Man, the Yamaha Bolt 250 2025 is like that plucky little cruiser that’s come out of nowhere to shake up the entry-level scene—retro charm with just enough modern punch to make city commutes or weekend spins feel effortless without the premium tag. Teased in early 2025 videos and concepts as Yamaha’s new budget bobber, it’s rumored to be a downsized version of the classic Bolt lineup, blending old-school soul with BS6-compliant efficiency for first-timers, students, and budget riders chasing that cruiser vibe on a shoestring. Priced around Rs. 1.50 lakh ex-showroom (based on leaks), it’s a steal against the Bajaj Avenger 220 or Honda CB350—perfect if you’re upgrading from a 150cc or jumping from a commuter, with a 249cc single-cylinder engine teasing 35 kmpl and 14 bhp for 0-100 kmph in 10 seconds, though the basic features might not wow tech lovers.
Retro, Nimble Design
This cruiser’s a lean throwback—2,000 mm long, 780 mm wide, 1,100 mm tall, with a 1,350 mm wheelbase that’s nimble for dodging autos or gentle curves. At 145 kg kerb and 170 mm ground clearance, it skips speed bumps without scraping. The 2025 keeps the teardrop tank, round headlamp, and upright frame but amps it with LED tail light and body-colored fenders in new shades like Matte Black, Dark Green, or Silver—spoke wheels with tubeless tires for that old-school pop. The 790 mm seat height fits most riders, wide bars for control—it’s got that cafe racer stance, wide enough for presence but slim for tight mohallas, with chrome accents adding shine.

Simple, Rider-Tuned Setup
Hop on the solo saddle, and upright bars with mid pegs give a comfy, neutral stance for city sprints or hauls—no numb hands after hours. The analog-digital console flashes speed, fuel, odometer, and gear, with Bluetooth on higher trims for call alerts or basic nav via Yamaha app. USB port keeps your phone juiced, 13L tank tucks neat—no pillion grab on base, optional backrest adds two-up fun. Low vibes let you chat over the engine’s hum, no overwhelming screens—just that focused roadster feel for chai runs or weekend jaunts, keeping it real without gadget overload.
Punchy 250cc Power
The air-cooled 249cc single-cylinder BS6 mill pumps around 14 bhp at 7,000 rpm and 18 Nm at 5,000 rpm—5-speed gearbox shifts crisp, zipping 0-100 kmph in 10 seconds and topping 120 kmph. ARAI 35 kmpl (real-world 30-32) stretches the tank to 400-450 km at Rs. 2-3/km—torquey low-end for overtakes, refined purr on throttle without shake. Telescopic forks up front and twin shocks rear soak bumps decently, no harsh jolts on potholes—refined for highways, though it hums a tad at revs like a content scooter.
Safety Basics Solid
Single-channel ABS on front disc (260 mm) with rear drum (220 mm) bites hard in rain—no dual-channel flash, but the tubular frame grips tight. LED tail light and kill switch add night smarts—side-stand cut-off saves rookie slips. It’s tough for urban dings, chasing 4-star Global NCAP with its light build—solid for new riders wanting thrill without worry, shrugging off scrapes like a champ.
Price and Quick Snag
Base Drum at Rs. 1.50 lakh, ABS topper Rs. 1.80 lakh—on-road Delhi Rs. 1.65-2.00 lakh with taxes. Mid-2025 launch means pre-book at Yamaha dealers or BikeWale, with festive perks: Rs. 5k-10k cashback, no-cost EMI from Rs. 3,000/month on SBI cards, or free helmets. Waits 7-15 days, 2-year/unlimited km warranty, Rs. 2k-3k yearly service—resale 75% after two years if babied.
What Users Say
Owners are hooked on the lightness and pep—”Bolt soul for peanuts,” one Delhi newbie says—but plain looks and no rear disc bug highways. Service Yamaha everywhere, vibes creep at speed. Vs. Avenger’s zip or CB350’s style, Bolt 250 wins on heritage—top if retro basics are your jam.
Quick Specs
Mid-2025 launch, Rs. 1.50-1.80 lakh, 249cc single-cylinder, 14 bhp, 35 kmpl ARAI, single-channel ABS—three variants. Swing by for Matte Black or deals—your cruiser’s ready to roll.