Key performance
Technical specifications
- Power
- 67.0 ch @ 8800 tr/min (49.3 kW) → 71.0 ch @ 8800 tr/min (52.2 kW)
- Torque
- 63.7 Nm @ 6400 tr/min → 62.8 Nm @ 6500 tr/min
- Compression ratio
- 11.5:1 → 11.2:1
- Fuel system
- Injection Ø 39 mm → Injection
- Starter
- électrique → —
- Seat height
- 820.00 mm → 830.00 mm
- Seat type
- Selle biplaces → —
- Fuel capacity
- 22.00 L → 20.00 L
- Weight
- 217.00 kg → 213.00 kg
- Dry weight
- 189.00 kg → —
- New price
- 6 499 € → 8 399 €
Engine
- Displacement
- 645 cc
- Power
- 71.0 ch @ 8800 tr/min (52.2 kW)
- Torque
- 62.8 Nm @ 6500 tr/min
- Engine type
- Bicylindre en L à 90°, 4 temps
- Cooling
- liquide
- Compression ratio
- 11.2:1
- Bore × stroke
- 81 x 62.6 mm
- Valves/cylinder
- 4
- Camshafts
- 2 ACT
- Fuel system
- Injection
Chassis
- Frame
- Double poutre alu
- Gearbox
- boîte à 6 rapports
- Final drive
- Chaîne
- Front suspension
- Fourche téléhydraulique Ø 43 mm, déb : 150 mm
- Rear suspension
- Mono-amortisseur, déb : 150 mm
Brakes
- Front brakes
- Freinage 2 disques Ø 310 mm, étrier 2 pistons
- Rear brakes
- Freinage 1 disque Ø 260 mm, étrier simple piston
- Front tyre
- 110/80-19
- Front tyre pressure
- 2.25 bar
- Rear tyre
- 150/70-17
- Rear tyre pressure
- 2.50 bar
Dimensions
- Seat height
- 830.00 mm
- Fuel capacity
- 20.00 L
- Weight
- 213.00 kg
- New price
- 8 399 €
Overview
Who remembers the first Suzuki DL 650 V-Strom, the one that showed up with the SV's L-twin tucked under the tank and the looks of an off-duty civil servant? The machine won fans with its versatility, reliability, and tight pricing. But it never set anyone's heart racing. Too tame, too rounded, too middle-of-the-road. Up against the Kawasaki Versys and Yamaha Tracer, the Suzuki V-Strom was quietly fading off the radar. For 2017, Hamamatsu decides to shake things up. New styling borrowed from the big sister DL 1000, revised electronics, reworked engine. The new price of the Suzuki DL 650 V-Strom lands at €8,399, keeping it among the most affordable options in the mid-size adventure segment.

Visually, the change is dramatic. The timid curves of the 2012 or 2005 models give way to an angular, almost aggressive snout that won't appeal to everyone. That cyclops stare is polarizing. Some will see character, others a lack of harmony compared to the smoother lines of a Tracer 700 or the racy face of a Tiger 800. Suzuki owns the shift and banks on equipment to compensate. The dashboard, inherited from the 1000, offers a legible analog tachometer paired with two digital screens displaying the selected gear, fuel consumption, and outside temperature. It's clean, it's comprehensive, and it's a genuine leap forward from the dreary unit on the previous generation.
On the mechanical side, the 645 cc V-twin continues its long career. This 90-degree L-twin has been spinning for nearly twenty years in various forms; it powered the SV 650, then every generation of V-Strom. For this 2017 iteration, Suzuki grafts on 60 new parts: pistons, exhaust camshafts, 10-hole injectors. The result: 71 horsepower at 8,800 rpm and 62.8 Nm of torque at 6,500 rpm. The gains remain modest — two horsepower more than the previous version — but mid-range torque improves noticeably. That's where this bike lives, between 3,000 and 7,000 rpm, with a flexibility that makes city riding and long-distance touring equally effortless. The recurring criticism comes down to displacement itself. In a market where Yamaha offers 689 cc and the competition pushes toward 800, the Suzuki's 645 cc is starting to look slim. A bump to 700 cc would have provided a strong argument against its rivals.

The electronics represent the real generational leap. Three-mode traction control, hill-start assist, a Low RPM Assist system that smooths out low-speed maneuvers, and Easy Start ignition. On a 71-horsepower, 213 kg wet-weight adventure bike, traction control might seem superfluous. Yet on wet or gravelly roads, with a rear tire in 150/70-17 channeling the twin's 62.8 Nm, the added safety is justified. ABS rounds out the package, paired with conventional but effective brakes: dual 310 mm discs up front, a single 260 mm disc at the rear. Nothing revolutionary, but proven solutions that get the job done. The 43 mm telescopic fork and mono-shock each offer 150 mm of travel, enough for gravel tracks without pretending to handle serious off-road. For riders seeking more adventure capability, the Suzuki DL 650 V-Strom XT variant adds spoked wheels, a skid plate, and handguards.

A few grey areas remain. The Suzuki DL 650 V-Strom 2017 center stand is listed as an option, which feels stingy on a travel-oriented adventure bike. Pannier mounting plates are also extras. The 20-liter tank promises decent range, and the revised seat with an 830 mm height will suit average builds. On the used Suzuki DL 650 V-Strom market, 2004, 2007, or 2020 and 2021 model years are easy to find at tight prices, proof of this lineage's legendary reliability. This third generation doesn't reinvent the formula. It modernizes it intelligently, keeping what has always been the model's strength: an affordable price, a durable engine, and genuine versatility. The kind of bike nobody looks at twice in a parking lot, but that stays in the garage for ten years. The Suzuki DL 650 V-Strom accessories catalog is well stocked for customization, and that may be where its true strength lies: a sound, reliable base that each rider tailors to their own program.
Standard equipment
- Assistance au freinage : ABS de série
Practical info
- Véhicule accessible au permis A2 ou bridable à 47.5ch / 35 Kw
- La moto est accessible aux permis : A, A2
Reviews & comments
No reviews yet. Be the first to share your opinion!