Key performance

🔧
193 cc
Displacement
💺
960 mm
Seat height
9.5 L
Fuel capacity
💰
7 490 €
New price
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Technical specifications

Changements 2012 2013
Compression ratio
12.5:1
Fuel system
Carburettor. Keihin PWK 36 S AG
Lubrication
Mixture oil lubrication 1:60
Starter
Kick Electric & kick
Clutch
Wet mDouble disk clutch / hydraulically operated Wet multi-disc clutch / hydraulically operated
Front suspension
WP Suspension Up Side Down 4860 MXMA PA WP  Suspension Up Side Down 4860 MXMA PA
Rear suspension
WP Suspension PDS 5018 DCC WP  Suspension PDS 5018 DCC
Rear wheel travel
330 mm (13.0 inches) 335 mm (13.2 inches)
Front tyre
90/90-21
Rear tyre
120/90-18
New price
7 390 € 7 490 €

Engine

Displacement
193 cc
Engine type
Single cylinder, two-stroke
Cooling
Liquid
Bore × stroke
64.0 x 60.0 mm (2.5 x 2.4 inches)
Ignition
Contactless, controlled, fully electronic ignition system with digital ignition timing adjustment, type Kokusan
Starter
Electric & kick

Chassis

Frame
Central tube frame made of chrome molybdenum steel tubing
Gearbox
6-speed
Final drive
Chain   (final drive)
Clutch
Wet multi-disc clutch / hydraulically operated
Front suspension
WP  Suspension Up Side Down 4860 MXMA PA
Rear suspension
WP  Suspension PDS 5018 DCC
Front wheel travel
300 mm (11.8 inches)
Rear wheel travel
335 mm (13.2 inches)

Brakes

Front brakes
Single disc
Rear brakes
Single disc

Dimensions

Seat height
960.00 mm
Wheelbase
1471.00 mm
Ground clearance
355.00 mm
Fuel capacity
9.50 L
Dry weight
97.00 kg
New price
7 490 €

Overview

Some machines are born from an intelligent compromise, and the KTM 200 EXC is one of them. Imagine a rider who wants the agility of a 125 without sacrificing the punch of a 250: that is exactly the niche this little Austrian has occupied for years, and the 2013 model year sharpens the argument further. A 193 cc two-stroke single-cylinder, a 64 mm bore for a 60 mm stroke, 97 kilograms dry on the scale, a seat perched 960 mm from the ground. On paper, it is a machine for the sharp-edged crosser. In practice, it is far more subtle.

KTM 200 EXC

What sets the 2013 KTM 200 EXC apart from its predecessors is the arrival of an electric starter and a revised cylinder head, two details that profoundly change the relationship with everyday riding. Gone is the competition kick-start that demands a strict starting procedure in cold weather. The rider can focus on the line rather than on getting the engine running, which better matches the actual profile of buyers in this displacement class: regular riders, often experienced but not necessarily track devotees, who want to ride without fighting their own motorcycle. For anyone looking for a used KTM 200 EXC, it is precisely from this model year onward that everyday usability genuinely improves.

The suspension deserves particular attention. At the front, a 48 mm WP upside-down 4860 MXMA open-cartridge fork, fully adjustable in rebound and in high- and low-speed compression. At the rear, the WP PDS shock absorber, mounted directly on the forged aluminum swingarm, without a linkage. This PDS layout has been a KTM signature for a long time, and it divides opinion: some criticize it for a progressiveness that is harder to modulate than linkage-based systems, while others appreciate its directness and light weight. On this model year, the swingarm has been repositioned to center the load more effectively, and the shock adopts a flatter angle that improves the progression curve. The base setup is calibrated for the specific weight and engine of this 200, not copied and pasted from a heavier 250.

The brakes come from Brembo, with braided lines and lightweight Wave discs on both wheels. The rear master cylinder has been redesigned to reduce seal wear on broken terrain, a real-world concern in serious enduro riding. The result is crisp bite and decent modulation, with no surprises. The hand-welded chrome-molybdenum steel frame increases lateral torsional rigidity, which is felt directly in the precision of weight transfers. The 1471 mm wheelbase and 355 mm ground clearance place this machine in a technical category, not a recreational one.

Compared to a Husqvarna TE 250 or a Gas Gas EC 200 from the same era, outright power is not the KTM 200 EXC's main selling point, since exact figures are not homologated. What matters here is the agility-to-traction ratio on varied terrain. The 9.5-liter tank provides honest range for a half-day outing, and the new price of 7,490 euros positioned it clearly at the upper end of the bracket for this displacement class. It is aimed at a rider who knows enduro, who is looking for a machine that is both lightweight and sufficiently well-equipped to leave nothing to be desired, and who does not need the ego of a big-bore to have fun in the woods. For those who have followed the KTM 200 EXC technical specifications from the earliest versions of 1999 to the present day, the progression is real and consistent. This is not a spectacular motorcycle. It is a right one.

Practical info

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