Motorcycle Parts
Motorcycle parts in this category cover service and replacement components for bikes, from braking and drive items to filters, cables and control parts. The category is broad, spanning everyday consumables through to model-specific pieces that change by year and trim. The product grid below shows live listings from multiple partner retailers inside the Discount Promo Codes shopping channel, built to support comparison when fitment notes and specification fields differ across feeds. Products may be listed as separate SKUs per bike model, or grouped under one listing with selectable variants. You will see parts such as brake pads, sprocket and chain kits, oil and air filters, levers and mirrors, with filters that narrow by bike type, system and compatibility notes. Availability shifts as partner feeds refresh, so exact variants can rotate quickly.
Read on for fitment, specs and how parts are published
Core part groupings in this category
The grid commonly includes brake pads and discs, chain and sprocket kits, oil and air filters, spark plugs, cables and replacement levers. Some items appear as separate listings for front versus rear fitment, while others group both positions under one card with a selector. Fitment matters. Consumables may list pack count (single filter vs twin pack) and vehicle notes, but those fields vary by partner feed. Halfords appears as an anchor where service items and basics are often presented with clearer pack details. In listings that include motorcycle parts, check position and model-year notes before anything else.
Sets, kits and alternate formats
Many bike parts are sold as kits. A drive kit may include chain plus front and rear sprockets, while another feed lists the chain and sprockets separately, with similar photos and different quantities. That changes comparison. Brake pads can be sold per caliper set, while levers can be single or paired. Service bundles may include filters and oil as separate SKUs rather than a kit. Euro Car Parts is an anchor where kit versus single listings are common, so pack format needs a careful read. For motorbike spares, compare what is included and whether fixings are supplied.
Fitment, sizing and spec differences
Fitment data can vary by bike model, engine size and year range, and feeds do not always publish those fields consistently. Brake pads may list shape codes or caliper types, while another listing only states a model match. Chains and sprockets can vary by pitch and tooth count, and cables differ by length and end fittings. When comparing motorcycle brake pads, confirm axle position, pad shape reference and whether shims or pins are included.
Materials, build and functional detail
Build differences matter in wear parts. Brake pads may be organic, sintered or semi-metallic; sprockets can be steel or lightweight alloy; levers can be cast or CNC-style replacements with adjusters. Details matter. GSF Car Parts appears as an anchor where consumables and replacement items can be listed as direct-fit parts or generic equivalents, depending on the product feed. In motorcycle chain kit listings, check pitch, link count and whether the kit includes rivet links or clip links.
Common checks people make before ordering
Users check model-year fitment, position (front/rear), then confirm quantities and key specs such as tooth counts, chain pitch, cable length and connector types. They also check whether a listing is a kit or a single component and whether fixings are included. Small differences matter. Another common check is whether a part is road, off-road or scooter-specific.
How Discount Promo Codes context appears here
Retailer cards may show discount code availability beside the merchant name as a neutral listing detail, while the main comparison stays on fitment notes, spec fields and what is included. Discount Promo Codes donates 20% of profits each month to charity, stated once as a factual platform note. With motorcycle replacement parts, comparing specs across multiple feeds helps reduce the risk of choosing the wrong variant.