HIMALAYAN 450

A practical adventure bike for riders who want to mix pavement, gravel, backroads, and real weekend escapes without overcomplicating the ride.

Questions about fit, availability, or whether the Himalayan 450 is right for you? Ask us directly.

125 Years in Motion

0% APR 36mo

or

$650 Customer Credit

0% APR 36mo

or

$650 Customer Credit

0.99% APR 24/36mo

Is the Himalayan 450 the right fit?

Great for

Riders who want one bike for commuting, backroads, gravel roads, and day trips into nature.

Less ideal for

Riders wanting a very low seat, a pure highway tourer, or a strictly retro street bike.

Why people choose it

Comfortable upright position, confidence on mixed surfaces, useful real-world versatility.

Perfect for central ohio

amazing riding isn’t far

The Himalayan 450 makes a lot of sense in central Ohio because it suits the kind of riding many of us actually want to do. At Throttle Company, many of us own Himalayan 450s, and a normal week can include taking several of them east/southeast of Columbus to chase great paved roads, gravel detours, and a lunch stop worth the ride.

This is part of what makes the Himalayan so appealing. It is not a bike you need to build a whole expedition around. It is a bike that makes it easy to unplug for a day, get out into nature, cover real ground, and come home feeling like you actually went somewhere.

If hiking is one way to stretch your legs and clear your head, the Himalayan 450 offers a similar kind of escape with a much wider radius. It turns ordinary free time into a real outing.

Dylan’s Himalayan

Shinko 804/805 tires

Rally seat and fender

Acerbis handguards

Handlebar risers

GPS mount

Veridian Cruise Control

Heated Grips

nicole’s Himalayan

Acerbis handguards

Adventure windscreen

Large engine guards

Pannier rails

Handlebar risers

Heated Grips

Who the Himalayan 450 is for?

The Himalayan 450 fits riders who value usefulness, comfort, and the freedom to take the road that looks more interesting, even when it is not the smoothest one.

For newer riders who want room to grow

The Himalayan 450 is approachable enough for many newer riders, but capable enough that it does not feel like something you will outgrow in a hurry.

For riders tired of perfect-pavement limitations

If you want a bike that does not make rough pavement, broken roads, or gravel feel like a mistake, the Himalayan is a strong fit.

For weekend escape riders

This is a great choice for riders who want to leave the city, head toward scenery, mix in some backroads and gravel, and make a day of it.

For practical riders, not image collectors

The Himalayan 450 is not mainly about posing. It earns its place by being genuinely useful in the real world.

What to know before you buy

The Himalayan 450 is easy to like, but it makes more sense when you understand what kind of bike it is trying to be.

Seat height

The Himalayan 450 is not the lowest bike in the lineup. That matters for some riders, but seat height on paper does not tell the whole story. The upright ergonomics and overall balance make it feel more manageable than some people expect.

Highway use

It can handle real road miles, but this is not a giant highway-focused touring motorcycle. Its strength is versatility: commuting, backroads, day trips, imperfect pavement, and mixed-surface exploring.

Where it shines

The Himalayan feels most at home when your ride includes a mix of pavement, rough roads, gravel, and the freedom to wander a little.

What it is not trying to be

It is not pretending to be a huge luxury ADV bike, and it is not a pure street bike. That middle ground is exactly why many riders end up drawn to it.

In Stock at Throttle Company

Kaza Brown

$5,999

Adjustable seat height

Adventure ready tube-type wheels and tires

Rugged, matte finish

Poppy Blue

$5,999

Adjustable seat height

Adventure ready tube-type wheels and tires

Gloss grey with blue highlights.

Kamet White

$6,399

Adjustable seat height

Black tubeless wheels and tires.

Matte white with topographic graphics.  

Hanle Black

$6,399

Adjustable seat height

Gold tubeless wheels and tires.

Gloss black and gold graphics.

Mana Black

$6,599

Rally Accessories

Black tubeless wheels and tires.

Matte black topographical graphics.

available to order

slate salt

$5,999

Adjustable seat height

Adventure ready tube-type wheels and tires

Gloss grey with light red highlights.

Is the Himalayan 450 a good first motorcycle?

For many riders, yes. It offers a manageable power delivery, upright ergonomics, and a riding position that inspires confidence. That said, fit and comfort still matter, and some newer riders may want help thinking through seat height and intended use.

Is it too tall?

That depends on the rider, but the number alone can be misleading. The overall balance and riding position often make the bike feel more approachable than people expect from the spec sheet.

Is it comfortable on the highway?

It can handle highway riding, but the Himalayan’s sweet spot is broader than that. It really shines when your riding includes everyday roads, backroads, rough pavement, and some exploring.

Is it too off-road focused for everyday riding?

No. In practice, one of its strengths is that it makes normal riding more flexible. You do not need to be chasing remote trails to appreciate what it does well.

Is it a good fit for Ohio roads?

Yes. The Himalayan 450 feels particularly well suited to the mix of paved roads, rough pavement, and gravel options you find around central and southeastern Ohio.

How does it compare to the Bear 650?

They appeal to different priorities. The Himalayan leans more toward mixed-surface versatility and practical exploration, while the Bear 650 brings a different style and road-focused character.

Why do so many people seem drawn to it right now?

A lot of riders are drawn to the Himalayan 450 because it feels like a motorcycle with a real purpose. It is not just about style, speed, or spec-sheet bragging rights. It promises a kind of riding that feels more open-ended: leave town, take the road that looks interesting, do not worry too much about whether the pavement stays perfect, and make a day out of it. That is a very attractive idea, especially for people who want their motorcycle to expand their options rather than narrow them.

What to know before you buy

Himalayan 450 vs Bear 650

The Himalayan 450 leans toward practical versatility, mixed surfaces, and easy exploration. The Bear 650 offers a different kind of personality with more road-biased energy and style.

Himalayan 450 vs Himalayan 411

The new Himalayan keeps the spirit of the original, but updates the experience in meaningful ways.

Himalayan 450 vs other Royal Enfields

Trying to figure out where the Himalayan fits in the lineup? We can help you narrow that down.

A bike we actually ride

A bike we actually ride

At Throttle Company, the Himalayan 450 is not just a model we talk about. Several of us own them, ride them regularly, and keep finding reasons to take them out of Columbus and into the kinds of roads they were built for.


That matters because a bike like this makes the most sense when it is understood through actual use. We see firsthand why people are drawn to it, how they use it, and where it fits best.

FEATURES
  • Royal Enfield’s liquid-cooled engine the Sherpa 450
  • Ride-by-wire with riding modes
  • Dual Channel ABS
  • LED Headlamp
  • Integrated turn & tail lamp all LED
  • USB type C charging point
  • 4″ TFT display with phone connectivity, media controls, full map navigation (powered by Google Maps)
  • Upside down forks
  • Tubeless tire option available in Kamet White & Hanle Black colorways
  • 3 YEAR UNLIMITED MILE WARRANTY
  • 3 YEAR ROADSIDE ASSISTANCE
dimensions

Ground Clearance

9.1 in

Length

88.4 in

Width

33.5 in

Seat Height

32.5 in, adjustable to 33.3 in — optional low seat: 31.7 in

Height

51.8 in (to top of flyscreen)

Weight

399 lb

Fuel Capacity

4.5 gal

engine

Type

Liquid-cooled, single cylinder, DOHC, 4 valves

Displacement

452 cc

Maximum Power

40.02 PS (29.44 KW) @8000 RPM

Maximum Torque

40 Nm @5500 rpm

Bore x Stroke

84 mm x 81.5 mm

Ignition

Digital electronic ignition

Clutch

Wet, multi-plate, slip assist (slipper clutch)

Gearbox

6-Speed Constant Mesh

Lubrication

Semi-dry sump

Fuel supply

Electronic fuel injection 42 mm throttle body, ride-by-wire system

Engine start

Electric

Chassis and suspension

Type

Steel Tubular Double Cradle Frame

Front Suspension

Showa Upside down telescopic fork 43mm

Rear Suspension

Showa Twin Shock, 115mm travel, adjustable preload

brakes and tires

Front tire (Spoked Wheel)

90/90 – 21″ tube/ tubeless option available only on Kamet White colourway

Rear tire (Spoked Wheel)

140/80 – R 17″ tube/ tubeless option available only on Kamet White colourway

Front brakes

Hydraulic disc brake, 320 mm ventilated disc, double piston caliper

Rear brakes

Hydraulic disc brake, 270 mm ventilated disc, single-piston caliper

Brake System

Dual Channel ABS, Switchable off at rear

Interested in a Himalayan 450?

Check current inventory, see available offers, or ask us which setup makes the most sense for how you ride.

LATEST himalayan 450 VIDEOS

Built By The Himalayans
Roads and Adventures
Mana Black