Beat generation
Honda Beat PP1 for sale
Honda Beat PP1 (1991-1996). Mid-engine kei roadster, E07A 660cc three-cylinder. One of the original three kei sports cars alongside the Cappuccino and AZ-1.
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Honda Beat PP1 — pricing right now
- Listings
- 85
- From
- $1,767CA$2,504£1,321A$2,549€1,548¥287,174
- Up to
- $32,778CA$46,456£24,510A$47,288€28,718¥5,327,101
- Average
- $9,312CA$13,198£6,963A$13,434€8,159¥1,513,392
Source: JDMBUYSELL live marketplace data — updated daily.
84 of 85 listings match your filters.
For sale
Available Honda Beat PP1 listings
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1994 Honda Beat
Japan$12,248CA$17,359£9,158A$17,670€10,731¥1,990,553TCV (tradecarview)
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1991 Honda Beat
Japan$7,127CA$10,101£5,329A$10,282€6,244¥1,158,285TCV (tradecarview)
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1992 Honda Beat
Japan$5,099CA$7,227£3,813A$7,356€4,467¥828,693TCV (tradecarview)
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1991 Honda Beat
TX, USA$10,500CA$14,882£7,851A$15,148€9,199¥1,706,467SCW Performance
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1991 Honda Beat
VA, USA$16,531CA$23,429£12,361A$23,849€14,483¥2,686,629Duncan Imports & Classic Cars
Replies in ~2d
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1991 Honda Beat
Japan$3,704CA$5,250£2,770A$5,344€3,245¥601,976TCV (tradecarview)
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1991 Honda Beat
Japan$7,504CA$10,635£5,611A$10,826€6,575¥1,219,555Carused.jp Carpaydiem
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1992 Honda Beat
Japan$3,247CA$4,602£2,428A$4,684€2,845¥527,704Carused.jp Carpaydiem
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1992 Honda Beat
Japan$4,655CA$6,598£3,481A$6,716€4,078¥756,534Carused.jp Carpaydiem
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1992 Honda Beat
Japan$3,902CA$5,530£2,918A$5,629€3,419¥634,156Carused.jp Carpaydiem
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1991 Honda Beat
Japan$5,490CA$7,781£4,105A$7,920€4,810¥892,238TCV (tradecarview)
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1991 Honda Beat
Japan$1,774CA$2,514£1,326A$2,559€1,554¥288,312TCV (tradecarview)
History & specs
About the Honda Beat PP1
The Honda Beat (chassis code PP1) was produced from May 1991 through February 1996 as a two-seat, right-hand-drive kei roadster sold exclusively through Honda Primo dealerships in Japan. Honda never homologated the Beat for export markets; every example outside Japan is a private import. Approximately 33,600 units were built across the single PP1 generation, with roughly two-thirds of production concentrated in the first two years as initial demand eased. The car was sized and powered to the Japanese kei-class regulations then in force: displacement capped at 660 cc, output capped at 64 PS, and overall length not exceeding 3.4 metres.
The PP1 uses the E07A 656 cc SOHC three-cylinder in naturally-aspirated form with Honda's MTREC system — individual throttle bodies, one per cylinder — producing 64 PS at 8,100 rpm and 60 Nm torque at 7,000 rpm, with a redline near 9,000 rpm. The engine is mounted transversely behind the seats in a mid-engine layout driving the rear wheels. The standard gearbox is a five-speed manual; a three-speed automatic was available on all trim levels but is uncommon in the market. Where the Suzuki Cappuccino and the Autozam AZ-1 used turbocharged F6A engines to reach the 64 PS ceiling, Honda chose a naturally-aspirated, high-revving approach; the trade-off is modest torque and a 0–60 time in the region of 13 seconds. Three named special editions appeared during the run: Version F (Aztec Green Pearl, alloy wheels, February 1991), Version C (Captiva Blue Pearl, white alloy wheels, May 1992), and Version Z (Blade Silver Metallic or Everglade Green Metallic, black gauges, rear spoiler, exhaust finisher, May 1993).
Under the US federal 25-year rule, 1991 Beat PP1 examples became eligible for import in 2016; the last 1996 production reached eligibility in 2021. All Beats are right-hand drive with no factory left-hand-drive option. State-level registration rules vary and should be confirmed before purchase, as some states impose additional restrictions on kei vehicles. Pre-purchase inspection priorities for this model are underbody rust — sills, floor pans, rear wheel arches, and trunk floor are the documented failure areas — and cooling system condition, including the underfloor coolant pipes (prone to corrosion), radiator end tanks (age-brittle plastic), and confirmation that the system has been bled correctly. The E07A's high-rpm character accelerates wear on neglected examples; a compression and leakdown test, timing belt service history, and oil condition check are advisable. Trim and weatherstrip parts have become harder to source; stock, documented cars with original interior and roof seals command a measurable premium over modified or worn examples.
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