dual-sport / default rider 183 cm
Kawasaki KLR650 S ABS vs Suzuki DR200S ergonomics
Kawasaki KLR650 S ABS and Suzuki DR200S land within a few ergonomic points for the default rider, so the better choice comes down to posture preference and bike category.
Fit verdict
Kawasaki KLR650 S ABS
All contacts reached
Suzuki DR200S
All contacts reached
The two bikes are close enough that posture preference matters more than the overall score.
Rider fit: reaching the ground
The Kawasaki KLR650 S ABS has a 815 mm seat; the Suzuki DR200S sits at 810 mm — a 5 mm difference. As a rule of thumb you flat-foot a bike when your inseam roughly matches its seat height: about 82 cm for the Kawasaki KLR650 S ABS and 81 cm for the Suzuki DR200S.
That makes the Suzuki DR200S the easier reach to the ground — the safer pick for shorter riders or anyone who wants both feet planted at a stop — while the Kawasaki KLR650 S ABS gives taller riders more legroom and a more open knee bend. Load your own height and inseam into the simulator to see exactly how each one fits you.
Geometry snapshot
| Spec | Kawasaki KLR650 S ABS | Suzuki DR200S |
|---|---|---|
| Seat height | 815 mm | 810 mm |
| Wheelbase | 1,514 mm | 1,405 mm |
| Wet weight | 209 kg | 126 kg |
| Displacement | 652 cc | 199 cc |
Posture metrics
Knee angle
- Kawasaki KLR650 S ABS
- Sport (67.6 deg)
- Suzuki DR200S
- Sport (67.4 deg)
Hip angle
- Kawasaki KLR650 S ABS
- Neutral (106.4 deg)
- Suzuki DR200S
- Neutral (108.7 deg)
Elbow angle
- Kawasaki KLR650 S ABS
- Relaxed (143.3 deg)
- Suzuki DR200S
- Relaxed (143.3 deg)
Torso lean
- Kawasaki KLR650 S ABS
- Neutral (7.4 deg)
- Suzuki DR200S
- Neutral (5.8 deg)