Honda
CRF250RX
Cross-country 250F — off-road tuning, larger tank and softer suspension.
Specifications
- Class
- 250F off-road
- Type
- Off-Road / Cross-Country
- Engine
- 250cc 4-stroke
- Cooling
- Liquid-cooled
- Vehicle
- Dirt Bike
- Seat height
- Not yet verified
- Weight
- Not yet verified
- MSRP
- Not yet verified
Blank rows are figures that vary by model year — we leave them blank rather than guess, and fill them as we verify each year’s manufacturer data.
Honda riders
How many riders in our archive are recorded on a Honda (any model)
#3 most-ridden brand
Top states for Honda
- Missouri1,120 riders
- Illinois696 riders
- Kansas391 riders
- Iowa276 riders
- Minnesota241 riders
Brand-level: our race-results sources record the make, not the specific model — so this counts every Honda rider, not just the CRF250RX. Real counts from our own data, never estimated sales.
Dial it in for your track
Pick your conditions — every recommendation shows what it does and what you give up.
Track surface
Rider skill
Rider weight (lb, in gear) — optional
unlocks spring-rate guidanceSetup for Honda CRF250RX · Intermediate / loam · Intermediate
Race sag (full-size)
~100–105 mm
Standard full-size starting point (~30% of travel), set with the rider in full gear. If you can’t hit it with preload, the spring rate is wrong for the rider weight.
Tire
Dunlop Geomax MX33
What it does: Knob shape and spacing built for intermediate / loam — that means hook-up where you ride, so you can get on the gas earlier.
What you give up: A mid compound is the safe all-rounder — it gives up a little ultimate grip at the sand and hard-pack extremes.
Gearing
Stock gearing is the right baseline
What it does: Intermediate dirt is what bikes are geared for from the factory — start here and only change for an unusually tight or fast layout.
What you give up: Nothing — this is the balanced default; only deviate if the track is an extreme.
Power delivery
Standard map, fresh air filter, fuel as specified
What it does: The stock tune is a genuinely good all-round setting — keeping the filter clean and using the right fuel keeps it crisp and consistent all day.
What you give up: Nothing meaningful for most riders; map tweaks are a refinement, not a fix.
Air filtration
Clean, properly oiled spare filter
What it does: A clean, oiled filter keeps airflow (and power) consistent and stops fine dust reaching the engine.
What you give up: Only the cost of a spare and a few minutes of prep — no performance downside.
Protection
Skid plate + handguards
What it does: Cheap protection for the cases, frame, and levers — a tip-over or a rock costs you a guard, not an engine or a DNF.
What you give up: A few ounces of weight and a small upfront cost.
Four-stroke care
Check valve clearances on schedule
What it does: Four-stroke valves tighten over time; checking on schedule is cheap and prevents a burnt valve / new head.
What you give up: A bit more involved to service than a two-stroke top-end — the trade for the four-stroke’s tractable power and long ring life.
Sag and gearing figures are general starting guidelines and vary by model year and your suspension — always confirm in your manual and set sag in full gear. Shop links are Amazon searches for your model; MWR earns a small commission at no extra cost to you.
Maintenance schedule
Guideline service intervals for a 4-stroke like the CRF250RX. Track your hours in My Garage to get reminders — and always confirm exact numbers in your owner’s manual.
Do this basically every ride. A clogged filter chokes power; a torn one lets grit into the engine.
Fresh oil protects the whole motor. Hard riders change it often — many every few hours of race time.
The piston and rings wear out. Replacing on time prevents a far more expensive bottom-end failure. (2-strokes need it much sooner than 4-strokes — check your manual.)
Four-stroke valves tighten over time and can burn if ignored. Checking is cheap; a new head isn’t.
A fresh plug means easy starts and clean running. Cheap insurance.
A worn chain and sprockets rob power and can snap. Replace as a set.
Fresh coolant stops overheating and corrosion. Roughly once a season for most riders.
Re-greasing the suspension linkage and wheel bearings keeps the bike handling right and saves bearings.
Parts & customizing
Common upgrades and replacements that fit the Honda CRF250RX. Each opens an Amazon search for the model — what it’s for is noted so you know what it does.
Graphics kit
Restyle the plastics with a full graphics/decal kit cut for this model.
Shop graphics kit →Plastics kit
Fresh OEM-fit fenders, shrouds and side panels when the originals are faded or cracked.
Shop plastics kit →Air filter
The single most important consumable — a clean, oiled filter protects the whole engine.
Shop air filter →Hand grips & levers
Cheap control upgrades that survive crashes and improve feel.
Shop hand grips & levers →Skid plate & guards
Protect the cases, frame and radiators from rocks and roost.
Shop skid plate & guards →Maintenance intervals are general guidelines and vary by year and how hard you ride — follow your owner’s manual. Rider counts come from our own race-results database, not manufacturer sales data. Part links are Amazon search results for your model; MWR earns a small commission at no extra cost to you.