MT-03 from 2016). The Ninja 250/300/400 has decades of refinement — chassis geometry, ergonomics, engine character — all worked out over multiple generations.
Real cost change
−$1.4k
Ninja 250R was $4,725 in 1996 ($9,450 today). Ninja 500 (which replaced the Ninja 400 globally for 2024+) is $8,099 — about 14% cheaper in real terms. Kawasaki has held A2 Ninja pricing remarkably steady despite huge tech additions (ABS, FI, TFT, slipper clutch) and the bike growing significantly in size and power. The 451cc twin produces 51bhp, up from the 400's 44bhp.
Weight gain
+16kg
152kg dry Ninja 250R → 168kg wet Ninja 400. About 16kg heavier including the wet/dry conversion difference. Bigger engine, modern brakes, ABS hardware, larger fuel tank all contribute. Still light by modern A2 standards.
Where it sits in 2026
Ninja 500 incoming
The Ninja 400 is starting to be replaced by the Ninja 500 (2024+) — bigger 451cc twin, same A2-restrictable approach. The Ninja 400 will likely be phased out over the next 2-3 years as the 500 takes over. So the 2026 Ninja 400 may be one of the last of this lineage; the Ninja 500 starts a new arc.
Cheapest way in
$2k
A clean Ninja 250R from the late 90s. Carbed, simple, 36bhp screaming parallel twin (14k redline!), Ninja styling. Probably the cheapest way to get a proper sport-bike with A2-legal restrictor in your garage. Build quality is excellent — Kawasaki built these to last.