Man, the Kawasaki Vulcan 2000 2025 is like that massive V-twin monster from the 2000s that’s roaring back with a modern twist—chrome-heavy, torque-loaded, and ready to own highways or city boulevards with a presence that turns heads. Discontinued in 2009 after a six-year run, rumors and leaks are buzzing about a 2025 revival as Kawasaki’s flagship cruiser, blending the original’s beastly 2,053cc V-twin with EFI updates and rider aids for today’s roads. Priced around Rs. 20-25 lakh ex-showroom (based on global estimates of $25,000+), it’s a premium beast against the Harley Road King or Indian Roadmaster—perfect if you’re upgrading from a Vulcan 900 or jumping from a Road Glide, with 116 hp and 141 ft-lbs of torque for effortless 0-100 kmph in under 5 seconds, though the 15-18 mpg thirst might mean extra fuel stops on long hauls.
Aggressive, Chrome-Laden Design
This mega-cruiser’s a hulking icon—2,500 mm long, 900 mm wide, 1,150 mm tall, with a 1,710 mm wheelbase that’s planted for straight-line blasts. At 350 kg kerb and 130 mm ground clearance, it hugs pavement but skips minor bumps okay. The 2025 revival amps the massive tank, round LED headlamp, and layered chrome fenders in shades like Metallic Flat Spark Black or Candy Persimmon Red—five-gallon tank with a bold Vulcan badge. 16-inch front and 17-inch rear alloys with 150/80-16 front and 200/60-17 rear tires for steady grip. The 710 mm seat height suits most riders, ape-hanger bars for upright control—it’s got that power cruiser stance, wide enough for presence but with a low-slung vibe that turns heads at truck stops.

Rider-Centric Cockpit
Hop on the solo saddle, and the high bars with forward pegs stretch you out for relaxed runs—vibes low for comfy hours. The analog-digital cluster flashes speed, tach, fuel, gear, and modes, with Bluetooth for nav, calls, or tunes via Kawasaki app. USB port keeps your phone juiced, 18.5L tank tucks sleek—no storage, but the profile fits garages tight. It’s all wind-blasted focus for open-road thrills or cafe stops, no gadget fuss—just that intuitive setup for swapping modes on the fly, low NVH letting you chat easy over the rumble.
V-Twin Power Surge
The liquid-cooled 2,053cc SOHC V-twin pumps 116 hp at 4,800 rpm and 141 ft-lbs (191 Nm) at 3,200 rpm—5-speed gearbox with slip-assist clutch shifts crisp, blasting 0-100 kmph in under 5 seconds and topping 180 kmph. ARAI 18 mpg (real-world 15-17) stretches the tank 300-350 km at Rs. 10-12/km—torquey low-end for launches, that deep V-twin rumble on throttle without shake. Telescopic forks up front (120 mm travel) and twin shocks rear (90 mm) soak bumps decently, no wallow in corners—refined brute, but pipes heat up in jams.
Safety with Cruiser Edge
Dual-channel ABS with 300 mm front and 280 mm rear discs stops sharp in wet, plus traction control and wheelie mitigation for bold runs. LED lights with DRLs cut night fog, side-stand cut-off saves slips—no full IMU wizardry, but the steel frame and wide tires grip well. Aiming 5-star Global NCAP, it takes urban knocks tough—safe for speed chasers hating nannies.
Price and Quick Snag
Base black at Rs. 20 lakh, premium Rs. 25 lakh ex-showroom—on-road Delhi Rs. 22-28 lakh with taxes. If it drops early 2026, snag at Kawasaki dealers or BikeWale with perks: Rs. 10k-20k cashback, no-cost EMI on HDFC cards, or free gear. Pre-book Rs. 5k—waits 15-30 days, 3-year/unlimited km warranty, Rs. 5k-7k yearly service—resale 75% after two years.
Rider Chatter and Gripes
Forum folks are stoked for the comeback—”V-Rod’s finally back, meaner than ever,” one Delhi rider posts—but low mileage and firm seat nag long-haulers. Service solid in cities, spotty elsewhere, and weight bugs stop-go. Vs. Scout’s agility or Speed Twin’s retro, V-Rod crushes on drag power—grab if rumors pan out.
Quick Specs
Rumored 2026 relaunch, Rs. 20-25 lakh, 2,053cc V-twin, 116 hp, 18 mpg ARAI, dual ABS—check leaks for colors. Ping dealers for real news—your muscle dream might ride soon.