Demand For BMW's New Small Off-Road Motorcycle In India Is So Crazy, They Stopped Orders
Selling like hotcakes! Or, in this case, somosas.
The BMW F 450 GS has reportedly become so popular in India that some buyers are facing waiting periods stretching close to a year. Reports also suggest dealers have stopped accepting fresh bookings in certain areas until later in 2026. On the surface, it sounds like a straightforward story about a new motorcycle selling better than expected. Look a little closer, though, and it highlights something much bigger than a single BMW model.
For years, motorcycle manufacturers operated under the assumption that riders were always dreaming of bigger, more premium machines. More displacement meant more performance, more prestige, and supposedly more desirability. Every new generation brought bigger engines, more technology, and higher prices. Yet while manufacturers continued moving upward, many riders started gravitating in the opposite direction, choosing motorcycles that delivered enough capability without the compromises that often come with excess size, weight, and complexity.
That's what makes the F 450 GS such an interesting case study. This isn't a bare-bones beginner bike. It carries the same GS badge that has become synonymous with adventure touring, while packing a parallel-twin engine producing nearly 48 horsepower, modern rider aids, and a TFT dashboard. More importantly, it packages those features into a motorcycle that remains approachable and manageable without sacrificing the premium experience buyers expect from BMW.
The adventure segment has spent the better part of two decades chasing bigger numbers. Engine displacements climbed well beyond 1,000cc, horsepower figures increased steadily, and curb weights followed the same trend. The resulting motorcycles became incredibly capable, but they also became increasingly specialized. Many were built to cross continents and tackle extreme terrain, while the average owner was far more likely to spend weekends exploring backroads or commuting to work than crossing the Sahara.
That disconnect created an opening for motorcycles that prioritize usability over excess. Riders have discovered that a machine weighing under 400 pounds can be more fun day-to-day than one approaching 600 pounds. A motorcycle with 45 to 80 horsepower can comfortably cruise at highway speeds, carry luggage, and handle dirt roads while remaining easier to maneuver, easier to pick up, and less intimidating when conditions get challenging.
The popularity of motorcycles such as the Yamaha Tenere 700, Honda NX500, Royal Enfield Himalayan, and CFMoto Ibex 450 reflects that shift. Riders aren't choosing these bikes because they're settling for less. They're choosing them because the balance of performance, weight, and practicality aligns more closely with how they actually ride.
What's particularly revealing about the F 450 GS is that demand remains strong even in markets where pricing isn't especially aggressive. In the UK, the bike starts at £6,990, while estimates place US pricing somewhere around the $9,000 to $10,000 mark. Buyers aren't flocking to it because it's cheap. They're attracted to the idea of a premium adventure bike that delivers most of the capability they want without requiring them to manage an oversized machine every time they leave the garage.
In many ways, the waiting list itself isn't the story. The bigger takeaway is that BMW may have underestimated how many riders were waiting for a motorcycle exactly like this. The industry spent years convincing itself that bigger automatically meant better. The response to the F 450 GS suggests many riders reached a different conclusion long ago.
Source: BikeDekho
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