
Vespa Sprint 150 Review
"Buy the cleanest example you can find, budget for service."
Used Buyer Review
The Sprint 150 is genuinely one of the better-built small-displacement scoots you'll find used, but you're paying Vespa tax every step of the way. The all-steel monocoque body means rust is a real conversation on older examples — lift the seat, check the floor pan, and probe around the front apron before you hand over any cash. The three-valve single makes around 12 horsepower, which sounds laughable until you're carving through city traffic at 55mph feeling smugly invincible. Mechanically these things are pretty robust if they've been serviced properly, and that's the catch. Find a neglected one and you're looking at valve clearances, drive belt replacement, and roller weights that haven't been touched since Obama's second term. Dealer servicing is expensive and independent Vespa specialists are thin on the ground depending where you live. Budget an extra $300-400 for a proper inspection and catch-up service on any used example. The ride quality is genuinely impressive for a 150cc scooter — long-travel suspension soaks up urban punishment well. Just accept the compromises and buy the cleanest example you can afford.
Pros
Cons
You need cheap running costs or highway touring
Similar Scooter Reviews
"The sensible fast-scooter choice that never feels like a compromise."
Commuters wanting performance without sacrificing practicality $7,500-$10,500
"The smartest used maxi-scooter buy on the market right now."
Commuters wanting weekend touring capability too $7,500-$11,000
"The premium maxi-scooter benchmark that still embarrasses newer rivals."
Commuters wanting weekend fun without compromise $5,500-$9,500
"The best scooter money can buy, used or new."
Commuters wanting performance without compromise daily $7,500-$11,000