Work order

The Grom that stopped being a joke

2022 Honda Grom — Paddock transport that turned into its own hobby — cage it, gear it, sort the shock, and stop pretending you're not racing it.

Shop build Stage 2 · committed 7 parts $1,420 at street prices

Reference build assembled by the shop from community consensus — prices verified at publish.

Unstocked · sheetRev 18.07.2026
2022 Honda Grom Build sheet
  • T-Rex Racing crash cageBuy this before your friends ride it, not after. Two drops so far, zero damage, and it doubles as a grab point for loading in the truck.$210
  • Folding adjustable leversCheap folding levers because the bike will go down. They fold, they survive, done.$40
  • Yoshimura RS-9T full systemHalf the weight of stock and it makes the 125 sound like it means it. Do not run it without sorting fueling — mine popped and ran lean until the controller went in.$460
  • EJK fuel controllerThe other half of the exhaust purchase. Plug-in piggyback, settings for pipe-plus-filter combos are well documented in the Grom community.$250
  • YSS rear shockThe stock shock is the single worst part on a Grom at any speed above parking lot. This is the mod that makes kart-track pace possible.$260
  • Fork spring kitSprings matched to an adult rider plus fresh oil. Do it while the front wheel is already off for something else.$110
  • Steel rear sprocket +2 with 420 chainKart tracks are all drive, no top speed. Gives up highway cruising you were never doing on a Grom anyway.$90
Parts total $1,420
Sec. 01

The story

The Grom was bought for one job: getting across race paddocks and campgrounds without walking. Everyone at the track has one, everyone's is modified, and everyone tells you the same lie I'll tell you now — it's just for the pits. Then someone mentions mini moto night at the local kart track, and the receipts start.

The cage went on first, before any of the fun parts, because the other universal Grom truth is that everyone drops it — usually a friend, usually at walking pace, usually within the first month. Mine has been down twice (once me, once not me) and the cage plus folding levers meant both crashes cost zero dollars. Best money on the sheet.

The exhaust and fuel controller are one purchase pretending to be two: the Yoshimura alone had it running lean and popping on decel, so budget them together, not in sequence. The +2 rear sprocket suits kart-track speeds, and the suspension is where the joke officially dies — the stock shock gives up completely at pace with a full-size adult on board. YSS shock and fork springs turned it from a pool toy into a thing you can genuinely ride hard. I have looked up the MiniGP class rules. I have not yet filled out the form. This is where I am as a person.

What I’d do differently. Shock before exhaust — the pipe is the fun purchase but the shock changed lap times, and I did them in the wrong order. Also: the cage is not optional, whatever your friends say about their careful throttle hands.
Sec. 02

Shop this build

One retailer search per line. Most of these parts are model-specific, so confirm the exact part number for your year, generation and market before you buy.

Some links may earn Unstocked a commission at no cost to you. Prices shown are typical street prices — always verify fitment and price at the retailer. Model-specific parts (exhausts, rearsets, bodywork) can run 2–3× between platforms — the sheet shows a typical figure.

Sec. 03

Ride your version

Open this exact parts list in the composer. Swap what you’d change, then share your own link — the sheet lives in the URL.