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Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda’s GL

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL
Young and travel-hungry: My early days at Rider Magazine taught me that on the right motorcycle there are no limits.

The following story is excerpted from 50th Anniversary Gold Wing, a book released this year by American Honda. It will be provided as a gift to customers who purchase a 2025 50th Anniversary Edition Gold Wing and will be available online and through Honda powersports dealers.


What is a motorcycle, if not a companion? You can love a car, sure, but do you ever feel a part of it? On a motorcycle, your physical connection is not unlike what a rider feels on a horse. Your slightest movement impacts the machine, your line of sight guides it. As shared adventures accumulate, that connection can only deepen into something even more profound. A bond.

Ask me about Honda’s Gold Wing and I’ll tell you the model has been a great friend to me during my nearly 40-year career as a motorcycle journalist, testing and traveling on the full range of brands and bikes. 

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL

Honda’s legendary Gold Wing and I got along right from the start, me a 20-year-old associate editor at Rider trying out a fully dressed tourer for the first time, a 1986 blue-on-blue GL1200 Aspencade. It was by far the largest motorcycle I’d ever ridden, and I remember feeling so nervous, my heart pounding as I throttled away, expecting an unruly ride. 

But the Gold Wing immediately did what I now know it always does, its weight evaporating like some magic trick, revealing a machine that is agile and easy to ride. I was done for, my growing appetite for two-wheel travel now matched with a machine that could take me farther and in a glorious amount of comfort. And what about that plush pillion behind me? It presented an opportunity to share the magic of motorcycle touring.

Shortly after that first ride, I packed an extra set of gear and motored away from Southern California on that Aspencade, grabbing up my big sister, who had never been on a motorcycle, from the San Francisco Bay Area, and away we went on a weeklong tour of Oregon. Again, the Gold Wing wowed me with its ability to maintain its composure, now carrying two girls, trunk and saddlebag lids straining to contain all our cute outfits and hair curlers. 

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL

Oh, how very young and free we were, barely into our 20s, our long, blonde braids in the wind as we dipped and dove our way up Oregon’s winding Pacific Coast Highway. And what a sight, two-up, in a time when women riding motorcycles was a rarity. All these years later, I can’t remember a time when we had more fun together, a situation where we felt closer, all thanks to that Gold Wing Aspencade and all the possibilities a beautifully designed touring bike presents.

In 1987, I was tasked with comparing the budget-minded GL1200 Interstate with another tourer, and I chose the backdrop of Tombstone, Arizona. The other editor I invited on the tour, Brent Ross, had been a professional roadracer, and dicing with him in the twisties on those big tourers took my love for the Gold Wing to the next level. Not only was the bike agreeable in everyday situations, it was up for a mad dash, keeling over predictably and roaring off each apex like it was born for the chase.

From there, my relationship with Honda’s GLs only deepened, each year the bikes becoming more refined, more exciting to ride, right in step with my improving skills and ever-expanding horizons.

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL
Back in 1986, my sister was my first passenger on a two-up tour – a weeklong adventure we still revisit with smiles.

In 1988, the long-awaited GL1500 “Super Wing’’ hit the scene, the ferocious growl of its flat-six resonating as much in my chest as in my ears. As soon as we got our hands on one, Rider’s then tech editor, Mark Tuttle, and I headed off toward Arizona’s Superstition Mountains, not on two bikes but two-up on the Wing, switching rider and passenger duties along the way.

This was my first time riding pillion for long stints on a Gold Wing, and I remember thinking at the time how on a machine this luxurious, the passenger might enjoy a tour even more than the pilot.

When I left Rider later that year to begin a 12-year stint freelancing for a variety of motorcycle publications, the Gold Wing was always there, popping in and out of my life like a favorite friend. I interviewed Nancy Wright, a transport pilot during World War II, who at 82 no longer flew planes but said riding her 1992 GL1500 around the country was just as exciting.

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL
A 1987 GL1200 Interstate test to Tombstone, chasing curves and discovering just how spirited a tourer could be.

A Gold Wing of any vintage is a dream to ride on the Cherohala Skyway. While testing a GL1500 SE in the late ’90s, I rode into a monstrous sandstorm near Death Valley that was blowing sand sideways so hard you couldn’t see three feet ahead. When I emerged on the other side nearly an hour later, I found the Gold Wing’s pretty Pearl Glacier White paint had been stripped clean off the left side, but thanks to the tourer’s steady nature, I was unscathed.

Rallies celebrating the Gold Wing were attended, factory tours were enjoyed, and all the while the bike kept improving. I like to think I was evolving right alongside it, now married and the mother of a young daughter, a circumstance that didn’t keep me from riding but did make me appreciate the stability and emerging rider aids on this legendary tourer even more.

In the early aughts and now approaching 40, I created a magazine called Motorcycle Escape, the physical manifestation of my long-time passion for road travel. It was about motorcycles, but even more so about the places they could take you.

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL
The 2012 Gold Wing held its crown in a showdown with BMW’s then-new GTL.

By now, the Gold Wing had been reborn as the kingly GL1800, the definition of a super-tourer that came with a boatload of innovations, including a nice stereo with CD changer, optional ABS, and a much-welcomed stiffer aluminum frame. GL1800 test units loaned to the magazine became my secret weapon, carrying me as far and wide and as fast as I cared, allowing me to grab up stories from all over the continent in comfort, style, and with plenty of room for camping and camera equipment.

One GL1800, a fully loaded 25th Anniversary Edition, carried me so many thousands of miles it earned a nickname: Zeus, an endearment that came to me just after I’d passed a couple of young guys on sportbikes on the outside of a fast corner on the way to Mesa Verde National Park in Colorado, a shower of sparks adding to their surprise. I remember laughing out loud in my helmet and reveling in how connected I felt to that machine.

I put more than 6,000 miles on that bike in just 10 days, reporting on world-class roads and travel destinations in Arizona, Utah, and Colorado, including exploring high-elevation dirt and gravel passes like Cinnamon and Engineer. Over the many years of testing Gold Wings, I’d come to understand there is nothing it won’t do well, including light off-road use, as the bike’s tractor-like torque, low center of gravity, and supple suspension work together to glide you across every imaginable landscape.

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL
A tour along the Pacific coast two-up with my daughter on a Gold Wing nicknamed Zeus became another treasured memory.

It was always so amusing to me to pull up at a scenic overlook of a high-altitude dirt pass on a machine that looked so completely inappropriate for the conditions. I remember one older man getting out of a Jeep and asking, “Did you ride that thing up here all by yourself?”

After Colorado, I pointed Zeus northwest, where I met up with long-distance riding legend and Ayres Adventures founder, Ron Ayres, for a SaddleSore 1000 (1,000 miles in 24 hours) from Seattle, Washington, to Hyder, Alaska. Since my bum was already pretty famous for being iron-clad, I thought it would be a piece of cake, but we started extremely late, so most of that 1,000-plus miles was spent in the dark, dodging elk and moose on torn-up Canadian high-country backroads. I’m not sure there was ever a time I was more relieved to be on a Gold Wing, hurtling so precariously through that cold, ink-black night.

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL
Watching Hannah, then 13, smiling in her helmet and developing her own signature wave, I knew I’d chosen the perfect bike to grow her love for motorcycling.

The next day kicked off an interesting event in town, the Hyder Seek Rally, which used to be the culmination of an annual Iron Butt Association-sanctioned run called a “48 Plus” where riders had to pass into 48 states plus Alaska in just 10 days. Reaching Hyder, the closest pinch of U.S. soil from the lower 48, was the only possible means to complete the challenge. And what bike were the majority of the 25 finishers riding? Gold Wings, of course.  I immediately felt at home in the company of these men and women, riders who understood the hypnotic pull of a long-distance ride, as well as the powerful advantage of choosing the right bike for the job.

Running late on my return to Southern California, with a magazine needing to be shipped to the printer, my long-term test Wing was parked at the Seattle airport for a few weeks as I flew home to work. When I returned to retrieve it, I brought along an eager passenger, the epitome of precious cargo, my then 13-year-old daughter, Hannah.

Hannah immediately took to the Gold Wing with its cushy seat and backrest, pillion speakers and floorboards. She had ridden behind me many times, though mostly on short spins on the back of my sportbikes, so luxury-touring was entirely new. We had helmet comms for that ride and had the most wonderful talks, gliding along the edge of the Pacific, Hannah so chatty I knew she was having the best time, me so grateful to the Gold Wing for its gift of great memories.

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL

As we crossed the Astoria-Megler trestle bridge, a majestic steel stitch that binds Washington state to Oregon, one of those Gold Wing-gained memories surfaced and stirred a strong wave of emotion. For a moment, I was 20 again, riding across that same bridge with my 25-year-old sister as passenger on that 1986 Aspencade. We had thought the bridge was so cool we had ridden across it and back, marking the apex of our weeklong tour of Oregon.

Boy, the Gold Wing and I had come a long way since then. It, awash in cutting-edge innovations and me, at the height of my career, at the time editor-in-chief of two national motorcycle magazines. The kinship I felt with the Gold Wing was further cemented on that four-day trip as I watched my daughter in the rearview mirrors, dialing in her own signature wave to other riders, the two of us singing girl pop over the intercom.

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL
The Astoria-Megler Bridge connects Oregon and Washington state. It also became a link between my carefree youth and the responsibilities of parenthood.

In 2012 I was 47, the Gold Wing, 37. That year, the bike came with some updates, things like new saddlebags and fairing, stereo and nav system, though the core machine hadn’t seen an overhaul in more than a decade. Motorcyclist magazine had hired me to compare the updated Honda to BMW’s 2012 K 1600 GTL, a bike that was brand-new from the ground up and bristling with state-of-the-art technology. 

The comparison took place in Tennessee over the course of three days, and it had been preordained that I would ride the winning machine back to California. I went in feeling a sense of dread for my favorite luxury-tourer, a bike I shared so much important history with, since it felt all but certain the GTL would knock the Wing off its long-held luxury-tourer throne.

Well, to everyone’s surprise, the king held onto its crown. BMW’s GTL was sportier in those days, yes, but it was also top heavy and not nearly as luxurious or comfortable to ride. I was more than happy to settle into the Honda’s familiar bucket seat for the long ride home to California, the bike’s silky-smooth flat-six humming a song about the open road.

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL
At a rally in Hyder, Alaska, the majority of finishers of the Iron Butt 48 Plus (48 states plus Alaska in 10 days) arrived aboard Gold Wings.

As I was crossing Missouri on that Gold Wing, a crazy thing happened. It had been pouring rain all day, but the Wing has always been a calm machine, and I felt very comfortable riding it in extreme conditions. I was cruising along, singing in my helmet, when a speeding car slowed beside me, its passenger pointing to the sky. I gave a thumbs up and thought, yes, I know it’s storming and I appear crazy, but it is not as hard as it looks.

But when I glanced down at the weather overlay on the Gold Wing’s navigation screen a moment later, I saw something I’d never seen before, a dot of purple within the red mass that was heavy rain. I swiveled around to assess the whole of the sky, and there it was, a tornado.

I sped toward the nearest exit, wind howling, and quickly pulled up to the office of a hotel, its manager yelling for me to get inside then ushering me toward the center of the first floor by the elevators where all the hotel’s guests were already gathered along with mattresses taken from nearby rooms. It was an absolutely wild experience, by far the most dramatic moment I have ever had on a motorcycle tour.

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL
When the sporty GL1800 came on the scene in 2018, it felt like a stranger, but at its core, I found the same magic.

The tornado eviscerated nearby buildings and plucked trees from the ground by their roots. I had never seen such a thing, and I couldn’t stop thinking about the close call as I rolled toward home, me now requiring Advil and Red Bull to put in the long miles while the GL felt as vital as ever.

As the next decade rushed by, the Gold Wing and I underwent dramatic transformations, me becoming an aging empty nester in stretchy pants, while the GL1800 went full Benjamin Button for 2018, becoming sleeker, lighter, and far more athletic than ever before. I didn’t even recognize that sixth-generation Gold Wing when I first saw it, the sharp lines of a shark where once lived a friendly bear.

At the model’s press introduction in Texas Hill Country, I eagerly jumped onto the next-gen GL expecting to find an old friend once underway, but instead, I was met by a stranger. No longer sitting “in” the big touring bike I knew so well, I was perched atop a modern sport-tourer, gazing at a clean, concise cockpit.

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL
An IBA Bun Burner (1,500 miles in 36 hours) to Key West helped forge a fresh bond with the new-gen Wing.

The bike performed brilliantly, of course, though I admit I was pining for the last gen’s plane-like cockpit, so busy with buttons, the bolstered captain’s chair, and that Cadillac-esque cush.

I left the press ride happy for Honda and the new generation of riders this bike would attract but also a bit sad for myself. The arrival of such a different Gold Wing felt like a hard stop to a beloved series of chapters in my life’s story, or so I thought.

That same year, I spent the entire summer riding around America in search of its 50 greatest roads. I used several different test bikes for this 16,000-mile expedition, the last one a Candy Red 2018 Gold Wing Tour DCT I collected in upstate New York a day and a half before my 53rd birthday.

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL
It’s difficult to choose which generation of Gold Wing is my favorite, each having become a part of my life story in its own unique way.

As preferred, I had no expectations for my birthday other than to wake up somewhere memorable. I pulled the Gold Wing to a stop on the edge of an I-95 onramp to ponder options when a wild idea struck: Why not ride to Key West? I tapped the destination into the Wing’s nav system, and it told me it was a dumb idea. It was already noon and Key West was 1,502 miles away, but if I throttled onto the interstate immediately, I could arrive just after midnight on the morning of my birthday.

For better or worse, wild hairs always win with me, so, yes, I rode the new, ultra-sporty Wing right into that fast-flowing river of traffic and swam south for a day and a half, stopping only to refuel, slam gas-station snacks, and grab a terrible night’s sleep at a cheap motel. I know most riders hate the interstates, but I’ve always found a long ride on a straight road leads to a therapeutic level of introspection, a deep cleaning of sorts.

As happens later in life, and especially around birthdays, there was an audit of time. How quickly it slides by later in life, but also an accounting of time passed versus time left. Did I spend it well? How do I make the most of what is left? Ever since I had swung my leg over that first Gold Wing in 1986, the bike had become a kind of touchstone, and here it was, punctuating the story of my life with another profound memory.

Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda's GL
Though the cockpit has changed over the decades, I’ve always found the view from the seat of a Gold Wing to be the most satisfying.

By the time the bike’s tire crunched onto the white, crushed-shell driveway of my Key West hotel, the new Gold Wing was no longer a stranger. Instead, I’d made a new friend: youthful, smart, powerful, and more than happy to share its abundant grace with a pilot who was now growing older, my essence dimming slightly each year as the Gold Wing’s only grew brighter. (For the full story, see “The Long Ride” in the February 2022 issue or on our website here.)

That sharing of power and fluidity was a gift I would prize more than ever over the next two weeks as I explored some of the country’s finest motorcycle roads in Georgia, North Carolina, and Virginia, the Gold Wing proving itself, as ever, to be an ideal travel companion. Over the course of my long-shared history with this wonderful motorcycle, it has been so much more than the perfect tool for two-wheel travel. The Gold Wing has become a cherished friend, ever-evolving and ready for a ride, even when it is just a trip down memory lane.


Jamie Elvidge Contributor Headshot

Contributing to the 50th Anniversary Gold Wing book has been a major highlight of my 40-year career as a motorcycle journalist. Led by Lee Edmunds and edited by Matthew Miles, the project resulted in a gorgeous tribute, packed with details and backstories about the machine beloved by so many.

The post Love Letter to the Gold Wing: A Lifelong Affair with Honda’s GL appeared first on Rider Magazine.

Source: RiderMagazine.com

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Review

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
On the first day of our Honda Gold Wing tour, we rode from Birmingham, Alabama, to Apalachicola, Florida. (Photos by Align Media)

Sitting astride a 1975 Honda Gold Wing GL1000, a motorcycle only a couple years younger than I am, my eyes took in the Candy Blue Green paint on the “tank” (it’s just a cover since fuel is stored under the seat), the slightly sun-faded twin gauges, and the colorful indicator lights nestled between them. 

My nose smelled unburned gasoline. The 999cc flat-Four engine, which had been running steadily for the better part of an hour, was running rich.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
Hisaho Nozue, Larger Project Leader for the first Honda Gold Wing, designed the GL1000 to be a “majestic machine” with “a hidden initiative spirit,” offering class-leading performance with dignity. “An aristocratic grand tourer couldn’t have any rattles or vibration,” said Nozue-san. “It had to be quiet, spacious, and comfortable.”

My gloved hands held the ribbed rubber grips, and my right hand twisted the cable-actuated throttle to rev the engine. Butter smooth with a throaty burble from the twin pipes.

My left foot pressed the shifter down into 1st with an audible clunk. I eased out the clutch, which had a very narrow friction zone, with as much finesse as I could muster, not wanting to stall it in front of an audience.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
The spirit of the 1975 GL1000 lives on in the 2025 GL1800.

I was in the final pairing of journalists who would ride a first-year Gold Wing and a current-year Gold Wing – a 50th Anniversary Edition resplendent in Eternal Gold, a colorway inspired by iconic GL1200 and GL1500 paint schemes – back-to-back at Barber Motorsports Park, a beautiful racetrack that twists and turns among rolling green hills near Birmingham, Alabama.

Two weeks earlier, I had spent nearly a full day chasing Senior Editor Kevin Duke around the Winding Road Course, a 4.5-mile test track at the Honda Proving Center in California’s Mojave Desert, on an identical Eternal Gold GL1800 for our video “Think You Know the Honda Gold Wing? Think Again.” Check it out below.

At Barber, I wanted to ride the GL1000 first so I could start at the beginning of the Gold Wing story. But that also meant I would get my first-ever ride on a 50-year-old motorcycle (before this, the oldest Wing I had ridden was Rider’s former photo wagon, a 2000 GL1500 SE 25th Anniversary Edition) while also on my first-ever ride around the Barber track, a tricky circuit with several blind crests that had an obstacle course of distracting traffic cones left over from a Porsche driving school that had just finished for the day.

Related: 50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing

As I pulled onto the track and began to accelerate, my first anxious thought was Don’t crash! The GL1000 was a beautiful example of a 50-year-old classic on loan from a private owner, and I didn’t want to be that guy.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
Smooth, graceful laps at Barber.

My next thought was This thing feels small! With no fairing and no windscreen, the GL1000 all but disappeared from view, and the 640-lb bike felt light and slim between my knees.

After completing the first half-lap, once I realized that the red dash light that came on every time I applied the brakes was normal and that the gearbox needed to be treated with care to avoid chirping the rear tire during downshifts, I came to appreciate how much of the original Gold Wing DNA has been passed down over five decades and six model generations.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
50th Anniversary Edition Gold Wings: Tour models in Bordeaux Red Metallic and Eternal Gold and a standard model in Matte Metallic Black.

The first-year GL1000, which, in the words of Large Project Leader Hisaho Nozue, was designed to be a “grand tourer with aristocratic elegance,” had all the traits that became Gold Wing hallmarks: a smooth-running liquid-cooled flat engine; generous low-end torque; easy but steady handling thanks to a low center of gravity, courtesy of the engine configuration and underseat fuel tank; shaft final drive; and long-haul comfort.

My two laps around Barber amounted to less than 5 miles on the GL1000, but I would gladly have ridden it cross-country.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
The Gold Wing has come a long way in 50 years. Here the 1975 GL1000 and 2025 GL1800 await their laps at Barber Motosports Park.

Swapping over to the 2025 Wing was revelatory. Yes, it felt more familiar since I’ve put thousands of miles on sixth-gen GL1800s. But it was a quantum leap, a sudden time warp from past to present, from analog to digital. The 1975 Wing was highly refined by contemporary standards, but it seemed crude compared to the modern-day GL1800. And how could it not be, given the enormous amount of time, effort, and resources devoted to the Gold Wing’s evolution over the past 50 years?

As capable as either GL was on a track, that’s not their natural habitat. Touring, at whatever speed, is the alpha and omega of the Gold Wing. To let the 2025 Gold Wing truly shine, we packed our GL luggage liners, loaded them in trunks and side cases, and hit the road for two days.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
Within the brown panels on the Eternal Gold colorway are dozens of tiny Gold Wing logos, which add visual texture and depth.

Before leaving the hotel parking lot, we paired our smartphones and Bluetooth headsets with the bikes. Wireless compatibility with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto is new for 2025, and there is no longer a built-in nav system since most people use Google Maps, REVER, or other smartphone apps for routing.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
The center console is the only place you’ll find mention of the Gold Wing’s 50th Anniversary Edition. It’s also on the Smart Key fob.

Our crew saddled up on a mix of 50th Anniversary Gold Wings – the standard “bagger” model and the trunk-equipped Tour model, both 6-speed manual-transmission and 7-speed automatic Dual Clutch Transmission versions.

We spent our first day riding south through Alabama on country roads. Our pace was relaxed, and with nothing new to figure out – I already knew what all the buttons were for and how to change settings – I left the Wing in Tour mode and let the DCT do the shifting for me. One of Honda’s PR guys led the ride and the music on my iPhone was on shuffle, so I didn’t have to decide where to go or what to listen to; I just sat back and enjoyed a worry-free ride on a mild, sunny day.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
Birthday sparklers!

The languid pace afforded me the headspace to think about the Gold Wing’s legacy. While there are other motorcycles that have left their mark, there are few motorcycles – perhaps none – that have had such a significant impact on the industry at large. The Gold Wing certainly wasn’t the first touring motorcycle, but it was the first to transform and expand the concept of what touring could be.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
Cruising along Florida’s Gulf Coast.

Thanks to brisk sales in the ’70s and ’80s, the Gold Wing almost single-handedly created and supported a thriving aftermarket. During that era, the Gold Wing became the gold standard of luxury touring, so much so that competition from other Japanese OEMs – in the form of the Kawasaki Voyager, Suzuki Cavalcade, and Yamaha Venture – came and went. In later years, BMW’s K 1200 LT and K 1600 GTL provided a European alternative, but not much in the way of serious competition. And as impressive as today’s Harley-Davidson and Indian V-Twin touring models are, they can’t match the Gold Wing in terms of handling, comfort, and refinement.

Related: BMW K 1600 GTL vs. Honda Gold Wing Tour Comparison Review

Related: Harley-Davidson Electra Glide Ultra Limited vs Honda Gold Wing vs Indian Roadmaster Comparison Review

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
Pristine examples of each Gold Wing model generation were on display at Daytona Bike Week.

The GL1800 that debuted in 2001 was much sportier than the GL1500 it replaced, and the all-new GL1800 introduced in 2018 was sportier still. Yet, even a quarter-century later, the Gold Wing still struggles to shake its stigma as an “old man’s bike” and a “couch on wheels.” These labels are thrown around a lot, most often by people who have never ridden a Gold Wing – the same ones who get red-faced when they are passed by a Gold Wing on a curvy road. While it lacks the cornering clearance of a dedicated sport-tourer, the GL can hold its own while delivering all the luxury it’s known for.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
Our Gold Wing crew rolling down Main Street at sunset.

The farther south we rode, the flatter the terrain became. Compared to roads that go over mountains or through canyons, one could say the route was boring. But that’s missing the point. I was happy to cruise along without worrying about blind corners or scraping pegs. On the Barber and Honda tracks, I appreciated the Gold Wing’s unflappable stability, monster 6-piston front brakes, and deep well of torque. On Alabama backroads, I appreciated the wind protection, comfort, and conveniences of cruise control, DCT, and Apple CarPlay.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
Matthew Miles (left) and Lee Edmunds provided a history lesson about the Gold Wing.

We stopped for lunch in Troy, a quiet community in southeastern Alabama with a picturesque town square. A few hours later, we crossed into Florida. We cruised down long, mostly straight roads through Apalachicola National Forest as late-afternoon light filtered through tall stands of slash pines. The sun had set by the time State Route 65 ended at the Gulf of Mexico. We turned right on U.S. Route 98, crossed Apalachicola Bay in the dark, and dropped our sidestands in front of the Gibson Inn, a historic hotel in Apalachicola.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
Japanese artist Makoto Endo uses chopsticks and India ink to paint a 50th Anniversary Gold Wing Tour.

We rose early and rode east on U.S. 98 along the Gulf Coast, crossed Ochlockonee Bay, and cruised through flat woodlands. After coffee in Perry, we turned south on U.S. Route 19. The road was flat and the scenery uninteresting, mostly stubby palmetto bushes interspersed with the occasional auto/body shop or country-cookin’ diner. My memory banks became flooded with images from my teen years in Florida: rope-swinging from a cypress tree into the Suwanee River; swimming with manatees in crystal-clear springs; piling in a friend’s car to drive to Panama City for spring break.

We continued eastward to central Florida for a late lunch in Ocala. We finally found a few twisties in the Seminole State Forest, but they were spoiled by commuter traffic. After 700 miles over two days, we arrived in Dayona Beach.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
The GL1500 on display at Daytona was the 1,000,000th motorcycle built by Honda of America Manufacturing in Marysville, Ohio.

As the sun was setting, we rolled down International Speedway Boulevard. It was Friday, February 28, the first day of Bike Week – the 84th annual edition of the world’s largest motorcycle rally. We crossed the Intercoastal Waterway and rolled through the raucous pandemonium of Main Street, which was restricted to motorcycle traffic only and awash in sights, very loud sound systems, and folks enjoying the scene.

Related: 2025 Daytona Bike Week Recap

When we put down our kickstands for the last time and handed over the key fobs, I felt disappointed. I didn’t want the ride to end. I wanted to keep going. Somewhere. Anywhere.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
Ride to eat, eat to ride.

The next day, we went to Daytona International Speedway, where motorcycle manufacturers hosted demo rides, vendors had booths and tents set up, and races ran all week. Honda had an enormous display area to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Gold Wing, including one example of every model generation: GL1000, GL1100, GL1200, GL1500, GL1800 SC47 (2001-2017), and GL1800 SC79 (2018-2025).

Going from model to model, Lee Edmunds, a former advertising director at American Honda, and Matthew Miles, a former editor at Cycle and Cycle World, gave us a history lesson about the Gold Wing. Edmunds and Miles were instrumental in compiling a book about the Gold Wing that will be given as a gift to all customers who buy a 2025 50th Anniversary Edition. Former Rider staffer Jamie Elvidge wrote several chapters for the book, and her essay “Love Letter to the Gold Wing” is reprinted in the May 2025 issue.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
For many, the Gold Wing is more than just a motorcycle. It’s the embodiment of emotions, memories, and dreams. A true icon.

It was an honor to be a part of the Gold Wing’s 50th anniversary celebration. And it’s been an honor to write yet another chapter in the Gold Wing story, which has been central to Rider’s story for 50 of our 51 years.

2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Tour Test
2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition in Eternal Gold

2025 Honda Gold Wing Tour 50th Anniversary Edition

  • Base Price: $29,200
  • Price as Tested: $29,700 (Tour DCT)
  • Website: Powersports.Honda.com
  • Engine Type: Liquid-cooled, longitudinal opposed flat-Six, Unicam SOHC w/ 4 valves per cyl.
  • Displacement: 1,833cc
  • Bore x Stroke: 73.0 x 73.0mm
  • Transmission: 7-speed Dual Clutch Transmission automatic (as tested)
  • Final Drive: Shaft
  • Wheelbase: 66.9 in.
  • Rake/Trail: 30.5 degrees/4.3 in.
  • Seat Height: 29.3 in.
  • Wet Weight: 845 lb (as tested)
  • Fuel Capacity: 5.5 gal.

The post 2025 Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary Edition Review appeared first on Rider Magazine.

Source: RiderMagazine.com

Honda Gold Wing 50th Anniversary and Daytona Bike Week | Ep. 78 Rider Magazine Insider Podcast

Rider Magazine Insider Podcast Ep. 78

Episode 78 of the Rider Magazine Insider Podcast is brought to you by Western Power Sports. In this episode, Greg and Duke talk about the 50th anniversary of the Honda Gold Wing and their video “Think You Know the Gold Wing? Think Again.” They also talk about 2025 Daytona Bike Week: races, bike shows, Main Street, beach riding, and more.

LINKS: “Think You Know the Gold Wing? Think Again.” (YouTube)2025 Daytona Bike Week RecapWestern Power Sports

You can listen to or watch Episode 78 of the Rider Magazine Insider Podcast on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPodbean, and YouTube or via the Rider Magazine Insider Podcast webpage. Please subscribe, leave us a 5-star rating, and tell your friends! Scroll down for a list of previous episodes.

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The Road to Daytona Bike Week 2025

Daytona Bike Week 2025
Our gang of Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wings rolling down Main Street on the first day of Daytona Bike Week 2025. (Photo by Align Media)

Our road to Daytona Bike Week 2025 started in Birmingham, Alabama, where Honda hosted a group of motojournalists to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Honda Gold Wing. It culminated 700 miles later on Main Street in Daytona Beach, Florida. We’ve enjoyed racing, bike shows, riding on the beach, and much more. Here are a few highlights of the week so far.

After getting a tour of the incomparable Barber Vintage Motorsports Museum, we got to ride laps on a first-year 1975 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing and a current-year 2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing Tour DCT on the Barber Motorsports Park track. Clearly the Gold Wing has come a long way over the past five decades, but riding the GL1000 really gave a sense of the Gold Wing’s fundamental DNA – the smoothness of its flat engine, the steadiness of its handling, and the comfort of its seating position.

Daytona Bike Week 2025
Side by side, a 2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing Tour DCT and a 1975 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing.

Believe it or not, it wasn’t the first time we’ve ridden a Gold Wing on a track. We did it few weeks ago when we shot a video called “Think You Know the Honda Gold Wing? Think Again.”

Daytona Bike Week 2025
Riding a 1975 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing at Barber Motorsports Park. (Photo by Align Media)

The next day, we saddled up on a small fleet of 50th Anniversary Gold Wings – the standard “bagger” model and the trunk-equipped Tour model, both 6-speed manual-transmission and 7-speed automatic Dual Clutch Transmission versions. We spent a day riding south through Alabama on country roads, stopping for lunch in Troy. Late in the day, we crossed into Florida, rode through the Apalachicola National Forest, and spent the night at the Gibson Inn in Apalachicola.

Daytona Bike Week 2025
We rode through Florida’s Apalachicola National Forest as the sun was setting. (Photo by Align Media)

We rose early and did photo passes on U.S. Route 98 on the edge of St. George Sound. We then followed U.S. 98 along the coast, crossed Ochlockonee Bay, and then cruised through flat woodlands along Florida’s gulf coast. After lunch in Ocala, we found a few twisties (sort of) through the Seminole State Forest on our way to Daytona Beach.

Daytona Bike Week 2025
An early-morning ride on U.S. Route 98 along the Gulf Coast in Florida. (Photo by Align Media)

As the sun was setting, we rolled down International Speedway Boulevard on Friday, September 28, the first day of Bike Week. We crossed the Intercoastal Waterway on the Main Street Bridge and rolled through the raucous pandemonium of Main Street on a Friday night, which was restricted to motorcycle traffic only and was awash in sights, very loud sounds of audio systems, and tons of folks enjoying the scene.

Daytona Bike Week 2025
We’ve arrived in Daytona!

On Saturday, we went to Daytona International Speedway, where motorcycle manufacturers have demo rides and vendors have booths and tents set up. Honda had an enormous activation to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Gold Wing, including one example of every model generation: GL1000, GL1100, GL1200, GL1500, GL1800 SC47 (2001-2017), and GL1800 SC79 (2018-2025).

Daytona Bike Week 2025
Get a Honda Gold Wing history lesson. (Photo by Align Media)

Lee Edmunds, a former advertising director American Honda, and Matthew Miles, a former editor at Cycle World, gave us a history lesson about the Gold Wing. Edmunds and Miles were instrumental in compiling a book about the history of the Gold Wing that will be given as a gift to all customers who buy a 50th Anniversary Gold Wing. The book includes chapters by former Rider staffers Mark Tuttle and Jamie Elvidge.

Daytona Bike Week 2025
Japanese artist Makato Endo uses chopsticks and India ink to paint a 50th Anniversary Gold Wing. (Photo by Align Media)

Next to the Honda activation our friends at Michelin had a booth set up with a 2024 Honda Gold Wing with new Michelin Road W GT tires. We checked out the Michelin Commander III cruiser and touring tires, and we had our photo taken with “Bib” the Michelin Man.

Related: Michelin Road W GT Gold Wing Tires Review

Daytona Bike Week 2025
Hangin’ with Bib!

We spent the afternoon inside the Speedway. We got a behind-the-scenes tour of Honda’s Supercross race trucks and pit garage, where we met team rider Chance Hymas. We did a track walk of the Supercross course that was designed by Ricky Carmicheal and included a sand section with sand taken from Daytona Beach. We ended the day watching the Supercross races, where Suzuki rider Ken Roczen came from behind for a dramatic win in the 450 class.

Daytona Bike Week 2025
Group selfie with Honda SX rider Chance Hymas. (Photo by Align Media)

On Sunday morning, in front of the Hard Rock Hotel, we see and hear an impressive performance bagger owned by @FatAndFuriousOne. The bike was dripping with carbon fiber, billet aluminum, performance mods, and top-shelf components, and it was shod with Michelin Commander II tires. We shot a reel of the bike, which got a lot of attention on Instagram.

Daytona Bike Week 2025
This high-dollar custom performance bagger is owned by @FatAndFuriousOne.

We cruised down Main Street in the morning. The shops and bars were still closed and a few early risers were claiming parking spaces ahead of the crowds. Then we headed over to the Speedway to check out some new and custom bikes at the huge Harley-Davidson display area, and to stroll through the V-Twin Visionary Presents the Rockford Fosgate All Out Bagger Show.

Daytona Bike Week 2025
A custom Harley-Davidson Pan America with cross-spoke wheels and Michelin Road 6 tires at the V-Twin Visionary Presents the Rockford Fosgate All Out Bagger Show.

We can never get enough of the custom bike scene. On Monday, we went back to the Speedway for the V-Twin Visionary Performance & Club Style Motorcycle Show. Then we rode a 2025 Harley-Davidson Low Rider S with Michelin Scorcher tires down to Ormond Beach for a break from the crowds.

Daytona Bike Week 2025
There’s nothing quite like riding a motorcycle on Daytona Beach!

It rained on Tuesday, but we didn’t let that dampen our spirits. We took our Low Rider S loaner and a 2024 Honda Gold Wing with Michelin Road W GT tires for a ride down a deserted Main Street and onto the hard-packed sand of Daytona Beach where they used to race bikes years ago.

Daytona Bike Week 2025
We didn’t let the rain stop us from a ride on the beach.

We rode down to Port Orange for lunch at Giuseppe’s Steel City Pizza, which hosted the Traditional Chopper bike show with a great selection of custom bikes, ranging from long-fork choppers to road-weary vintage machines.

Daytona Bike Week 2025
There was a lot to see at the Traditional Chopper show at Giuseppe’s Steel City Pizza.

There’s more to come from our Daytona Bike Week 2025 experience, so stay tuned!

Daytona Bike Week 2025
Riders lined up on the grid for the Royal Enfield Build. Train. Race. flat-track races on Thursday night.

The post The Road to Daytona Bike Week 2025 appeared first on Rider Magazine.

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Think You Know the Honda Gold Wing? Think Again. (VIDEO)

Honda Gold Wings on canyon road
We show what the Honda Gold Wing can do on some of Southern California’s best canyon roads as well as a closed-course track. (Videography by James Martinec)

The Honda Gold Wing has long been the gold standard in luxury motorcycle touring, but it’s sportier than most people realize. When the GL1000 was launched in 1975, its 999cc flat-Four was the largest, most powerful engine yet created for a Honda motorcycle. And the GL1000’s quarter-mile acceleration was second only to the Kawasaki Z1, the fastest “sportbike” of the era, and it had a top speed of 129 mph.

Related: 50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing

As the Gold Wing evolved over multiple generations from the GL1000 to the GL1500, it became bigger, heavier, and more luxurious. Thanks to its low center of gravity, the Gold Wing has always handled well for its size, but due to its plush seating for two, generous luggage capacity, and other accoutrements, it developed a reputation as a “couch on wheels.”

Honda Gold Wing CBR1000RR-SP Fireblade
Rider’s Editor-in-Chief Greg Drevenstedt and Senior Editor Kevin Duke discuss the merits of the Honda Gold Wing.

With the introduction of the GL1800 in 2001, Honda steered the Gold Wing’s development in a sportier direction. Masanori Aoki, Large Project Leader for the GL1800, had previously developed some of Honda’s CBR sportbikes. Compared to the GL1500, the GL1800 had a more aerodynamic shape, a lower curb weight, and an extruded aluminum twin-spar frame that vastly improved its performance capabilities.

Honda Gold Wings on race track
We rode two Gold Wings head-to-head on the Winding Road Course at the Honda Proving Center in California’s Mojave Desert.

In 2018, Honda introduced a new version of the GL1800 that was even sportier. It was more compact and 90 lb lighter than its predecessor, and its double-wishbone front end allowed the engine and rider to be moved closer to the front wheel for better handling. Over the last couple of model generations, the Gold Wing’s handling, acceleration, and braking have improved significantly.

Related: 2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing Preview

Honda Gold Wing footpeg
This is what the Honda Gold’s footpeg looked like after two days of sport riding.

Every Gold Wing we’ve tested has been returned to Honda with beveled footpegs and scuffed engine guards, its potential limited only by its cornering clearance. We’ve heard the “couch on wheels” stereotype parroted many times over the years, often by people who have never ridden one. To dispel the myth, with support from Honda, we created a video titled “Think you know the Gold Wing? Think again.” We take a pair of Gold Wings into the canyons and onto a closed-course track to show what they can do.

For more information about the 2025 Honda Gold Wing and Gold Wing Tour, visit the American Honda website.

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2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing Preview 

2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing Tour Airbag DCT
2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing Tour Airbag DCT in Bourdeaux Red Metallic

It’s been 50 years since the debut of the Honda Gold Wing, the motorcycle that all but invented the touring segment. To celebrate this milestone, the 2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing will feature designated logos and styling in both the standard version and the Tour model.  

2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing
A special Gold Wing badge is located in front of the seat.

The 1975 GL1000 Gold Wing K0, developed by Toshio Nozue, was first presented at the Cologne Show in 1974. Rider published a test of the bike in the Summer 1975 issue, and since then, we’ve tested every Gold Wing model multiple times. The Gold Wing has been awarded our Motorcycle of the Year award twice (2001 and 2018), and as part of Rider’s own 50th anniversary in 2024, we published a review of the 1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 in the December issue. 

2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing
A Gold Wing logo adorns the saddlebags on the anniversary model.

In addition to the dedicated logos and styling, the anniversary models will also come with two free gifts, a coffee-table book about the Gold Wing’s history and a 1:12-scale tabletop model with both a 1975 and 2025 Gold Wing. Aside from styling, the only update for 2025 is the addition of wireless compatibility for Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. 

As part of the celebration, Honda will have a special display and activities during Daytona Bike Week. Expect more details soon. 

2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing
All Gold Wing trims receive compatibility with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto for 2025. The Gold Wing’s previous navigation system is eliminated.

The Honda Gold Wing base model will feature Gold Wing logos across the saddlebags and side fairings, with a special 50th anniversary badge in front of the seat. The instrumentation will now display “Since 1975” when the bike is switched on. Everything else carries over from before, including the bike’s 1,833cc 6-cylinder engine, its double wishbone front suspension and Pro-Link shock, and features like ride modes, hill start assist, a reverse function, an electrically controlled windscreen, cruise control, and more.  

2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing
This 3D model is included as a free gift with the purchase of an anniversary Gold Wing. It features the original 1975 GL1000 on one side and the 2025 Gold Wing on the other side.

The 2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing will be available in Matte Black Metallic for $25,200 with a manual 6-speed transmission or $26,200 with DCT. 

2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing
2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing in Matte Black Metallic

The Honda Gold Wing Tour includes a 61-liter trunk but otherwise retains all features of the standard model, including the 50th anniversary badging on the Bourdeaux Red Metallic and Eternal Gold color options (the Light Silver Metallic color is not badged as a 50th anniversary model). Like the base model, the Tour version is available with a manual transmission or with DCT, and the Tour also comes in an Airbag DCT version. 

2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing Tour
2025 Honda 50 Anniversary Gold Wing Tour in Eternal Gold

The 2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing Tour will start at $29,200 with a manual transmission. The DCT version has an MSRP of $30,200, and the Airbag DCT is priced at $33,500. The Light Silver Metallic version that is not badged as an anniversary model will have an MSRP of $28,700 for manual or $29,700 for DCT. 

2025 Honda Gold Wing Tour DCT
2025 Honda Gold Wing Tour DCT in Light Silver Metallic

Find more information on the Honda website

Check out more new bikes in Rider’s 2025 Motorcycle Buyers Guide 

The post 2025 Honda 50th Anniversary Gold Wing Preview  appeared first on Rider Magazine.

Source: RiderMagazine.com

Michelin Road W GT Gold Wing Tires Review

Michelin Road W GT Gold Wing Tires Review

This year, the Honda Gold Wing will celebrate its 50th anniversary. Since 1975, Rider has tested every Gold Wing model – from the GL1000 to the current GL1800 – multiple times. Over the past 50 years, the Gold Wing has been on our cover 29 times, we’ve selected it as Motorcycle of the Year twice (2001 and 2018), and we’ve included it in comparison tests, travel stories, product reviews, and other features.

Related: 50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing

Later this year, we expect Honda to announce a special 50th anniversary edition of the Gold Wing to commemorate its golden jubilee. In the meantime, there are tens of thousands of Wings on the road, and they all need tires.

Michelin has developed a new sport-touring tire aimed specifically at the Gold Wing called the Road W GT. Gold Wings and their riders place high demands on tires. For the current-model GL1800, the standard Gold Wing bagger has a curb weight of 807 lb while the fully loaded, trunk-equipped Gold Wing Tour Airbag DCT tips the scales at 855 lb. Add a rider, passenger, and luggage, and it’s easy to approach the maximum weight capacity of 1,272 lb.

Michelin Road W GT Gold Wing Tires Review

The sixth-generation Gold Wing, which was introduced in 2018, is the sportiest and most technologically advanced GL ever produced. Thanks to its low center of gravity, aluminum frame, and double-wishbone front suspension, it handles remarkably well for its size. Hustling more than half-a-ton of bike and cargo down a winding road with 106 lb-ft of torque at the rear wheel puts a lot of stress on the tires’ rubber, carcass, and sidewalls.

Michelin’s objectives in designing the Road W GT tires were to deliver extended mileage, good wear resistance, and reliable wet-weather performance. It brought some of its proprietary technologies to bear, including:

  • Radial X-Evo: reinforced three-layer plys that enhance stability by preventing tire deformation during cornering.
  • Aramid Shield: high-density aramid reinforcement in the casing to reduce the number of punctures.
  • Silica: added to rubber compounds to improve grip in wet/cold conditions.
  • Water Sipe: patented tread grooves that enhance water evacuation.
Michelin Road W GT Gold Wing Tires Review

I’ve been testing the Road W GT tires on a 2024 Honda Gold Wing Tour DCT. They have provided a smooth, quiet ride on interstate highways, city streets, and winding backroads. I’ve pushed the Wing hard on numerous canyon roads with surfaces ranging from freshly paved to bumpy, cracked, and patched, and the tires provide confident grip, neutral handling, and fluid side-to-side transitions.

See all of Rider‘s tire reviews here.

After two wet winters here in California, we’ve cycled to a La Niña climate pattern that produces warm, dry conditions. We’ve only had a few bouts of brief, light rain – enough to bring months of accumulated oil and dirt to the surface but too little to wash it away. Even on wet, slick roads, the Michelins continued to deliver dependable grip during cornering and hard braking.

Michelin Road W GT tires are excellent replacement tires for your Gold Wing. They’re available now in one front size (130/70-R18, MSRP $279.95) and two rear sizes (180/60-R16, $367.95; 200/55-R16, $376.95).

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50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing

50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing 1983 GL1100 Aspencade
1983 GL1100 Aspencade

The histories of Rider magazine and the Honda Gold Wing have run parallel – and often intertwined – over the past 50 years. Rider’s first issue was published in the summer of 1974, and a few months later the Honda GL1000 Gold Wing was unveiled to the public.

50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing
Honda GL1000 test in Rider’s Summer 1975 issue.
50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing

The GL1000 debuted as a 1975 model, and sales in the U.S. began that year. Rider published a test of the Honda GL1000 in the Summer 1975 issue, which opened with this paragraph:

It’s a bull in street clothing. A solid, low-to-the-ground animal from the breed that produced the classic 750 Four. An ultra-smooth, quick, fast, silent, powerful roadburner. A sophisticated touring machine.

Over the past half century, Rider has tested every Gold Wing model multiple times, and we have included the Wing in numerous comparison tests, tour tests, and travel stories. The Gold Wing became so synonymous with touring that it spawned an enormous aftermarket, and at least 50 companies have used Wings in their advertising in Rider over the years.

50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing
The first Gold Wing ad in Rider Magazine appeared in the 1976 April issue.

“It is possible that Rider owes its existence to the early Gold Wing,” former EIC Mark Tuttle told me. “The touring aftermarket that sprang up in its wake filled the pages of the magazine with ads in the late 1970s and continued to do so even during the recessions of the 1980s, when the OEMs slashed their marketing budgets. Most of the other magazines were focused on sport, performance, and racing, and alternatives to print had yet to appear, making the travel and touring focus of Rider the best venue for companies like Vetter, Markland, Tour Rider, and many touring accessory warehouses to showcase their stuff. That revenue helped the magazine survive several nasty economic downturns in the 1980s.

50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing
A Honda GL1500 ad.

“Honda was pretty quick to notice that it was missing an opportunity to provide and profit from those accessories itself, and it wasn’t long before many of them appeared as factory equipment or options on Gold Wing models like the Interstate and Aspencade. That had a negative impact on the aftermarket’s profitability and on Rider’s ad revenue. Fortunately for the magazine, it was soon replaced by copious amounts of Honda ads as the economy improved and the Gold Wing exploded in popularity with the release of the 1988 GL1500.”

50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing
Rider’s June 1979 issue included a Dresser/Goodies ad for Gold Wing accessories.

Alan Cathcart’s review of the GL1000 (published originally in Rider‘s December2024 issue) describes the Gold Wing’s development, and below are some key milestones in the model’s 50-year history.

See all of Rider‘s Honda motorcycle reviews


1972: A team led by Shoichiro Irimajiri develops the M1 prototype, a 1,470cc flat-Six precursor of the Gold Wing.

50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing 1975 GL1000
1975 GL1000

1974: The 1975 GL1000 Gold Wing K0 makes its public debut at the Cologne Show. Developed by Toshio Nozue, who was also responsible for the CB750, the Gold Wing is dubbed “the ultimate motorcycle” by Honda.

1977: The Gold Wing Road Riders Association (GWRRA) is founded.

1979: Honda opens its $50 million, 260,000 square-foot production facility in Marysville, Ohio.

1980: Honda introduces the 1,085cc Gold Wing GL1100, featuring a longer wheelbase, electronic ignition, increased fuel capacity, and less weight. An Interstate version offers a factory-installed fairing and luggage and an optional stereo-intercom system. Honda’s Marysville Motorcycle Plant produces its first Gold Wing.

1982: Honda introduces the GL1100 Aspencade, featuring two-tone paint and the Interstate’s touring amenities.

50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing 1983 GL1100 Aspencade
1983 GL1100 Aspencade

1984: Honda introduces the 1,182cc GL1200, which has a stiffer frame, repositioned engine, smaller wheels, longer wheelbase and swingarm, and upgraded suspension.

50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing 1984 GL1200 Interstate
1984 GL1200 Interstate

1985: Honda commemorates 25 years in America and 10 years of the Gold Wing with the GL1200L Limited Edition, which features auto-leveling rear suspension. The naked version of the GL1200 is discontinued. Honda opens an engine plant in Anna, Ohio, where GL engines would eventually be produced.

1988: Honda introduces the 1,520cc flat-Six GL1500, featuring more power, a smoother transmission, increased fuel capacity, a stiffer chassis, improved brakes, and a comprehensive fairing.

50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing 1988 GL1500
1988 GL1500

1996: On July 26, the Marysville plant produces its 1 millionth U.S.-built Honda – a Gold Wing.

1997: Honda introduces the Valkyrie, a high-performance cruiser based on the GL1500 chassis.

2000: The Gold Wing’s 25th anniversary. GL engine production is moved from Anna, Ohio, back to Marysville.

2001: Honda introduces the GL1800. Developed under Masanori Aoki, it has a larger, 1,832cc flat-Six, fuel injection, an aluminum frame, and optional ABS braking.

50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing 2001 GL18000
2001 GL1800

2004: Honda introduces the Valkyrie Rune, a radical-looking, heavily chromed, limited-edition GL1800-based cruiser.

2006: The Gold Wing gets in-dash GPS and heated seat and grips. The world’s first motorcycle airbag is available on a GL1800.

50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing 2006 GL1800
2006 GL1800

2011: No Gold Wing model is produced as production moves to Kumamoto, Japan.

2012: The GL1800 gets a major update, with fresh styling, more luggage capacity, improved comfort, better handling, updated infotainment, and more. 

50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing 2012 GL1800
2012 GL1800

2013: Honda releases the F6B, a bagger version of the Gold Wing.

2015: Honda offers a 40th anniversary edition Gold Wing with commemorative badges, a two-tone paint scheme, an embossed passenger seat, and a special ignition key.

50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing 2015 GL1800 40th Anniversary
2015 GL1800 40th Anniversary

2018: Honda introduces the sixth-generation Gold Wing, which is new from the ground up and is available as a standard model with no trunk (a replacement for the F6B) or as a Tour model with a trunk. The new GL1800 is lighter and more compact, has state-of-the-art features, and is available with an optional 7-speed automatic Dual Clutch Transmission.

50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing 2018 GL1800
2018 GL1800
50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing 2018 GL1800 Tour
2018 GL1800 Tour

2025: Honda celebrates the Gold Wing’s 50th anniversary.

The post 50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing appeared first on Rider Magazine.

Source: RiderMagazine.com

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
The 1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 in Sulfur Yellow ridden by the author is a restored barn find. It’s owned by Joel Samick, who runs Pennsylvania-based RetroTours. (Photos by Kel Edge)

Honda stunned the two-wheeled world at the 1968 Tokyo Show by revealing its inline 4-cylinder CB750, the first series production superbike of the modern era. But six years later, the Japanese company unveiled something completely different at the 1974 Cologne Show – the GL1000 Gold Wing. It was the first in a family of bikes which continues in production today, albeit in flat-Six 1,833cc guise vs. the original flat-Four 999cc model. Now, 50 years and 650,000-plus motorcycles later, the Wing continues to be a cornerstone of Honda’s range (see “50 Years of the Honda Gold Wing” in Rider’s December 2024 issue). At its peak, the GWRRA global owners club boasted 80,000 members in 53 countries, split into around 800 chapters.

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
The Honda GL1000 Gold Wing debuted as a 1975 model, available in Candy Blue or Candy Red.

Yet initial sales of the GL1000 were underwhelming, with less than 5,000 bikes sold to American owners in 1975, far fewer than hoped for in the model’s debut year. As much as anything, it was because nobody at Honda appeared to really know who the bike was aimed at. It offered a step up in performance compared to the CB750, which was already suffering by comparison to the 903cc Kawasaki Z1 launched in 1972. The 999cc Wing trumped that as the largest-capacity Japanese motorcycle yet built. But at that time, motorcycle touring as we know it today was in its infancy. Except for shaft-drive BMW Boxers, the available bikes weren’t especially practical for covering thousands of miles at a stretch.

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
An early Gold Wing concept sketch.

But then a funny thing happened: Customers started purchasing the GL1000 in increasing numbers and taking it for long rides – and as the rides became longer and longer, more and more people started copying their neighbor or friend or guys they met in a cafe by purchasing a GL1000 and clocking up miles themselves. Suddenly Honda had a hit on its hands, thanks to this customer-led repositioning of the Wing in the marketplace. It had almost accidentally invented a whole new long-range luxury touring sector – much as the BMW GS would do with adventure touring a few years later.

In December 1972, Honda had assembled a team of its top designers led by Shoichiro Irimajiri, who’d headed up creation of Honda’s GP roadracing engines of the 1960s. This team was tasked by upper management with developing the so-called “King of Motorcycles,” by which the largest motorcycle manufacturer in the world could flaunt its technical prowess. The M1 prototype was born of an ambition to impress, not as the result of focus groups or marketing studies. It was to be a fast, comfortable GT model, superior to all other motorcycles in terms of smoothness, performance, and quality.

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
The six-cylinder M1 prototype.

To explore extremes, the top-secret M1 prototype featured a liquid-cooled 1,470cc flat-Six engine with shaft final drive, features that would adorn the Gold Wing line in years to come. The official goals called for a compact and light machine with extremely high performance by the standards of those days. It was to weigh 210 kg (463 lb) with power targeted at 61 hp at 7,500 rpm and maximum torque produced high up at 5,500 rpm. Most telling of all was the quarter-mile performance goal of 12.4 seconds – quicker than Honda’s CB750.

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
The Gold Wing was the first Japanese motorcycle with shaft final drive.

Once the M1 was created to general in-house acclaim – remember, this was a top-secret project – Honda decided to produce a customer model based on this concept. Mr. Honda himself, close to retirement from the company he had built, still favored air cooling for its simplicity and believed that engines larger than 750cc might be rejected by the public as too big, especially with six cylinders. The M1’s liquid cooling was a radical idea back then, but Honda’s engineers knew the operating temperature of air-cooled engines fluctuated with air temperature, and excess heat was deemed unacceptable. With liquid cooling, the GL would be able to be unaffected and reliable through the hottest weather and at the highest speeds and loads.

Because of the M1 engine’s exceptionally low center of gravity, the prototype felt lighter than its true weight. Although a by-product of the layout, this trait was so well-liked by testers it became a focus of the whole design because it made carrying greater weight practical. The engine designers weren’t bound by traditional two-wheel thinking and quickly revised their design to position the transmission under the engine instead of behind it. This innovation permitted the controls comfortably within reach while allowing the flat-Six engine to clear a rider’s shins. Such innovative thinking also led to the GL’s 5-gallon underseat fuel tank. 

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
With perfect primary balance, the Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0’s 999cc flat-Four engine is the epitome of smoothness.

For the future of motorcycling, the M1 opened the way to the universal acceptance of largely maintenance-free, liquid-cooled powerplants in bikes of every kind. Before it could do that, though, it had to pass muster at the highest level. According to in-house legend, Oya-ji (the Old Man, Soichiro Honda himself) appeared unannounced at the Honda R&D Test Center late one evening. When he saw what his engineers had created, he said with his characteristic directness that it “looked like a bat,” with its two blocks of horizontally opposed cylinders. He hopped on the big machine and rode out into the darkness. In due course, he returned safely, parked the bike, remarked that it was “pretty good,” and went home!

In all, the gestation period for the original flat-Four GL1000 spanned just two years from concept to production due to lessons learned from the M1 project. But when it was introduced at the 1974 Cologne Show, few who first saw the bike fully understood what it was – or what it might become. Its straight-line performance was second only to the Kawasaki Z1, the premier superbike of the day, and the GL’s power peaked high in the powerband. But it was judged too heavy, too long, and too bulky to rank as an out-and-out performance model. 

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
A pair of 2-piston front calipers pinching 276mm rotors provide barely adequate stopping power.

Despite a slow start in showroom sales, the GL’s stellar qualities gradually became apparent to long-distance riders who’d tried the alternatives and found them wanting. Owners learned the new Gold Wing would carry all the luggage they needed on longer trips, plus a passenger, all in comfort, and Honda’s already well-established reputation for reliability meant they wouldn’t be stranded far from home.

The Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0’s liquid-cooled flat-Four motor with two valves per cylinder had perfect primary balance, with the contrarotating alternator counteracting the torque reaction of the 180-degree longitudinal crankshaft when the throttle was opened. The single overhead camshaft for each bank of cylinders was driven by silent-running toothed belts, like the Moto Morini 3½, which had pioneered this format on two wheels in 1973. 

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
In its original naked form, few realized the Gold Wing would eventually become the gold standard in luxury touring.

Running a 9.2:1 compression ratio, the engine measured 72 x 61.4mm for 999cc, and in production form delivered 78 hp at 7,500 rpm at the crankshaft, a figure comparable to the 81 hp of the Kawasaki Z1. The GL’s peak torque of 61.2 lb-ft at 5,500 rpm handily beat the 54.2 lb-ft from the Kawasaki. A quartet of downdraft 32mm Keihin CV carbs fed the cylinders – fuel injection had been considered but rejected for the time being as needing further development for motorcycle use. The 5-speed gearbox was located beneath the engine, with shaft final drive for the first time on any Japanese motorcycle.

This engine was housed in a tubular-steel duplex cradle frame, with a 37mm Showa fork offering 4.8 inches of travel carried at a 28-degree rake, with 4.7 inches of trail. The 19-inch front wire wheel and 17-inch rear delivered a reasonable 60.8-inch wheelbase while offering good space for a passenger, with twin rear shocks giving 3.3 inches of travel, which on the first series K0 model provided poor damping and were often replaced by aftermarket items, usually Konis. 

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
Soichiro Honda thought the Gold Wing’s horizontally opposed cylinders resembled a bat.

The twin front 276mm Nissin steel discs with twin-piston calipers were adequate in the dry but judged to be dangerous in the wet – so much so that an owners’ petition was organized to persuade Honda to do something about it! The rear 294mm disc with its single-piston caliper was larger than the front discs, in recognition that most American riders back then favored using the rear stopper over the front ones. At a claimed 584 lb dry, the Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 was no featherweight, but with the weight low down, it was much less noticeable and favored high-speed handling.

Despite Honda’s engineers favoring a torquey midrange performance tune, the first-generation GL1000 Gold Wing was capable of scintillating performance for the day, with 1975 magazine tests showing it ran the quarter-mile in 12.9 seconds from a standing start (though only a couple of times before the clutch burned out!) – second only to the Kawasaki Z1 but not by much – and a trap speed of 104.5 mph. Top speed was 129 mph. Still, the new model had made its mark.

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
A low center of gravity contributes to the Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0’s good handling.

Finding an original-spec early Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 to ride was surprisingly difficult; the model took time to catch on, so the early versions are relatively rare. So it was a surprise to find one that today earns its keep in southeastern Pennsylvania as part of a fleet of street classics, mostly Twins, available for rent from RetroTours for rides of up to seven days around the northeast U.S. and Atlantic seaboard, with company founder, Joel Samick. 

“My friend Jeff Cordisco decided that an early Gold Wing might be fun,” Samick told me. “He enjoys the hunt, and this one took him to upstate New York, where this one-owner bike with just 8,000 miles on the clock was hiding in an old warehouse between some tractors and stuff, behind a boat on a trailer with two flat tires!

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
A smooth, reliable engine and a comfortable seating position made the Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 an ideal tourer. Owners added fairings, luggage, and passengers.

“The bike had sat idle in unheated storage for over 30 years, so it was a real time capsule. Just getting it out into the daylight was a challenge, and it was totally covered with what we call farkles, an acronym for Fancy Accessory, Really Kool, and Likely Expensive! This guy had got addicted to accessorizing his Gold Wing, so it had a full Windjammer fairing, a radio, saddlebags, a top box, crash bars, an extra light rail round the back, extra mirrors, and all kinds of stuff on it. This was common back in the day, but it’s ironic in a way as Honda never intended the GL1000 to be a dresser. It was more of an answer to the Kawasaki Z1 – a smoother, more comfortable, and more sophisticated superbike. It was only after American riders festooned their Gold Wings with touring accessories, spawning a lucrative new decked-out touring-bike market, that Honda decided to go after that.

“Jeff paid $1,000 for it and brought it home. After stripping off the accessories, a box-stock, low-mileage, second-year Gold Wing was revealed. Of course, it needed a bit of work to get it back on the road.” In fact, everything needed attention: the carbs, valves, head gasket, water pump, fuel tank, brakes, tires, tubes, and more.

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
During restoration, accessories were removed to return this 1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 to mostly stock form.

“Once we had it running, we agreed that it would be prudent to replace the cambelts, which had been sitting in one position for over 30 years! Jeff spent $2,000 refurbishing it, and finally the 8,000-mile Honda was fit for use again, looking rather fine in canary yellow. 

“Apparently, once the hunt is over, the prey loses its appeal. Once the Honda was brought back to life, Jeff was ready to move on to the next project. So after all that work, I gave Jeff back the money he’d paid me for repairs, plus some. I had come to love this bike, and I had to have it in the RetroTours fleet. Variety is the spice of life!

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
Under the seat is a 5-gallon fuel tank.

“Riding this bike is like taking a magic carpet ride: It defines smoothness. We literally balanced a nickel on edge on the crankcase and revved the engine. The nickel never moved. With the Koni rear shocks, the suspension is comfortable and competent enough for all but the most spirited street riding. The triple-disc brakes are excellent for 20th-century hardware – more than up to the task, except in the rain where you gotta take care. The bike weighs 600 lb wet but never feels heavy. My wife, Lynn, and I have done a couple of trips on it, one to North Carolina to visit some friends. It was a long highway trip because we only had a short timeframe, so we couldn’t take all the backroads. The GL1000 of course excels at that kind of thing – 70 or 80 mph all day, piled high with baggage – and it was great. The ride is enjoyable in the extreme: Honda quality has a way of doing that. You need to ride this bike to discover the bare essential roots of the modern touring motorcycle.”

So I did.

The only flat-Four 4-stroke motorcycle I’d ridden before was a 1938 Zündapp K800, and like that bike, the GL1000 Gold Wing’s engine was indeed completely devoid of vibration. The magic carpet ride cliche is completely applicable, since even by today’s standards it’s smooth and effortlessly efficient to ride. Fifty years ago, the GL must have seemed a motorcycle from another planet compared to the parallel-Twins which then ruled the big-bike marketplace before the takeover of the Japanese Fours and Laverda and BSA/Triumph Triples. Thumb the starter button, and the flat-Four immediately catches alight, settling to a 1,200-rpm idle speed that’s dead smooth.

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
Before the profusions of buttons on later models, the Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 had a simple cockpit.

The left-foot one-down gear change is smoother and crisper than any other shaft-drive motorcycle of the era (i.e. BMWs or Guzzis) that I recall ever riding, and the light clutch action makes using the Wing in traffic untiring. It picks up smoothly from 2,000 revs, and the torquey response gives more than acceptable performance by the standards of 50 years ago. Apparently, the motor will rev safely to 8,500 rpm, but there’s honestly no point – instead, just ride the torque curve peaking at 5,500 rpm, and enjoy that magic carpet ride. Cruising at 60 mph sees just 3,700 rpm on the clearly visible tach with a temperature gauge at the bottom, while 75 mph comes at 4,600 revs. The Gold Wing feels completely unstressed at these sorts of speeds, and a brief dash up to 7,000 rpm revealed total stability cruising at 100 mph, without getting too blown about despite the lack of a screen.

The riding position is relatively relaxed, though I found the U.S.-market handlebar with its pulled-back grips a little higher than I prefer. It delivers an upright posture which wasn’t tiring during my 120-mile day, and the seat was pretty comfy too. The dummy fuel tank, with its flip-out panels on the left and on top collectively housing the electrics, air filter, coolant tank, and the storage space for the emergency kickstart lever in case you’ve flattened the battery, is one of the many innovative features of this bike. Like the constant beep when you activate the turnsignals until you turn them off. Why don’t we have these today? Plus the big mirrors give a good view behind and don’t vibrate in the slightest.

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
Opening the false fuel tank panels reveals a storage compartment, the fuel filler, and more.

While the GL’s long wheelbase dulls its agility, the Honda flicked from side to side through a series of hillside bends really well – its low center of gravity was certainly a factor here. And presumably thanks to the contrarotating alternator, I honestly forgot I was riding a bike with a lengthways crank – though it does pay to remember you’ve got a shaft final drive, even if it doesn’t rise and fall on the suspension as some European bikes of the era did. The Bridgestone BT46 tires Joel had fitted gave enough grip for me to deck the hero tabs on the flip-up footrests, but ground clearance was never an issue.

Joel had fitted Koni shocks immediately upon acquiring the 8,000-mile bike, and with 19,284 miles now on the clock, the shocks still functioned well despite the restricted wheel travel over some of the less than ideally surfaced Pennsylvania roads we came across. The nonadjustable Showa fork worked okay but felt a little stiff – it didn’t like successive bumps, as if the rebound setting was excessive. Suspension is one thing that’s advanced by leaps and bounds in the past 50 years since this bike was built, and the same goes for the brakes, although to be fair, these were decent in the dry conditions I rode the Honda in and stopped it well from high speed – the big rear disc was especially effective. When in America…

1976 Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 Review
The Honda GL1000 Gold Wing K0 stands the test of time.

Derided by many as a “two-wheeled car,” the Honda Gold Wing has divided opinion for half a century. But I challenge anyone who wouldn’t be seen dead on a Gold Wing to ride a first-generation GL1000 like this one. Dismiss your prejudices, and you may just appreciate what an innovative and impressive motorcycle this first Gold Wing was – and still is.


Alan Cathcart Contributor Headshot

Alan Cathcart is a true mid-Atlantic man. Though born and based in Britain, he’s a regular visitor to the USA and has visited 46 states so far. A Daytona race-winner, he combines track-testing racebikes old and new with clocking up the miles on the highways of the world.

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Source: RiderMagazine.com

2024 Honda Gold Wing, Rebel, and NC750X Returning Models 

2024 Honda Gold Wing Matte Armor Green Metallic
2024 Honda Gold Wing in Matte Armor Green Metallic

Honda has announced six models returning for 2024, including the Gold Wing family, the Fury, the Rebel family, and the adventure NC750X. These returning models join previously announced 2024 models, including the Ruckus and Metropolitan, the Monkey and Super Cub, the Shadow Phantom, the Shadow Aero, the ADV160, and the XL750 Transalp

The models in this announcement, except for the NC750X, receive new colors for 2024, and the bagger-styled Rebel 1100T will now come in a 6-speed manual transmission version to join last year’s Dual Clutch Transmission (DCT) version. 

2024 Honda Gold Wing 

2024 Honda Gold Wing Tour Pearl White
2024 Honda Gold Wing Tour in Pearl White

The ultimate touring motorcycle returns for 2024. Powered by a liquid-cooled 1,833cc opposed 6-cylinder engine with a 7-speed manual transmission or DCT, the Gold Wing family includes touring accommodations and conveniences for the most comfortable long-distance ride available. Technologies include throttle-by-wire, four ride modes, Honda Selectable Torque Control (Tour models only), Hill Start Assist, optimized cruise control, and electronically controlled combined braking system with ABS. Android Auto and Apple CarPlay allow riders to take advantage of the 55-watt speakers, and 121 total liters of storage provide plenty of space for long-haul travel needs. 

2024 Honda Gold Wing Dash
2024 Honda Gold Wing Dash

Related: 2021 Honda Gold Wing Tour DCT | Road Test Review 

The 2024 Honda Gold Wing will arrive in November 2023, and the base model will have an MSRP of $24,700 and come in Matte Armored Green Metallic. The Gold Wing DCT in the same color will be priced at $25,700. The Gold Wing Tour will be $28,700 in Gray Metallic/Black or Pearl White, and the Tour DCT will be $29,700 in the same color. The top-line Gold Wing Tour Airbag DCT will have an MSRP of $33,000 and come in Pearl White. 

2024 Honda Fury 

2024 Honda Fury in Adventure Green
2024 Honda Fury in Adventure Green

The Honda Fury is a chopper-styled cruiser powered by a liquid-cooled 1,312cc V-Twin. The front is raked out to 32 degrees, and the hard-tail styling and low seat height complete the look. It has adjustable front and rear suspension, a 336mm front disc with a twin-piston caliper, and a 296mm disc with single-piston caliper in the rear. ABS comes standard. 

The 2024 Honda Fury will be available in December 2023 in a new Adventure Green color with an MSRP of $11,499. 

2024 Honda Rebel 1100 

2024 Honda Rebel 1100T Matte Armored Green Metallic
2024 Honda Rebel 1100T in Matte Armored Green Metallic

Introduced for 2021, the Rebel 1100 cruiser is the next step up from the popular Rebel 500. It’s powered by a liquid-cooled 1,083cc parallel-Twin with a 6-speed transmission available in either manual or DCT. Last year, the bagger-styled 1100T DCT joined the family with hard saddlebags with a combined 35 liters of storage and a fairing with a short windscreen. For 2024, Honda has added a 1100T with a manual transmission. 

2024 Honda Rebel 1100 DCT Metallic Blue
2024 Honda Rebel 1100 DCT in Metallic Blue

Related: 2021 Honda Rebel 1100 | First Ride Review 

The 2024 Honda Rebel 1100 will arrive in January 2024. The base model with a manual transmission will come in Gray Metallic or Metallic Blue with an MSRP of $9,549. The 1100 DCT will come in the same colors with an MSRP of $10,149. The bagger-styled 1100T with a manual transmission will come in Metallic Black or Matte Armored Green Metallic for $10,699, and the DCT version will come in the same colors for $11,349. 

2024 Honda Rebel 500 

2024 Honda Rebel 500 ABS SE Pearl Smoky Gray
2024 Honda Rebel 500 ABS SE in Pearl Smoky Gray

The Rebel 500 is Honda’s highly popular modern cruiser and is powered by a liquid-cooled 471cc parallel-Twin. It features a peanut fuel tank, LED lighting, and blacked-out engine components. It’s available in standard and ABS versions, as well as the ABS SE version, which includes add-ons like a diamond-stitched seat and a headlight cowl.  

2024 Honda Rebel 500 Matte Laurel Green Metallic
2024 Honda Rebel 500 in Matte Laurel Green Metallic

Related: 2020 Honda Rebel 500 ABS | Road Test Review 

The 2024 Honda Rebel 500 will be available in January 2024 in Matte Laurel Green or Pearl Black. The standard model will have an MSRP of $6,499, and the ABS will be priced at $6,799. The Rebel 500 ABS SE will come in Pearl Smoky Gray with an MSRP of $6,999. 

2024 Honda Rebel 300 

2024 Honda Rebel 300 Nitric Orange
2024 Honda Rebel 300 in Nitric Orange

The Rebel 300 is Honda’s most approachable and affordable cruiser. With a low seat height, comfortable ergonomics, and predictable power delivery, the Rebel 300 is designed to provide new riders with confidence and fun without breaking the bank. It’s powered by a liquid-cooled 286cc Single and, like the Rebel 500 and 1100, includes a peanut fuel tank, blacked-out components, and LED lighting. 

2024 Honda Rebel 300 Pearl Black
2024 Honda Rebel 300 in Pearl Black

The 2024 Honda Rebel 300 will be available in January 2024 in Pearl Black or Nitric Orange. The standard model will have an MSRP of $4,849, and the ABS version will be priced at $5,149. 

2024 Honda NC750X 

2024 Honda NC750X Matte Nightshade Blue
2024 Honda NC750X in Matte Nightshade Blue

The do-it-all Honda NC750X commuter bike is powered by a liquid-cooled 745cc parallel-Twin and comes standard with DCT. It features an upright riding position and a large front storage compartment. Also included is the Honda Selectable Torque Control, which allows riders to choose between some rear-wheel spin for gravel and dirt or reduced spin. 

Related: 2019 Honda NC750X | Long-Term Report 

The 2024 Honda NC750X will be available in January 2024 in Matte Nightshade Blue with an MSRP of $9,499. 

For more information, visit the American Honda website

See all of Rider’s Honda coverage here. 

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Source: RiderMagazine.com