The last motorcycle I bought was a KTM Adventure 390. I purchased it new because I wanted some of the tech that came on the bike, and it offered most of what I was looking for in a 60 percent street, 40 percent dirt machine. Also, BMWs in this same frame would break my budget if I bought new ones. “Yeah, dude, that’s why I always buy used,” you and a whole fistful of my friends would argue. I hear ya.
But I wanted lighter weight than something in the 600-800cc range, ABS and traction control that I didn’t have to fear had been monkeyed with by a previous owner, a TFT display that auto-switched from light to dark background at night, a bright LED headlamp and modern LED signals and, specifically, a sixth gear that would allow me to highway cruise as needed. Oh, and enough ground clearance to be reasonably capable on dirt. (I know, all you naysayers: The 390 Adventure isn’t a “real” off-roader. The solution for moto enthusiasts like me who want to ride a myriad of terrains is always simple: Own more than one machine.)

I also knew the KTM had a massive catalog of parts for maintenance and adding or varying aspects to make the bike fit my use case more precisely. More than a few Japanese bikes have that option, too, but this isn’t an argument for this bike and only this one. It’s a discussion of how to think about buying new vs. used and why to zig or zag.
I’m not as seasoned a buyer as Marcin Wasicki, a genuine pro at this and master mechanic, who, while technically not a motorcycle mechanic by trade, actually is — he just wrenches on his own ever-expanding collection (and no, he won’t work on yours). See, Wasicki has spent the past two decades as owner of a European-focused car repair shop called Airport Automotive in Linthicum, Maryland, where they work on BMWs, Mercedes, and some Porsches. But in his free time, Wasicki is a motorcycle nut, selling, buying and racing for as long as he can recall.
I bring Wasicki into this conversation because he’s wrenched on more bikes than I’ve seen with my own two eyes, and if you ask him how many bikes he’s owned, he’s lost count of them. Basically, Wasicki’s the guy you ask when you want the honest answer about whether you should purchase anything with wheels, two or four, and his wisdom is what you want when your heart is talking louder than your head. And he offers some compelling arguments for buying new.