I've been debating a dual-sport or lighter ADV bike for over a year. I just haven't been able to decide. The DR650 is in the running, primarily because of it's simplicity. A more modern EFI engine with attendant ECU and electronics on the fancier ADV's have their appeal, but also pose a downside if they fail 50+ miles from the nearest paved road.
Any positives or negatives you feel are worth mentioning for a potential DR650 owner? I've already figured I'd have to go through the suspension to make it acceptable. Probably a bigger gas tank would be needed too.
I won't ride anything else but the DR650. I have two, a 2018 and 2022. This scooter is an experiment to potentially ride 2up with my wife for Sunday back country rides and local hikes within a 2 hours radius. She won't ride on the DR, or anything with gears that causes her helmet to smack against mine. So scooter cvt seemed like the next logical choice.
I rode 14,500kms across Canada, the northern Territories, and Alaska last year on Pig1 (2022 DR650). I rode multiple 1000km days, and 3000kms of gravel, mountain dirt roads, and the Dempster Highway to Tuk. Bike never missed a beat and I was all grins the whole time, while I watched larger "ADV" bikes struggling.
Buy a bone stock barn sale (like my 2018 for $3500 CDN) and invest to make it your bike. I have a lot of hours and $$ invested in my DR650's that pay dividends over and over again every time I ride them... I'll never get the money out of them, but I wouldn't sell them EVER!
Yes, I'm a DR650 cultist... everything else is crap
Careful buying used DR650's that have been mod'd. Make sure you have a good handle on what was done to the bike before taking ownership.
Logical reasons DR's make sense.
- Insane aftermarket
- Even more insane community over at drriders.com
- DR is one of the easiest bikes to work on
- Bullet proof... for the first 100k kms anyway

- Light (but don't let the mx guys hear you say that about the "Pig".... compared to "ADV" bikes, a couple hundred pounds lighter)
- Compared to my previous R1200GS, the DR is like a light dirt bike, and the man-machine connection is complete. I can dive down any dirt road without a second thought, or haul my loaded Pig up a mountain single track to find the perfect tent spot (did that many times on my trip).
- You can DUMP the DR HARD, flip it over, start her up and continue on yer trip. If I dropped my R1200GS the way I dropped my DR in the Northwest Territories it would have cost me thousands in damage and thousands to have the bike towed out.
- The DR is the perfect weight and with zero electronics I am never distracted. Since I've started riding DRs I'm always amazed at how much time is wasted by my friends riding the latest greatest electronic mess they call ADV bikes... they are distracted trying to get their computer gadgetry to work just right, pre ride, during the ride, post ride... instead of just RIDING!!! Seems like a real waste of time and I'm embarrassed for them ROFL... and that's the DR650 cult elitist coming out again
At the end of the day, a DR650 is a bike you will need to learn to wrench on. If that's not your thing a T7 might be more suited (if you have the height).