If you want to sell your used Royal Enfield motorcycle, prepare for a surprise.
You probably considered your Royal Enfield a real bargain when you bought it. Back then you probably knew it wasn't the fastest motorcycle on the planet, or even the most reliable.
It was the style -- and that low price -- that you liked.
Well, it still has style going for it, but if you're ready to sell and move on, guess what?
It's going to be a bargain for the person who buys it from you, because the going prices for used Royal Enfields are surprisingly low.
Ask me! I paid $4,100 for my 1999 Royal Enfield Bullet in 2001. I thought that was pretty low, given that I needed a new way to get to work and a car would have been much more.
But today, a quarter century of inflation later, it's possible to buy a late model used Bullet for even less! And it will come with disc brakes, fuel injection, electronic ignition and -- glory be -- even ELECTRIC START.
In fact, if I look hard enough, I bet I could find on eBay or CraigsList a low mileage Royal Enfield 650 twin in good condition, for not much more.
According to an online inflation calculator, my $4,100 spent in 2001 equates to the buying power of $7,400 today.
For that I could easily pay the Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price for a brand new 2025 Canyon Red INT 650 twin: only $6,149.
Sure, as always in the U.S., destination and handling fees, tax, title, license and registration are extra, and dealer prices may be higher. But I am still in the ballpark.
So have I been tempted to upgrade?
What? Me? Give up my 1999, with its kick starter, drum brakes, balky four-speed gearbox (with its neutral finder lever) and vibrating rear-view mirrors? Me? Me enjoy a cruise speed of more than 42 mph? Me? Give up oil leaks, for heaven's sake?
Not yet. Ask me again tomorrow.