Kawasaki Brute Force 750 vs Yamaha Fz25
Side-by-side comparison for used motorcycle buyers
Kawasaki Brute Force 750 vs Yamaha Fz25. Kawasaki Brute Force 750: ~46 hp @ 6,500 rpm (estimated; Kawasaki does not officially publish power figures for this model) hp, ~297 kg (wet/curb weight) weight, top speed ~105 km/h (estimated; note: this is an ATV, not a motorcycle), Motoryk rating 8.0/10. Yamaha Fz25: 20.9 hp @ 8,000 rpm hp, 153 kg (wet/curb weight) weight, top speed 130 km/h, Motoryk rating 7.5/10.
Performance at a Glance
Green = winner per metric · Bars are relative to the higher value
Kawasaki Brute Force 750
Yamaha Fz25
Horsepower (hp)
46 hp
20.9 hp
Torque (Nm)
62 Nm
20.1 Nm
Top Speed (km/h)
105 km/h
130 km/h
Weight (kg) — lower is better
297 kg
153 kg
Type
Naked
Naked
Horsepower
~46 hp @ 6,500 rpm (estimated; Kawasaki does not officially publish power figures for this model)
20.9 hp @ 8,000 rpm
Torque
~62 Nm @ 5,500 rpm (estimated; official figures not published by Kawasaki)
20.1 Nm @ 6,000 rpm
Top Speed
~105 km/h (estimated; note: this is an ATV, not a motorcycle)
130 km/h
Weight
~297 kg (wet/curb weight)
153 kg (wet/curb weight)
Fuel
~11–14 L/100km (estimated real-world average under mixed riding conditions)
3.5 L/100km or approximately 28 km/L (typical real-world average)
Fairing
No
No
Individual Reviews
Kawasaki Brute Force 750
8.0/10
"Tough, capable, and forgiving — if the previous owner cared."
Pros
+Bulletproof V-twin engine
+Strong low-end torque
+Excellent parts availability
Cons
−Front diff neglect is common
−CVT belt wears fast
−Heavy for tight trails
Yamaha Fz25
7.5/10
"A genuinely solid commuter that rewards patient, informed buyers."
Pros
+Reliable fuel-injected engine
+Strong resale value retention
+Low running costs
Cons
−Vibes above 7,000rpm
−Rear suspension often neglected
−Highway cruising feels strained
Top 10 Accessories
Picks that work on either bike.









