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How Fast Can The Suzuki Hayabusa Really Go? Here's What Riders Have Clocked

How Fast Can The Suzuki Hayabusa Really Go? Here's What Riders Have Clocked

Yahoo22-06-2025
Few motorcycles have earned the kind of legendary status that surrounds the Suzuki Hayabusa. For over two decades, the 'Busa has been the go-to name when you're talking straight-line speed and contemplating buying one for cheap to make your friends say, "You sure about that?" It didn't just set the bar for performance when it launched — it obliterated it, claiming to be the fastest production motorcycle in the world.
With its aggressive, swooping bodywork, a stretched stance, and the kind of power that made the liter class nervous, the Hayabusa built a cult following across drag strips, and among top speed chasers, and the back corners of the internet where turbo builds roam free. It wasn't just fast for its time, it was simply fast by any measure. This wasn't a motorcycle you rode to flex specs. It was one you rode to find out what your helmet's top vent tasted like at 190 mph.
So how fast can a Hayabusa actually go? Depends on the year, the mods, and your nerve.
Read more: These Are The Cars You'd Buy If They Were $20,000 Cheaper
When it launched in 1999, the first-gen Suzuki Hayabusa (GSX1300R) clocked a mind-bending top speed in excess of 190 mph, making it the fastest production motorcycle in the world. Suzuki didn't hold back on that first model — no limiter, no electronic leash, just a 173-horsepower, 1,299cc inline-4 sending power through a six-speed gearbox.
Then came the "gentleman's agreement" in 2000 between manufacturers to electronically limit top speeds to 186 mph. So while the second-gen Hayabusa (2008–2018) had a beefier 1,340cc engine making up to 191 hp, its top speed was capped at around 186 mph unless you removed the limiter.
Those were factory specs. In the real world, though, fully derestricted 'Busas with turbo kits have been known to produce 345 hp and push well beyond 250 mph. More famously, in 2023, Jack Frost of Holeshot Racing set a verified standing mile clocking 274.9 mph on his in-house turbo-Busa. This topped former Isle of Man TT racer Guy Martin's 2019 record of 270.9 mph for a standing mile on a whopping 819 hp streamlined turbocharged Hayabusa.
It's not just about the top speed -- the Hayabusa is also a rocket off the line. The original '99 model could do 0–60 mph in about 2.8 seconds. Quarter-mile times? Around 9.8 seconds bone stock. The second-gen version (2007-2018) with its revised motor shaved a few tenths off that, clocking 2.7 seconds for a 60 mph run from a standstill and dispatching a quarter-mile in 9.7 seconds.
Launched in 2021, the current-gen Hayabusa is more refined, boasts 188 hp, and gets more electronics nannies than ever before. Despite the slightly less top-end power, it still claims to clock 0–60 mph in 3.2 seconds. Still fast enough to outrun your excuses for not getting one.
The speed story of the Hayabusa is as much about evolution as it is about revolution. Gen 1 was raw and unfiltered. Gen 2 brought more power but also electronic limits. Gen 3 (current) refined the platform with advanced rider aids, better brakes, and smoother power delivery, but it no longer chases the outright top speed crown. Motorcycles like the 321 hp Kawasaki Ninja H2R are in a whole different league with forced induction and a top speed of 250 mph, but they're also not road-legal. On the street, the formidable 'Busa still remains a street-legal mix of brute speed and long-haul comfort that few motorcycles can touch.
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Inside BYD's plan to rule the waves
Inside BYD's plan to rule the waves

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Inside BYD's plan to rule the waves

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New Toyo International Holdings First Half 2025 Earnings: EPS: S$0.005 (vs S$0.011 in 1H 2024)
New Toyo International Holdings First Half 2025 Earnings: EPS: S$0.005 (vs S$0.011 in 1H 2024)

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New Toyo International Holdings First Half 2025 Earnings: EPS: S$0.005 (vs S$0.011 in 1H 2024)

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