Used Dirt Bikes: 12-Point Inspection Before You Buy
Quick verdict: If the bike passes the first three checks (compression, frame integrity, fork seals), it’s worth a closer look. If any of those three fail, walk away — repair cost will exceed savings.
Before you visit
- Confirm the VIN/title situation — never buy without a title
- Run the VIN on the manufacturer’s recall page
- Ask for service records — even partial records are a green flag
- Confirm the seller is the registered owner
The 12-point check
- Compression test (gas). Borrow or rent a compression gauge. Spec varies by engine; under 100 psi on most 4-strokes is a warning.
- Frame integrity. Look for welds that have been re-done, paint that doesn’t match, or bent neck/headstock.
- Fork seals. Any oil weeping = $150 minimum repair.
- Wheel bearings. Lift the wheel and rock side-to-side — no play allowed.
- Chain and sprockets. Hooked sprocket teeth or chain that lifts off the rear sprocket = $150 replacement.
- Brake pads. 3mm+ remaining; rotors should be flat, no deep grooves.
- Tires. Check date code (4 digits on sidewall) — over 5 years old means dry-rotted regardless of tread.
- Cooling (gas). Coolant should be clean. Oily film = head gasket issue.
- Oil sample (gas). Pull dipstick — any metal flakes, milky look, or fuel smell.
- Cold start. Insist on starting cold (engine ambient temp). Hard cold starts hide problems.
- Electric: battery health. Range claim vs reality — ride it at least 15 minutes and watch voltage drop.
- Electric: BMS data. If the bike has a BMS app, check per-cell voltage variance.
Red flags
- Fresh paint covering the frame neck
- Seller “doesn’t have the key”
- “Just needs a battery” / “just needs a carb clean”
- VIN plate looks tampered or missing
- Price 30%+ below market for the year
FAQs
What’s a fair price for a 5-year-old dirt bike?
40–55% of original MSRP for well-maintained examples.
Do you sell used bikes?
Occasionally — usually inventory returns we’ve inspected. Email for current availability.
Should I get a pre-purchase inspection?
Yes for bikes over $3,000 — $100–$150 at a local shop is cheap insurance.