Adventure Scooters Took Over Europe. Kymco Thinks America Might Finally Be Ready
The rest of the world already bought in. Now Kymco wants to see if America finally gets the hype.
Adventure scooters used to be one of those ideas that sounded great on paper and just a little ridiculous everywhere else. A scooter dressed up like an adventure bike? Complete with chunky tires, tall suspension, and enough plastic cladding to survive an imaginary trip across the Sahara? It was easy to laugh at. Then something unexpected happened.
Riders started buying them.
Honda deserves a lot of the credit. The X-ADV proved there was genuine demand for a machine that blended the convenience of a scooter with the comfort and versatility of an adventure bike. The smaller ADV160 and ADV350 expanded that formula even further, and before long, adventure scooters stopped looking like a niche experiment. They became a legitimate segment, especially across Europe and Asia, where rough roads, city traffic, and weekend escapes all play to their strengths.
That success hasn't gone unnoticed. Nearly every major scooter manufacturer now wants a slice of the pie. SYM has its ADXTG 400, while Chinese brands like Zontes and Voge have rolled out their own rugged interpretations. Suddenly, what once looked like a quirky Honda experiment has become one of the fastest-growing corners of the scooter market.
There's just one place where the concept still hasn't had its big moment: the good old U S of A.
Sure, American riders love their adventure bikes. They also love crossovers and SUVs, which are basically adventure scooters with four wheels and cupholders. But a large displacement scooter that blurs the line between motorcycle and commuter? That's still an unanswered question. Honda never brought the X-ADV stateside, leaving American riders to wonder what they're missing while the rest of the world racks up miles on them.
Now, it looks like Kymco wants to find out.
The Taiwanese manufacturer has filed trademarks for the name "CV-X45." According to a report by the folks at Cycle World, this could point to a production version of the CV-R5 concept it unveiled at EICMA in 2024. The naming also lines up neatly with the concept's 427 cc single-cylinder engine, suggesting the "45" refers to its place in the 450-class category, while the "X" signals its adventure intentions.
If the production bike stays true to the concept, it'll pack 34 horsepower and 30 pound-feet of torque, along with ride-by-wire, multiple ride modes, traction control, keyless ignition, a TFT display with smartphone connectivity, tire pressure monitoring, and enough under-seat storage to swallow a full-face helmet. It also rides on a 15-inch front wheel and a 14-inch rear, weighs a claimed 463 pounds, and has a manageable 31.5-inch seat height. So yeah, your run-of-the-mill spec sheet for a modern mass-market scooter.
But perhaps the most interesting part sits underneath all that bodywork. Unlike most scooters that use the engine as part of the swingarm, the CV-R5 mounts its engine in the frame like a conventional motorcycle. That setup can reduce unsprung weight and improve suspension performance, giving it more than just adventure styling to brag about.
Whether the CV-X45 actually reaches US dealerships remains to be seen, but the trademark filing is a strong hint that Kymco thinks there's room for an adventure scooter bigger than the ADV160. That's a gamble Honda never took.
If the CV-X45 lands stateside and buyers embrace it, adventure scooters could finally earn a permanent place in the US market. If it struggles, we'll know the segment's popularity may have been more regional than universal. Either way, Kymco might be about to run the biggest real-world test this category has seen yet.
Sources: USPTO, Cycle World
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