Buyer's guide

15 min read

Suzuki Alto HA11

Buyer's guide & specs

Production
1979-present
Market range
$3K–$35K
Engine
F6A
0.66L
Suzuki Alto Works
Suzuki Alto Works

Quick answer

The Suzuki Alto is a value-led kei/supermini known for low running costs, simple mechanicals, and strong city usability. Prices stay affordable, but clean, low-mile JDM kei imports and performance Alto Works/RS variants command growing premiums.

Background

Overview

The fourth-generation Alto (HA11S/HA21S/HA22S, 1994–1998) is the most-imported Alto generation in the global enthusiast market, particularly the HA21S Works with the turbocharged F6A and 5-speed manual. The platform added the K6A engine partway through (mid-1998 carryover to the fifth generation), introduced electronic features unknown on earlier Altos — power windows, central locking, optional keyless entry — and offered AWD on selected trims, a rarity in the kei class.

For a buyer who wants a usable daily-driver kei import with real Works pedigree, the HA21S/HA22S is the right entry point. The F6A turbo and K6A turbo are both reliable when the cooling system is maintained and the oil intervals are short. The single largest cost risk is bodywork: HA11-series cars in their 25–30-year window now show rust at the sills, rear arches and strut towers if they were stored outdoors. A documented one-owner car from southern Japan with the auction sheet intact is worth the premium over a cheaper rust-belt car.

Chassis Code Explained

CVehicle class
AModel
71Variant/generation code
SegmentMeaningDetail
CVehicle classC — kei-class compact category
AModelA — Alto series
71Variant/generation code71 — second-generation Alto (CA71V = standard, CA72V = Works)

CA71V is the standard second-generation Alto; CA72V is the turbocharged Alto Works variant. The F5A turbocharged three-cylinder at 64 PS (kei ceiling) distinguishes the Works from the naturally aspirated base car.

Editorial notes

Key Takeaways

The Alto has been around since 1979 and every generation feels like a different car. The early SS30 and CA71 cars are tiny 550cc time capsules and pretty hard to find now. The CM and HA11 are where the Alto Works turbo lineage really lands, and the HA24 and HA36 are the modern kei Altos most buyers actually drive.

  • Best value as a city runabout; ultra-low fuel/parts costs
  • Alto Works/RS are the collectible trims with premiums
  • Rust and neglect matter more than mileage on cheap examples
  • Kei rules limit power; highway comfort is the trade-off
  • Import legality: 25-year rule drives demand for JDM kei
  • Auto vs manual: manuals hold value and feel less strained
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Technical Specifications

Every Alto is a three-cylinder kei car. The early ones used the F5A 547cc, then the F6A 660cc came in with the 1990 kei rule change, and the K6A 660cc took over from 1998. The Works trim adds a turbo and roughly doubles the power. Manual gearboxes are mostly 5-speeds and the automatics are 3 or 4-speed depending on the year.

Engine Options

ChassisEngineDisplacementPower — JDMNotes
HA11/12/21/22F6A0.66LestimatedNA variants; exact figures vary by grade
HA11/12/21/22F6A (Turbo)0.66LestimatedAlto Works; exact boost/output by year

Transmission Options

TypeRatiosAvailabilityNotes
5-speed Manualvaries by genMost gens/trims (market dep.)Exact ratios differ by chassis/engine
3-speed Automaticvaries by genOlder gens (market dep.)Early AT; confirm by year/submodel
4-speed Automaticvaries by genHA23/HA24/HA25 (market dep.)Jatco/Aisin variants by application
CVTvaries by genHA25/HA36/HA37/HA97 (market dep.)Pulley ratio + final drive varies
5-speed AGS (Automated Manual)varies by genHA36 Turbo RS/Works (market dep.)Single-clutch automated manual

Livability

Headroom
38.0"
Tall drivers fit, but upright seating feels tight
Rear Seats
2 adults short trips
Knees tight behind tall driver; best for kids
Cargo
6-12 cu ft
Small hatch; usable with seats folded, tall load lip

Variants & Trims

Alto trims are pretty simple. Base passenger cars, commercial vans with vinyl floors and fewer seats, and the Works hot-hatch with the turbo. The Mighty Boy from the SS40 era is a kei pickup truck spin-off and worth knowing about if you want something weirder. Most of the price difference between trims comes down to whether it's a Works or not.

GenerationTrimEngineKey Features
HA11/12/21/22 (5th gen, Japan)Alto (base)F6A 0.66L I3 NAKei hatch, EFI, improved packaging
HA11/12/21/22 (5th gen, Japan)Alto (Van/Commercial)F6A 0.66L I3 NACommercial van, simplified trim, durability
HA11/12/21/22 (5th gen, Japan)Alto WorksF6A 0.66L I3 TurboTurbo, sport suspension, Recaro (market dep.)
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Should You Buy a Suzuki Alto HA11?

The Alto is one of those cars where the trade-offs are obvious from the spec sheet. You're getting cheap, light, and easy to live with. What you give up is highway comfort and any kind of power. If that sounds like your kind of car you'll love it.

Why You'll Love It

  • Extremely low running costsHigh mpg, small tires/brakes, simple service; ideal for budget ownership.
  • City-friendly sizeTiny footprint, tight turning circle, easy parking; great for dense areas.
  • Simple, durable kei hardwareMany trims use proven small engines; basic layouts keep repairs straightforward.
  • Strong JDM kei enthusiast supportAftermarket for Works/RS; community knowledge helps sourcing and maintenance.
  • Surprisingly fun in turbo trimsAlto Works/RS deliver lively boost in a light shell; great backroad pace.
  • Import novelty with practicalityKei charm plus real usability; good conversation piece without supercar costs.

Why You Might Not

  • Rust and corrosion riskOlder JDM kei often rust at sills/arches/underbody; repairs can exceed value.
  • Highway comfort limitationsShort wheelbase, light weight, and gearing make long trips noisy and tiring.
  • Safety and crash standards varyOlder generations lack modern airbags/structure; buyers must accept trade-offs.
  • Parts availability by generationEarly gens and Works-specific bits can be scarce outside Japan; plan ahead.
  • Many cars are heavily usedFleet/commuter life means worn interiors, tired suspension, deferred service.
  • Automatic/CVT can feel strainedSmall displacement plus auto gearing reduces performance; manuals age better.

Who Should NOT Buy This

  • Anyone needing highway passing power
  • Drivers doing 75+ mph daily in windy areas
  • People who refuse frequent maintenance
  • Buyers without access to small-car specialists
  • Those needing strong crash safety vs modern cars
  • Anyone needing 4 adults comfortably
  • Tall drivers needing lots of legroom
  • People who hate cabin noise and vibration
  • Owners in rust-belt without undercoating plans
  • Anyone expecting cheap automatic/CVT repairs
  • Buyers needing towing capability
  • People needing large cargo or stroller space
  • Those who can't tolerate slow A/C in extreme heat
  • Anyone who won't verify import/title paperwork
  • Drivers wanting modern infotainment and safety tech
  • People who can't source parts or wait for shipping
  • Owners who won't budget for suspension refresh
  • Anyone who ignores warning lights and keeps driving

Common Issues & Solutions

The Alto is a simple car and most of what goes wrong is age, not engineering. Rust is the big one, especially on the sills and rear arches. The Works turbo cars need their oil changes done on time or the F6A turbo bearings cook themselves. Suspension bushings and exhaust hangers wear out on any Alto past 25 years old.

IssueCauseSolutionEst. Cost
Rust in sills/underbodyThin paint, trapped moisture, salted roadsInspect/repair weld patches; undercoat; avoid rot$800-4000
Strut tower rust/cracksCorrosion + pothole loads on thin metalImmediate repair; plate/weld; align afterwards$1200-4500
Rear wheel arch rustMud traps at lip; poor drainageCut/replace arch sections; treat cavities$600-2500
Water leaks into cabinCowl drains clogged; door/hatch seals agedClear drains; replace seals; dry carpets fully$150-900
Overheating in trafficFan motor/relay failure or clogged radiatorTest fan circuit; replace fan/radiator; bleed$250-900
Radiator plastic tank crackAge heat-cycles; brittle plastic end tanksReplace radiator/cap; refresh hoses if swollen$200-650
Thermostat stuckCheap coolant, corrosion, ageReplace thermostat and gasket; flush coolant$120-350
Head gasket failureChronic overheating or neglected coolantMachine head, new gasket/bolts; fix root cause$900-2200
Oil consumption/smokeWorn rings/valve seals; long oil intervalsCompression test; rebuild or engine swap$1200-3500
Timing belt overdue (some)Unknown history; skipped intervalReplace belt, tensioner, water pump, seals$450-1100
Timing chain rattle (some)Stretched chain/tensioner wear from dirty oilReplace chain kit; verify oil pressure$700-1600
Rough idle/stallingDirty throttle body/IAC; vacuum leaksClean TB/IAC; smoke test; replace cracked hoses$120-600
Misfire under loadWorn plugs, coils/leads, weak fuel pressureTune-up; test coils; fuel pressure test/pump$120-900
O2 sensor agingHigh mileage; contamination from oil burningReplace upstream O2; check for exhaust leaks$150-450
Catalytic converter clogOil burning/misfire overheats catFix misfire; replace cat; verify backpressure$500-1800
Manual 2nd gear grindSynchro wear; wrong/old gear oilChange oil; if persists rebuild gearbox$120-1800
Clutch slip/shudderWorn disc/pressure plate; oil contaminationReplace clutch kit; resurface flywheel; fix leaks$500-1200
CVT shudder/failureNeglected fluid; overheating; belt/pulley wearFluid service early; rebuild/replace if slipping$900-3500
4AT shift flare (if auto)Worn solenoids/clutches; old ATFATF service; solenoid body; rebuild if burnt$250-2800
CV joint clickingTorn boots; grease loss; joint wearReplace axle or reboot early; align after$200-650
Wheel bearing humWater intrusion; pothole impactsReplace hub/bearing; torque to spec$250-700
Steering rack leak/clunkWorn inner joints/seals; torn bootsReplace rack or rebuild; align; replace tie rods$600-1600
Suspension bushing wearAge, heat, cheap rubber; rough roadsReplace control arms/bushes; alignment$300-1200
Brake line corrosionRoad salt; poor underbody coatingReplace hard lines; flush fluid; inspect all$400-1500
Caliper slide seizureNo grease service; torn bootsService slides; replace calipers if pitted$150-600
ABS sensor faultsBroken wiring at hubs; rusted tone ringsRepair harness; replace sensor; clean tone ring$150-650
A/C weak or not coldCondenser leak; compressor wear; O-ringsLeak test; replace parts; evac/recharge properly$200-1200
Blower resistor failureHeat stress; debris in blowerReplace resistor; clean blower and cabin intake$80-250
Window regulator failureCable fray; dry tracks; motor strainReplace regulator; lube tracks; check seals$150-450
Charging system weakAlternator wear; bad grounds; small batteryLoad test; replace alternator; clean grounds$200-650
Fuel pump weak/no startAge; running low fuel overheats pumpTest pressure; replace pump and strainer$250-800
Exhaust leaks/rustThin exhaust steel; short trips condensationReplace sections; check hangers; new gaskets$200-900
Interior rattlesLightweight trim; broken clipsReplace clips/felt tape; tighten seat/trim bolts$20-250

Differences between JDM & USDM

The Suzuki Alto has never been federalised for the United States. The car sold in dozens of other markets — as the Suzuki Alto in Europe, the Maruti Alto in India (where it became one of the best-selling cars in the world), the Suzuki Mehran in Pakistan, and badge-engineered as the Holden Barina and Pontiac Firefly in Australia and Canada — but North American buyers can only access the JDM Alto under the federal 25-year rule (or, in Canada, the 15-year rule that opens the door to HA22S Works cars now). The export-market Marutis built in India share the SS80 and successor platforms but were tuned for different fuel quality, emissions and crash standards, and they are not interchangeable with JDM cars on parts. Gray-market Alto Works cars are the high-value imports; base JDM Altos are the cheap kei-novelty entry point at the $3,000–$6,000 floor.

Pre-Purchase Inspection Checklist

Walk this list with the seller, not in front of them. The Critical items mean walking away if there's no paperwork. The High items can usually be priced into the deal. The Alto is small enough that 20 minutes with a flashlight under the car will tell you most of what you need to know.

Critical Priority

High Priority

Medium Priority

Low Priority

Generation History

SS30/40 (1st gen) (1979-1984)

  • Kei hatch; ultra-light, simple carb engines
  • Early Alto identity: cheap, efficient transport
  • Now niche-collectible; parts scarcity rising

CA71/72 (2nd gen) (1984-1988)

  • More modern body; better packaging
  • F5A/F6A era; basic, durable kei hardware
  • Survivors rare; rust is primary issue

CL11/21 (3rd gen) (1988-1994)

  • Big kei boom; more trims and special editions
  • F6A turbo appears in sporty variants
  • Strong JDM nostalgia; values firming

HA11/21/22 (4th gen) (1994-1998)

  • Popular JDM kei import target
  • Alto Works/RS-Z: turbo, manual, sport image
  • Watch for rust, swapped engines, hard use

HA12/23 (5th gen) (1998-2004)

  • K6A engine era; better refinement and economy
  • Works/RS trims vary by market; some NA sport
  • Sweet spot for import: usable + still simple

HA24 (6th gen) (2004-2009)

  • More safety/comfort; still light and efficient
  • Great daily kei; automatics common
  • Lower collector interest vs Works-era cars

HA25/35 (7th gen) (2009-2014)

  • More global focus; improved NVH and safety
  • CVT/auto prevalence; economy-first tuning
  • Values tied to condition, not rarity

HA36 (8th gen) (2014-2021 (kei); 2014- (global))

  • Modern Alto; very low running costs
  • Alto Works (HA36S): modern turbo kei hot hatch
  • Global Alto differs; specs vary by region
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Market Data

Alto trims are pretty simple. Base passenger cars, commercial vans with vinyl floors and fewer seats, and the Works hot-hatch with the turbo. The Mighty Boy from the SS40 era is a kei pickup truck spin-off and worth knowing about if you want something weirder. Most of the price difference between trims comes down to whether it's a Works or not.

Production Numbers & Rarity

GenerationYearsTotal BuiltNotes
SS30/SS40 (1st gen)1979-1984estimatedGlobal totals not consolidated; Japan-heavy
CA71 (2nd gen)1984-1988estimatedProduction varies by market and body type
CL11/21/22 (3rd gen)1988-1994estimatedMultiple derivatives; totals not centralized
CN11/21/22/31/32 (4th gen)1994-1998estimatedKei + commercial mix; totals not published
HA11/12/21/22 (5th gen)1998-2004estimatedIncludes Works; exact split by grade unknown
HA23S/HA23V (6th gen)2004-2009estimatedPassenger+van; Japan totals not fully disclosed
HA24S/HA24V (7th gen)2009-2014estimatedPassenger+van; market-dependent production
HA25S/HA25V (8th gen)2014-2018estimatedShort-cycle gen; totals not consolidated
HA36S/HA36V (9th gen)2014-2021estimatedIncludes Turbo RS/Works; rare sport variants
HA37S/HA97S (10th gen)2021-presentestimatedOngoing production; totals not final

Original MSRP & Pricing

Original MSRP: $1,900 at launch in 1979. USD equivalent of the ¥470,000 launch price for the first-generation SS30/SS40 Alto (May 1979). The WP source cites the $1,900 figure verbatim. By contrast, the contemporary Honda Civic (1979) listed at roughly $3,900 USD — the Alto undercut every competing passenger car in Japan by close to half.

How It Compares

Among the kei hatches, the Alto is the cheapest to run and the easiest to find parts for. The Daihatsu Mira is its closest rival on price and packaging. The Subaru Vivio runs a smaller four-cylinder and feels a touch more refined. The Mitsubishi Minica rounds out the segment but has the thinnest parts support.

FeatureHA11Daihatsu Mira L200Honda Today JA4
Class/segmentKei car / superminiKei carKei car
Typical powerNA ~40-55hp; turbo 64hpNA ~40-55hp; turbo 64hpNA ~50-58hp
Performance haloAlto Works (turbo)Mira TR-XX AvanzatoVivio RX-R (supercharged)
Engine familyF6A/K6A 0.66L I3JB-EL/EF 0.66L I3EN07 0.66L I4
Drivetrain layoutsFWD; some 4WD trimsFWD; some 4WD trimsFWD; some 4WD trims
Transmission options5MT common; 3/4AT/CVT5MT; 3/4AT5MT; 3/4AT
Weight/feelVery light; nimbleLight; slightly more plantedLight; revvier I4 feel
Tuning supportStrong for Works/RSStrong for TR-XXModerate; niche parts
Collector demandHigh for Works; base modestHigh for AvanzatoNiche but rising
Interior spaceGood for kei; uprightSimilar; slightly tighter rearSimilar; boxier packaging
Ride comfortFirm/short wheelbaseSlightly softer commuter tuneVaries; TR-XX is firmer
Reliability profileGood if maintained; age issuesSimilar; watch turbo wearGood; supercharger upkeep
Rust susceptibilityCommon on older importsSimilar; underbody checksSimilar; arches/sills

Comparable Alternatives

If the Alto isn't the right car, the Suzuki Cappuccino is the sportier two-seat option with the same F6A turbo. The Daihatsu Mira is the closest cross-shopped kei hatch. The Honda Beat and Mazda AZ-1 are the convertible kei sports cars and cost a lot more.

Daihatsu Mira TR-XX

Closest rival kei hot hatch; strong TR-XX/Avanzato cult

Subaru Vivio RX-R

Kei performance icon; supercharged character and AWD options

Honda Today JA4

Similar kei simplicity; cheap entry; great city usability

Suzuki Wagon R (kei)

More space and comfort; similar running costs and parts ecosystem

In Pictures

Suzuki Alto Works
Suzuki Alto Works
Suzuki Alto kei hatchback
Suzuki Alto — featured image from the JDMBUYSELL ultimate guide.FlickrImage by Dennis Elzinga
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The Buyer's Read

The first decision is Works or base. A base Alto is a cheap, slow city car or a low-stakes first JDM import; an Alto Works is bought for the F6A or K6A turbo with a 5-speed manual, and prices have moved up as the kei hot-hatch market has grown.

The HA21S and HA22S (1994–1998) are the most-targeted Works entries. The F6A turbo and 5-speed manual keep the car light enough that the 64 horsepower kei ceiling doesn't feel limiting. K6A turbo cars from the HA11 generation that followed are mechanically comparable with slightly better build quality; either way, a one-owner car with its auction sheet intact commands a real premium over cheaper alternatives.

For a practical daily-driver import, the HA24 and HA36 are the sensible picks — clean examples start around $5,000 and parts availability is good. Earlier CM and HA11 base cars cost less but require more upfront work on bushings, exhaust, and brake components.

Avoid sill, rear arch, or strut tower rust: Alto sheet metal is thin and a corroded car is a parts donor, not a project. On Works cars, inspect the turbo system carefully — aftermarket intercoolers and oversized turbos on stock F6A internals are the fastest path to spending past 80 horsepower and finding the engine's limits.

SS30 and CA71 cars without paperwork are collector territory. Parts are scarce outside Japan, and most require wholesale restoration.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which Suzuki Alto is the most collectible?
The Alto Works (turbo, manual) is most sought-after. Clean, unmodified cars with documentation bring the biggest premiums.
What are typical prices for an Alto in today’s market?
Base Altos are usually $3k–$10k; clean JDM imports often $8k–$15k. Works/rare trims can reach $15k–$30k+.
What should I inspect before buying an imported Alto?
Check rust, prior accident repair, cooling system, turbo play (Works), and verify auction sheet/export docs if available.
Is the Alto Works fast?
It’s not fast by modern standards, but 64hp in a very light car feels lively. The fun is momentum, boost, and agility.
Are parts easy to find in the US?
Service items are manageable, but model-specific trim and Works parts can be harder. Plan for Japan sourcing and longer lead times.
Manual or automatic: which is better?
Manual is preferred for drivability and value retention. Older autos/CVTs can feel sluggish and are costlier to overhaul.
What are common mechanical issues?
Age-related leaks, tired suspension, cooling neglect, and turbo wear on Works. The biggest killer is rust, not engines.
When is a Suzuki Alto US-legal under the 25-year rule?
It depends on build year. As a rule, a 1998 Alto became legal in 2023, and a 2004 Alto becomes legal in 2029.

8 sources cited below

Sources & References

Sources (8)
  1. Suzuki Alto — encyclopedic overview — WikipediaVerified
  2. Suzuki Alto Works — performance-variant history — WikipediaVerified
  3. Suzuki Mighty Boy — Alto-derived kei pickup (1983-1988) — WikipediaVerified
  4. Kei car — Japanese regulatory class history — WikipediaVerified
  5. Maruti Alto — Indian export-market overview — WikipediaVerified
  6. Suzuki Alto — current Japanese-market lineup page — Suzuki Motor Corporation (Japan)Verified
  7. Suzuki Alto — Japanese encyclopedic overview — Wikipedia (Japanese)Verified
  8. Suzuki global lineup — corporate model index — Suzuki Motor CorporationVerified

Sources last verified:

Market & demand on JDMBUYSELL

Reported sold prices and buyer-inquiry trend for the Suzuki Alto HA11 on the JDMBUYSELL marketplace.

Source:/api/market-data/suzuki/alto/ha11.json· Sold prices aggregated from listings marked sold by private-party sellers on JDMBUYSELL — seller-reported, not verified hammer prices. Inquiry counts are distinct buyer-to-seller conversations referencing at least one listing for this chassis.

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