SELLER
Immaculate 2009 Aprilia RS 125 in Spains No1 Livery. Two stroke race bike with only 1220 original miles on it. Stored inside my home as a display. Bike is being sold with owners manual, original paperwork, spare parts and clean title.
RSBFS
A pristine Aprilia RS125 that reminds us why two-strokes still have a hold on the heart.
Here’s one you don’t see every day: a 2009 Aprilia RS125 in Spain’s No. 1 race livery, showing just 1,220 miles. It’s a two-stroke single that captures the end of an era — light, sharp, and made to feel fast even at reasonable speeds. This one’s been kept indoors as a display piece and comes with the original paperwork, manual, and spares.
The seller’s asking $9,500, which is on the high side for the model, but this example does check all the right boxes for condition and presentation. For collectors, the livery and mileage make it a standout; for riders, it’s a reminder of how good small-displacement two-strokes can be.
You don’t buy an RS125 for practicality — you buy it because it makes you grin just looking at it.
The seller is a man of few words and fewer photos, which may mean he is easy to deal with and straight to the point. Not a bad thing when buying a motorcycle.
Good luck to the buyer and seller!











This would be a barrel of laughs at your local track.
Looks like it has a jollymoto pipe on it too. I have a thrashed trackbike version of this (still has the red tank shroud). It’s had god knows how many previous owners. But mine has the same jollymoto pipe. Maybe its a popular mod, or maybe it came from the factory that way?!
My fork had trashed chrome tubes and I had to get replacements from Italy. Only to find out when i got them, they are not threaded and don’t screw into the fork lugs that hold the axle. They are press fit/swaged. Good grief.
Thank you Roger Albert of onroad/offroad in Austin, TX for his time figuring out how to takeapart and re-engineer the parts to do that repair. Almost wrote that off as one-off dumb engineering. Until finding out my Benelli forks are the same way. (Benelli 135), a budget engineered bike that developed a leak. I am ever grateful Roger has not ghosted me completely at this point.