Your cheapest insurance bikes are cruisers up to 650cc and little sport touring bikes and enduros up to 300cc.
Get a 10 year old bike for $2500, I’ll bet you’ll be closer to $3000/year. My kids room mate started last year on a small kawi cruiser, he’s paying under $3000 from echelon, no collision (collision isn’t worth it on a low cost bike - make one claim and your insurance could jump more than the value of the bike).
Welcome!
This.
just get on the fugly ass cbr125 for a year and learn. youll have a hoot and learn a ton just like we all did.
And this, if a cruiser isn't your bag.
Pretty much this. Get the M1, do M1 exit course. Then buy the cheapest and lowest cc bike that qualifies as a standard motorcycle and ride that for a year. I saw a huge drop in insurance after one year.
And this too lol.
OP, in short, CC's matter - cruisers up to 600cc are cheaper. Sportbikes start to jump significantly when you're north of 250cc.
Neither may be your intended bag, but they
will be more affordable, and honestly, both bikes will be capable of exceeding the skills of a new rider for the first few years, so the best thing you can do is pickup something small and cheap to insure, don't care what anyone else thinks, and go have fun and build that insurance history that has one of the biggest effects on rates.
Keep in mind that the track bike route will not yield you anything whatsoever when it comes to road-bike insurance affordability as insurance companies want to see contigious years of accident, ticket, and claim free road-bike insurance before cutting you any deals on road bike insurance.
One thing I haven’t seen posted here is the myth of 25. There is no drastic step change at this age. Yes rates will be lower than a 24yo all else equal but not by much. Years insured has a much larger effect
Yep, not a thing for bikes really, only cars. Lots of riders who started in their 30's or 40's will quickly tell you that age doesn't matter near as much as years of experience, claims free insurance, and training will make.