🏍 Full Review | April 2026 Launch

BMW F 450 GS:
Smaller Size.
Bigger Statement.

2026 Launch
48 HP Twin-Cylinder
Starting ₹4.70 LakhAdventure • ADV • Touring • India Launch

Engine
420cc Parallel-Twin
Power
48 HP / 43 Nm
Weight
Only 178 kg
Starting Price (India)
₹4.70 Lakh

BMW doesn’t do things quietly. When they decided to fill the gap between the G 310 GS and the F 800/900 series, they didn’t just build a mid-range adventure bike. They built something that — at least on paper — makes the entire mid-capacity ADV segment look like it needs to rethink its homework.

The BMW F 450 GS is here, and it is exactly what intermediate riders and touring professionals have been quietly hoping would show up. A brand-new 420cc parallel-twin, 178 kg wet weight, Brembo four-piston brakes, a 6.5-inch TFT display, and an Easy Ride Clutch that virtually eliminates the need to manually work the clutch lever in traffic. And in India, it starts at ₹4.70 lakh.

So let’s get into all of it — the specs, the tech, the variants, the competition, and honestly, whether this bike is actually worth your money or just impressive on a spec sheet.

420cc
Parallel-Twin Displacement
48hp
Peak Power @ 8,750 rpm
178kg
Kerb Weight
4
Variants Available

⚙️

The Engine — And Why It Actually Matters

Let’s start where it counts. The F 450 GS runs a newly developed 420cc liquid-cooled parallel-twin with a 135-degree crankshaft offset. That unusual crank angle is BMW’s way of giving you the character and sound of an uneven-fire twin — think of it as a GS with actual personality — while keeping vibration smooth enough for long days in the saddle.

48 hp at 8,750 rpm and 43 Nm of torque at 6,750 rpm might not sound earth-shattering on paper. But remember — this is a 178 kg bike. That power-to-weight ratio puts it in genuinely sprightly territory, especially in urban and trail riding scenarios where responsiveness matters far more than peak numbers.

The engine uses throttle-by-wire, which feeds into the ride mode system. Fuel injection is handled by BMW’s own EFI setup, and the whole unit is built to be a stressed member of the frame — meaning the engine itself contributes to the chassis rigidity. This is proper engineering, not a cut-and-paste job.

Engine & Drivetrain Specifications
Displacement 420cc (bore 72mm × stroke 51.6mm)
Configuration Parallel-twin, liquid-cooled, 4-stroke
Crank Offset 135 degrees
Peak Power 48 hp (35 kW) @ 8,750 rpm
Peak Torque 43 Nm @ 6,750 rpm
Fuelling Throttle-by-wire fuel injection
Gearbox 6-speed with Shift Assistant Pro
Clutch Easy Ride Clutch (ERC) — Trophy / optional
🔧 What is the Easy Ride Clutch (ERC)? It is a centrifugal clutch that automates engagement at low RPMs — so you can roll into traffic or onto a trail without ever touching the clutch lever. The lever is still there and fully functional, but the ERC does the boring work for you. Paired with Shift Assistant Pro, you can go through an entire city commute using neither clutch nor throttle blips. It is borrowed from scooter tech and genuinely works.

🔩

Chassis, Suspension & Brakes

The F 450 GS is built around a newly designed tubular steel trellis frame — with the engine acting as a load-bearing element, as mentioned. The geometry is sport-adventure focused: a 1,465mm wheelbase, a 28.1-degree steering head angle, and enough ground clearance to make gravel paths feel like a plan rather than a risk.

Up front, you get a KYB upside-down fork with a 43mm stanchion diameter and 180mm of travel. That is proper off-road spec hardware on a mid-capacity ADV — not a compromise. The rear gets a KYB central monoshock with travel-dependent damping (WAD), a system BMW has adapted from off-road motorsport. Preload and rebound are adjustable on the standard suspension; the Sport and Trophy variants get fully adjustable compression damping too.

And then there are the brakes. A 310mm front disc with a Brembo four-piston caliper. At this price point, that is legitimately impressive. The rear gets a 240mm disc with a single-piston caliper. Standard kit includes ABS Pro, Dynamic Brake Control, engine drag torque control (MSR), and a dynamic brake light. These are not budget bike electronics — they are the kind of safety net you’d expect on something twice the price.

Chassis & Suspension
Frame Tubular steel trellis (engine as stress member)
Front Suspension KYB 43mm USD fork, 180mm travel
Rear Suspension KYB monoshock, WAD, adjustable preload & rebound
Wheelbase 1,465mm
Steering Head Angle 28.1 degrees
Front Brake 310mm disc, Brembo 4-piston caliper
Rear Brake 240mm disc, single-piston caliper
Front Wheel 19-inch
Rear Wheel 17-inch
Tyre Sizes 100/90-19 (F) · 130/80-17 (R)

📱

Tech & Electronics — This Is Where It Gets Serious

BMW knows that modern riders — especially those coming from higher-end bikes or upgrading from smaller machines — want electronics that actually help rather than just add to the price tag. The F 450 GS doesn’t disappoint.

🗂️

The Four Variants — Which One Is Actually For You?

BMW is offering the F 450 GS in four trims. Understanding which one fits your riding style genuinely matters — because the gap between Basic and Trophy is not just about price. It’s about what kind of riding you plan to do.

Entry
Basic
₹4.70 Lakh
Standard spec from factory. Rain and Road riding modes. LED lighting, TFT display, ABS Pro, DBC. The starting point — and still surprisingly loaded for the price.
Popular
Exclusive
₹4.90 Lakh
Adds off-road footpegs, handguards, engine guard, Pro riding mode, Shift Assist Pro, Enduro mode, and a clear windscreen. The sweet spot for most riders.
Performance
Sport
On Request
Everything in Exclusive plus sport suspension with adjustable compression damping. For riders who want precision on tarmac and more control on technical trails.
💡 Our Take: If you’re an intermediate rider planning a mix of highway touring and occasional offroad, the Exclusive variant at ₹4.90 lakh hits the best value point. The Shift Assistant Pro and Enduro mode alone are worth the ₹20,000 jump from Basic. Go Trophy only if you’ll genuinely use the ERC and the off-road footpegs regularly.

⚔️

How It Stacks Up Against the Competition

The F 450 GS doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Here’s who it’s going up against in the Indian market — and where it wins, loses, or just plays a different game entirely.

Bike Engine Power Weight Starting Price Key Advantage
BMW F 450 GS 420cc Twin 48 hp 178 kg ₹4.70L Electronics, Brembo brakes, ERC
RE Himalayan 450 452cc Single 40 hp 196 kg ₹2.69L Price, brand trust, dealer network
KTM 390 Adventure 399cc Single 46 hp 177 kg ₹3.76L Street performance, price
Honda NX500 471cc Twin 46 hp 196 kg ₹5.39L Honda reliability, refinement

The Himalayan 450 wins on price and is probably the right buy for a first adventure bike. But for an intermediate rider ready to step up, the F 450 GS brings a meaningfully higher level of electronics, braking hardware, and engine refinement at a price premium that is much smaller than you might expect from a BMW badge.

The Honda NX500 is a strong rival — twin-cylinder, well-rounded. But it actually costs more than the F 450 GS Trophy in India, with fewer off-road focused features. That’s a tough sell when BMW is sitting right next to it with Brembo brakes and Enduro Pro mode.

“Brembo four-piston brakes at ₹4.70 lakh. That is not a typo — that is a positioning statement.”

F 450 GS India Launch Analysis, April 2026

🧭

Who Should Actually Buy This Bike?

Let’s be honest about who the F 450 GS is genuinely built for — because the best review answers that question clearly rather than hedging with “it’s great for everyone.”

✅ Buy It If You Are…

  • An intermediate rider who has outgrown a 300–400cc single and wants a refined twin-cylinder with proper ADV capability
  • A touring professional who wants long-highway comfort with the ability to handle gravel roads and forest trails without changing bikes
  • Someone coming from higher-end bikes who wants a lighter, more nimble machine for city + weekend getaway use
  • Riders who do a lot of city commuting — the ERC and Shift Assistant Pro genuinely change the fatigue equation in traffic
  • Anyone upgrading from a 310 GS or similar entry-level ADV who wants to stay in the GS family with meaningful jump in capability

⚠️ Think Twice If You Are…

  • A first-time rider — the Himalayan 450 at a lower price makes more financial sense while you build experience and potentially drop the bike
  • Primarily a hardcore off-road rider who wants to spend most time on single trails — dedicated enduro bikes do that better
  • Someone who doesn’t use electronics at all and just wants a bare-bones simple machine — you’d be paying for tech you won’t use

🇮🇳

The India Story — TVS Hosur & What It Means

Here’s something worth knowing. The F 450 GS for India is manufactured at the TVS plant in Hosur — the same facility that built the G 310 GS and the BMW G 310 R. BMW and TVS have had a manufacturing partnership for years, and this is the next step in that relationship.

This matters for two reasons. First, it keeps the price down significantly — a European-manufactured BMW ADV with this spec list would cost substantially more. Second, it means service infrastructure is more accessible than you might expect from a BMW, since the TVS dealer network shares some support capabilities.

  • India Launch Date: Confirmed for April 23, 2026 — with deliveries from June 2026 onwards
  • Manufacturing: TVS Hosur plant under BMW-TVS partnership
  • Colour Options: Three available — Dime Silver Metallic Matte, Cosmic Black, and Trophy Blue (Cosmic Black not confirmed for India market)
  • Warranty: Standard BMW Motorrad warranty — details to be confirmed at dealership level
  • Competition positioning: Priced between the KTM 390 Adventure and the Honda NX500

The fact that BMW launched this bike in India and made it locally manufactured suggests they see the mid-capacity ADV space as a genuine volume opportunity — not just a prestige play. That is actually good news for buyers: it means support, spares, and local pricing are taken more seriously.

Final Verdict:
The GS Badge Has Never Been This Accessible

The BMW F 450 GS is not a budget bike wearing a BMW badge. It is a properly engineered machine — with Brembo brakes, KYB suspension, a characterful 135-degree twin, segment-leading electronics, and the GS design language that has made that family of motorcycles legendary for decades.

What makes it remarkable is that it manages to be all of that at a starting price of ₹4.70 lakh. In the Indian mid-capacity ADV market, that is legitimately disruptive positioning. The Royal Enfield Himalayan 450 wins on price and dealer reach. The KTM 390 Adventure is sharper on city streets. But if you want the combination of off-road capability, touring refinement, electronics sophistication, and brand credibility — the F 450 GS doesn’t just compete. It leads.

Go to your nearest BMW Motorrad dealership. Get on the waiting list before June. And if the Exclusive variant is calling your name — trust it.

India Launch — April 2026 Deliveries from June 2026

 

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