Yamaha Mio 125 vs Yamaha Nmax 155
Side-by-side comparison for used motorcycle buyers
Yamaha Mio 125 vs Yamaha Nmax 155. Yamaha Mio 125: ~9.0 hp @ 8,000 rpm (note: varies slightly by market variant and year) hp, ~93-96 kg (wet/curb weight, varies by variant) weight, top speed ~95 km/h (estimated; may vary by variant and market), Motoryk rating 7.0/10. Yamaha Nmax 155: 15.1 hp @ 8,000 rpm hp, 127 kg (wet/curb weight) weight, top speed 125 km/h, Motoryk rating 7.8/10.
Performance at a Glance
Green = winner per metric · Bars are relative to the higher value
Yamaha Mio 125
Yamaha Nmax 155
Horsepower (hp)
9 hp
15.1 hp
Torque (Nm)
9.6 Nm
13.9 Nm
Top Speed (km/h)
95 km/h
125 km/h
Weight (kg) — lower is better
93 kg
127 kg
Type
Scooter
Scooter
Horsepower
~9.0 hp @ 8,000 rpm (note: varies slightly by market variant and year)
15.1 hp @ 8,000 rpm
Torque
~9.6 Nm @ 5,500 rpm (note: varies slightly by market variant and year)
13.9 Nm @ 6,500 rpm
Top Speed
~95 km/h (estimated; may vary by variant and market)
125 km/h
Weight
~93-96 kg (wet/curb weight, varies by variant)
127 kg (wet/curb weight)
Fuel
~45-55 km/L (approximately 1.8-2.2 L/100km, real-world average)
2.4 L/100km or approximately 41 km/L (typical real-world average)
Fairing
Yes
Yes
Individual Reviews
Yamaha Mio 125
7.0/10
"The sensible urban runabout that rarely disappoints if bought carefully."
Pros
+Extremely reliable, low maintenance
+Parts cheap and abundant
+Fuel sipping economy
Cons
−Weak above 90kph
−Soft suspension, bottoms easily
−CVT neglect very common
Yamaha Nmax 155
7.8/10
"A smart, reliable urban weapon if you buy carefully."
Pros
+Bulletproof Blue Core engine
+Excellent underseat storage
+Composed, planted handling
Cons
−Front forks leak when neglected
−Plastics scratch embarrassingly easily
−Pillion comfort is mediocre
Top 10 Accessories
Picks that work on either bike.









