2026 Honda® CRF250RX Base
Exterior Colors:
- Year 2026
- Make Honda®
- Model CRF250RX
2026 Honda® CRF250RX
The Honda CRF250RX gives you serious motocross performance in a bike that’s specially tailored to cross country, and demanding trails. Thanks to different gearbox ratios, an 18-inch rear wheel, special engine settings, handguards, a sidestand, and a larger fuel tank, the CRF250RX is a winning formula.
Features may include:
Engine & Drivetrain- Downdraft Intake and Exhaust
The combination of 79 mm bore and short 50.9 mm stroke produces a high-revving engine with plenty of room for large titanium valves. The engine breathes and revs — the keys to making power. As well, the DOHC cylinder-head design let our engineers straighten out the intake and exhaust tracts to improve power and response. The intake is shorter and just about arrow straight, and the exhaust flows more efficiently too. You’ll experience more power and better throttle response.
- Plenty of Torque
More torque at low revs means better drive out of corners, so our engineers focused on the shape of the piston and connecting rod, while optimizing valve timing to help prioritize combustion consistency and thereby exhaust efficiency at lower revs. The bridged-box design of the piston uses a reinforcing structure between the skirt and the wrist-pin bosses that helps enable a high redline. Big torque down low, huge power up top. A winning formula.
Chassis & Suspension- Aluminum Frame
The CRF250RX’s aluminum frame has improve torsional and lateral rigidity in every direction, resulting in more-controlled and predictable handling — particularly in rough conditions.
- Showa Fork
To complement the updated frame, the CRF250RX also features a Showa fork with significant changes throughout, from the outer tube to the axle. These adjustments improve low-speed damping, reduce friction, and enhance rigidity—delivering better control and quicker lap times.
- Easier Shock Access
When you’re riding, you’ll appreciate the revised Pro-Link rear suspension that’s less prone to flexing, and the redesigned shock with smoother action. When you’re wrenching, you’ll love the new ease of access to the rear suspension assembly. Removing the shock used to take about 21 minutes, by our watch, but can now be done in about nine minutes. No more removing the seat, muffler and rear frame.