Includes purchase price, financing, insurance by state, gear, maintenance, tires, chain, depreciation by category, and projected resale. No dealer fluff.
Updated April 21, 2026Dealerships quote a monthly payment. That is the number they want stuck in your head. What they do not volunteer is the other seven costs that live inside motorcycle ownership: insurance, depreciation, gear, tires, chain, registration, and storage. Some of those individually cost as much as a full year of monthly payments. Depreciation alone can exceed every other cost combined in the first three years on a sport bike.
The Problem Turd is the finance desk guy who tells you "most people end up paying about $250 a month." He is not lying about the payment. He is lying by omission about everything else.
A standard motorcycle policy in Texas runs $400 per year. The same bike in New York runs $1,800. Same policy, same coverage, same rider. The state and your category of bike are the big levers. A sport bike costs 40 to 80 percent more to insure than a cruiser of equal value.
Depreciation follows category. Sport bikes lose 15 percent in year one and 10 to 12 percent per year after. Harley-Davidsons lose about 5 percent per year, which is why riders joke they are the only vehicle that appreciates (they do not, but the curve is very slow). Cruisers and adventure bikes split the difference. Scooters depreciate fastest.
A certified helmet, armored jacket, gloves, pants, and boots is a real budget item. Cheap gear saves you money until it does not. Plan around $1,500 first year, $250 per year ongoing for wear items.
Motorcycle tires wear faster than car tires because you have two of them carrying the same weight, and they are softer compound for grip. Sport riding halves the life. Plan tire replacement every 8,000 to 12,000 miles.
If your bike has a chain (most sport and standard bikes do), it wears. Replace chain + front + rear sprocket as a kit every 20,000 miles. Shaft-drive and belt-drive bikes skip this.
Texas is $30 a year. Massachusetts is $100 plus inspection. California has emissions and smog on newer bikes. Budget $50 to $200 per year.
If you live north of the I-70 line, you are probably storing the bike October through April. Indoor climate-controlled storage is $50 to $150 per month. DIY in a garage is free but requires fuel stabilizer, battery tender, and a cover ($80 once).
Kelley Blue Book publishes motorcycle values the same way they do cars. The curves are less standardized because the motorcycle market has more enthusiast buyers and more long-holding owners. Rough guidance:
After 5 years, a $12,000 cruiser is worth roughly $6,800. A $12,000 sport bike is worth about $5,400. A $12,000 Harley is worth about $9,000. Same purchase, very different outcomes.
Bryan is a 31-year-old software engineer in Massachusetts. He bought a 2024 sport bike in April 2024 for $13,500 out-the-door. He financed $11,000 at 7.9% over 60 months. Monthly payment: $223.
In October 2025, he ran a full TCO. His payments had totaled $3,793. His insurance (standard coverage on a sport bike in MA, age 31) ran $1,890 for 18 months. He had put 6,200 miles on the bike, about half of what he expected. Gas was $470. Maintenance including one tire change was $620. Gear first year was $1,400. Registration and inspection was $140. Indoor storage for one winter was $520.
Total outflows 18 months: $8,833. Market value of the bike in October 2025: roughly $9,000 (sport bikes depreciate hard year one, and 2024 is now last-year). Remaining loan balance: $8,200. Effective equity: $800.
Bryan's cost-per-mile was $1.42. He loved the bike. He was not wrong to buy it. But he also would not have guessed the real number, which is what the Problem Turd at the dealership counted on.
Depreciation is front-loaded. A 3-year-old bike has absorbed most of the year-one and year-two hit. You pay 60 to 70 percent of new-bike price for 80 percent of the useful life.
A sport bike in Florida costs a reasonable amount to insure. The same sport bike in New York triples the insurance. If you live in a high-rate state, the category choice alone can save $8,000 over 5 years.
A $500 helmet lasts 5 years and keeps working. A $150 helmet gets replaced in 2 years and the interior is shot. Same math on jackets and boots. Buy once for quality, replace only wear items.
We combine eight inputs (category, price, miles, years, financing, state, insurance tier, gear) with five cost drivers (gas, maintenance per mile, tires, chain, registration by state) and apply a category-specific depreciation curve to estimate the resale at your horizon.
Step 1, purchase plus financing: if cash, the full price hits year one. If loan, we amortize monthly payments over your term and accumulate interest. Total outflow = purchase price + total interest.
Step 2, insurance: we apply a state multiplier (rough state insurance cost index, national average = 1.0) to a category base rate. Standard tier = base, liability = 55% of base, full = 135% of base. Rate applies per year.
Step 3, operating costs: gas = annual_miles / MPG × gas_price. Maintenance = annual_miles × maint_per_mile. Tires trigger every 10,000 cumulative miles at $400. Chain triggers every 20,000 miles at $200 unless category is cruiser-Harley-touring (which often have belt or shaft drive).
Step 4, depreciation: we apply the category rate year by year (e.g., 10 percent year one cruiser, 8 percent after). Year-N value = purchase × (1 - rate_1) × (1 - rate_ongoing)^(N-1).
Step 5, net cost: total outflows minus projected resale value at end of horizon.
Most riders spend $2,500 to $4,500 per year after the purchase. That covers insurance ($400 to $1,500), maintenance ($400 to $900), gas ($200 to $600), tires and chain, registration, and storage. First-year cost adds gear ($1,000 to $3,000) and the purchase.
Varies 5x by state. Liability only averages $200 to $500 per year. Standard averages $500 to $900. Full coverage on a newer sport bike in a high-rate state exceeds $2,000 per year.
Sport bikes lose 15 percent year one, 10 to 12 percent after. Harley loses about 5 percent per year. Cruisers lose 8 to 10 percent. Scooters lose 20 percent year one. 5-year resale typically 45 to 65 percent of original.
Gear first year, insurance by state, depreciation, tires every 10,000 miles, chain and sprocket every 20,000, registration and inspection, and storage or winterization in cold states.
For pure transportation, a used economy car usually wins on total cost. Motorcycles win on gas and parking, lose on gear, insurance volatility, and seasonal usability. If it replaces a car outright, savings appear over 5 plus years. As a second vehicle, it adds cost.
Plan $1,200 to $2,500 for a starter setup: helmet ($250 to $600), jacket ($200 to $500), gloves ($80 to $200), pants ($200 to $400), boots ($150 to $350). Replace wear items annually around $250.
Disclaimer. This calculator is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, insurance, or vehicle purchase advice. Actual costs vary by specific bike model, rider age and history, driving record, state insurance regulations, and market conditions. Insurance quotes should be obtained from licensed agents or carriers. Depreciation estimates are directional, not guaranteed.