Buyer's guide

15 min read

Suzuki Every DA64V

Buyer's guide & specs

Production
1982-present
Market range
$4K–$18K
Engine
K6A
0.66L
Suzuki Every kei van
Suzuki Every kei van

Quick answer

The Suzuki Every is a kei microvan prized for low running costs, huge interior utility, and strong parts support. Prices hinge on year, drivetrain, and condition; clean 4WD turbo vans command the most as US import eligibility expands yearly.

Background

Overview

The Suzuki Every is the passenger and cargo van arm of the long-running kei microvan line Suzuki has sold in Japan since 1982, sharing its chassis and powertrain with the Carry truck — the two share most consumable parts across every generation. Chassis history runs from the ST10/ST20 and DA51/DE51 through the DA52, DA62, DA64V/DA64W, and the current DA17V/DA17W. Engines progressed from the carb-fed F5A 550cc to the F6A 660cc, then to the K6A 660cc turbo that arrived with the DA62 and became the platform's most sought-after drivetrain. Every example in the US arrived as a gray-market import under the 25-year FMVSS exemption — the van never entered the American market through any official channel.

Chassis Code Explained

DModel series
ABody layout
62Generation code
VBody type
SegmentMeaningDetail
DModel seriesD — DA-series Carry/Every platform
ABody layoutA — cab-over van body
62Generation code62 — DA62-generation Every (2001–2005)
VBody typeV — van variant (DA62T = truck/Carry)

DA62V denotes the passenger-van configuration of the DA62 generation (2001–2005); the DA64V succeeded it from 2005. The K6A engine is standard across the DA62 lineup in naturally aspirated and turbocharged variants.

Editorial notes

Key Takeaways

The Every has run since 1982 across five generations, and they're more different from each other than the badge suggests. The early ST10 and DA51 cars are simple carb-fed kei vans. The DA62 brought the K6A turbo. The DA64 modernized everything. The DA17 is the current car and won't be US-legal for years.

  • Best value: roomy kei van with low running costs
  • 4WD + turbo trims bring the strongest premiums
  • Rust/underbody condition matters more than mileage
  • US demand rising as 25-year eligibility expands
  • Auto vs manual: autos easier, manuals more durable
  • Parts support strong via Suzuki/Carry ecosystem
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Technical Specifications

Every Every is a kei vehicle, which means the engine is capped at 660cc and the body fits the kei box. The F5A and F6A engines ran the early cars. The K6A turbo arrived with the DA62 and is the one most overlanders want. The current R06A is a refinement of the same idea. Gearing matters more than power on these, so check what transmission you're getting.

Engine Options

ChassisEngineDisplacementPower — JDMNotes
DA64V/DA64WK6A0.66LestimatedNA output varies by van/wagon calibration
DA64V/DA64WK6A (Turbo)0.66LestimatedIntercooled turbo; output capped by kei regs

Transmission Options

TypeRatiosAvailabilityNotes
5-speed ManualestimatedMost gens/trims (market-dependent)Exact ratios vary by generation & drivetrain
3-speed AutomaticestimatedOlder gens (market-dependent)Early models; ratios vary by year
4-speed AutomaticestimatedDA52/DA62/DA64/DA17 (select)Ratios vary by engine NA/Turbo & 2WD/4WD
CVTestimatedDA17 (select markets/trims)Pulley ratios vary; includes final drive variants

Livability

Headroom
39.0"
Tall roof; upright seating, good with helmet/hats
Rear Seats
Varies by trim
Often thin/flat; best for short trips unless Wagon
Cargo
Huge for size
Van trims swallow bikes/gear; seats fold/come out

Variants & Trims

Joypop is the passenger-trim Every. Joypop Turbo adds the turbo engine to that trim. On later cars you'll see Join and Join Turbo doing the same job, and the Wagon PZ Turbo Special is the loaded passenger spec with the power sliding door. The van bodies (PA, PC, GA) are the commercial trims and they're what most US imports actually are.

GenerationTrimEngineKey Features
DA64V/DA64W (4th gen)Every PCK6A 0.66L I3 NAcommercial base, manual windows (market), steel wheels
DA64V/DA64W (4th gen)Every PAK6A 0.66L I3 NAcommercial mid, cloth seats, keyless (market)
DA64V/DA64W (4th gen)Every JoinK6A 0.66L I3 NAupper van trim, power windows (market), trim panels
DA64V/DA64W (4th gen)Every Join TurboK6A 0.66L I3 Turbointercooled turbo, upper trim, stronger drivetrain
DA64V/DA64W (4th gen)Every Wagon JPK6A 0.66L I3 NAwagon trim, rear seats, interior upgrades
DA64V/DA64W (4th gen)Every Wagon JP TurboK6A 0.66L I3 Turbointercooled turbo, wagon trim, alloy wheels (market)
DA64V/DA64W (4th gen)Every Wagon PZ TurboK6A 0.66L I3 Turbopower sliding door, turbo, higher equipment
DA64V/DA64W (4th gen)Every Wagon PZ Turbo SpecialK6A 0.66L I3 TurboPZ equip+, aero/trim pkg (market), turbo
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Should You Buy a Suzuki Every DA64V?

The Every is honest about what it is. You get a tiny van that's cheap to run, easy to park, and weirdly practical for the size. What you give up is highway pace, crash safety to modern standards, and the kind of refinement you'd want on a long trip.

Why You'll Love It

  • Exceptional space efficiencyBoxy kei packaging fits cargo/people far beyond its footprint; flat load floors are common.
  • Low operating costs660cc kei running costs: tires, brakes, fuel use, and many parts are inexpensive and plentiful.
  • 4WD availabilityMany trims offer selectable/part-time 4WD, ideal for snow, rural roads, and light trails.
  • Strong parts interchangeShares ecosystem with Carry/kei components; aftermarket support for suspension, wheels, camping kits.
  • Import-friendly ownershipSimple mechanicals and strong JDM supply make it a practical first import versus sports cars.
  • Conversion versatilityPopular base for mini-campers, mobile vending, and shop vans; huge community knowledge base.

Why You Might Not

  • Rust and corrosion riskJapanese coastal/snow regions cause underbody rust; repairs can exceed vehicle value quickly.
  • Slow by US standardsKei power and gearing mean limited highway pace; crosswinds and grades require planning.
  • Crash safety limitationsOlder kei vans lack modern crash structures/airbags; prioritize condition and later-year safety upgrades.
  • Cab-over heat/noiseEngine under/near seats increases NVH and cabin heat; insulation upgrades are common.
  • Hard commercial historiesMany were fleet/work vans; worn doors, seats, and drivetrains are common despite low indicated km.
  • US registration variabilityState rules vary; some classify kei vans as off-road/low-speed, impacting street legality.

Who Should NOT Buy This

  • Anyone needing modern crash safety
  • Highway commuters doing 75+ mph daily
  • People who refuse frequent maintenance
  • Rust-belt buyers without indoor storage
  • Anyone needing strong AC in extreme heat
  • Drivers expecting quiet, refined cabin
  • People who tow anything heavy
  • Those needing fast parts availability locally
  • Owners without a JDM-savvy mechanic
  • States with strict emissions/inspection rules
  • Drivers over 6'3" wanting relaxed legroom
  • Anyone who hates slow steering and body roll
  • People who overload vans for work daily
  • Buyers who can't handle import paperwork
  • Anyone needing advanced diagnostics/OBD2 ease

Common Issues & Solutions

The Every is mechanically simple and most issues come from age, not design. Rust is the big one and the only one that kills cars outright. The K6A turbo's oil-feed line and intercooler hoses are the ones to catch early. Pretty much everything else is normal kei-van wear that costs less than you'd think to fix.

IssueCauseSolutionEst. Cost
Severe underbody rustSalt use, poor undercoat, trapped moistureAvoid; or cut/weld properly, then undercoat$1500-6000
Rear crossmember rotMud/salt packs around mounts and seamsReplace/repair crossmember; treat cavities$800-3000
Sliding door roller wearDry rails, rust, heavy use as work vanReplace rollers; clean/lube rails; adjust door$150-600
Water leaks into cabinAged seals, windshield rust, clogged drainsReseal glass, replace seals, clear drains$200-1200
Timing chain rattleWorn chain/tensioner from infrequent oil changesChain+tensioner+guides; inspect sprockets$600-1400
Coil pack misfiresHeat/vibration; oil in plug wells from gasketReplace coils; fix cam cover gasket; new plugs$200-700
Oil consumption/blue smokeWorn rings/valve seals; turbo seals on turboCompression test; rebuild/engine swap; turbo$1200-4500
Overheating in trafficWeak radiator, stuck thermostat, bad fan circuitRadiator/thermostat; verify fan relay/sensor$250-900
Coolant leaksAged hoses, plastic tanks, heater pipes O-ringsPressure test; replace hoses/clamps/pipes$150-700
CVT shudder/failureOld fluid, wrong fluid, worn belt/pulleysCorrect fluid service; if bad, rebuild/replace$1200-3500
4AT harsh shiftsOld ATF, sticky solenoids, worn mountsATF exchange; solenoid service; mounts$250-1500
Manual clutch slipWorn disc/pressure plate; oil leak contaminationClutch kit; fix rear main/input seal if leaking$500-1200
CV joint clickingTorn boots, grease loss, high angle from sagReplace axle/boot; correct ride height$200-700
Wheel bearing noiseWater intrusion, age, overload useReplace hub/bearing; check torque and seals$200-600
Steering play/clunksWorn tie rods/ball joints; rack bushingsReplace worn joints; align; rack service if needed$250-1200
Brake line corrosionSalt exposure; factory coating thin on linesReplace hard lines; flush fluid; undercoat$400-1500
Rear drum seizureRusty hardware, seized adjusters, stuck cablesNew hardware/cylinders; free/replace cables$200-800
Charging system weakAging alternator, poor grounds, small batteryTest/replace alternator; clean grounds; battery$200-700
Blower motor failureWorn brushes, resistor pack failure, water ingressReplace blower and resistor; check cowl drains$150-600
AC weak/no coolingLeaks at O-rings, condenser rot, tired compressorLeak test; replace parts; evac/recharge properly$250-1400
Fuel filler neck rustRoad spray corrosion at neck and clampsReplace neck/hoses; inspect tank straps$250-900
Exhaust leaksThin factory piping, flange rust, flex failureReplace sections; ensure cat and O2 bungs sealed$200-1200
Engine mounts collapsedAge, oil saturation, constant stop-go useReplace mounts; recheck exhaust and shifter feel$250-900
Door lock actuator issuesWear, moisture, weak motors in sliding doorsReplace actuators; clean/lube latches$150-600
ABS sensor faults (if eq)Corroded tone rings, broken wiring at hubsClean/replace sensors; repair wiring; hub if needed$150-800

Differences between JDM & USDM

The Suzuki Every was never sold in the United States. The only US-market presence for the platform came through badge-engineered rebrands — the Ford Pronto (light-commercial channel, very limited) and indirectly through the Chevrolet/GMC partnership that produced the Suzuki-derived Chevrolet Sprint family on different bodyshells. Every Every in the US today is a gray-market import, which means the buyer either brought the vehicle in personally under the 25-year FMVSS exemption or bought from a domestic JDM importer who did. Practical implications: no NHTSA recall history applies, no US TSBs exist, all service literature is in Japanese, and state registration paths vary widely — some states classify imported kei vans as Low-Speed Vehicles (LSVs) and restrict them to sub-25 mph roads, while others register them as standard passenger vehicles. Verify the registration path in your state before purchase, particularly in Maine, Rhode Island, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Georgia, where kei-van registration has been contested in recent years.

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 backing them up. Rust at the rear crossmember and sills is the one to be most strict about, because fixing it properly costs more than the van's worth. Ten minutes underneath with a flashlight tells you more than any test drive will.

Critical Priority

High Priority

Medium Priority

Low Priority

Generation History

Every/Carry Van (early) (1982-1990)

  • Kei cab-over microvan roots
  • Simple carb engines; easy DIY
  • 2WD/4WD depending on trim
  • Rust is the main value killer

DE51V/DF51V (1991-1998)

  • 660cc F6A era; many 4WD
  • Workhorse trims dominate supply
  • Better HVAC and ergonomics
  • Common JDM import sweet spot

DA52V/DB52V (1999-2001)

  • Transition to newer 660cc setups
  • More safety/comfort vs DE/DF
  • Strong US interest as eligible
  • Watch for hard commercial use

DA62V/DA62W (2001-2005)

  • K6A engine widely used
  • Wagon trims add comfort features
  • Turbo models exist in some markets
  • Higher prices for clean 4WD

DA64V/DA64W (2005-2015)

  • Modernized interior and NVH
  • Great parts availability
  • Not US-legal yet (25-year rule)
  • Popular for camping conversions

DA17V/DA17W (2015-present)

  • Latest platform; best safety tech
  • Most refined driving experience
  • High domestic demand keeps prices up
  • US import wait remains long
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Market Data

Joypop is the passenger-trim Every. Joypop Turbo adds the turbo engine to that trim. On later cars you'll see Join and Join Turbo doing the same job, and the Wagon PZ Turbo Special is the loaded passenger spec with the power sliding door. The van bodies (PA, PC, GA) are the commercial trims and they're what most US imports actually are.

Production Numbers & Rarity

GenerationYearsTotal BuiltNotes
ST10/ST20 (1st gen)1979-1985estimatedExact production not publicly consolidated; estimated
DA51/DB51/DE51/DF51 (2nd gen)1985-1991estimatedExact totals vary by OEM rebadges; estimated
DA52/DB52/DA62 (3rd gen)1991-2005estimatedLong run; split by DA52/DB52 vs DA62; estimated
DA64V/DA64W (4th gen)2005-2015estimatedHigh-volume kei van; public totals not unified; est.
DA17V/DA17W (5th gen)2015-presentestimatedOngoing production; totals depend on cutoff date

How It Compares

Across the kei van field, the Every has the strongest parts ecosystem because of the Carry crossover. The Acty is the easiest to drive. The Sambar is the most interesting mechanically. The Hijet is the cheapest. The table below leans toward the Every's strengths because that's where it actually wins, on parts support and resale stability.

FeatureDA64VHonda Acty HH3/HH4Daihatsu Hijet S100V
Engine class660cc kei I3 (varies)660cc kei I3660cc kei I3
Drivetrain options2WD or part-time 4WD2WD/RealTime 4WD2WD or part-time 4WD
Transmission5MT/3AT/4AT by year5MT/3AT common5MT/ECVT some trims
Turbo availabilitySome trims/years (market)Rare; mostly NASupercharger on some
Interior space feelVery boxy; tall roofGood; slightly narrowerExcellent; low floor feel
Ride/handlingStable; utilitarian tuningCar-like steering feelBest ride; rear-engine
Service accessCab-over; tight but simpleCab-over; good accessRear-engine easier access
Rust susceptibilityModerate; check sills/railsModerate; check floorsModerate-high; arches
Parts availabilityStrong; Carry ecosystemStrong; Honda supportGood; model-specific bits
Typical US import price$4k-$12k (age/cond)$5k-$14k$6k-$16k
Collector premiumLow-moderate; niche trimsModerate; Honda taxHigher; SC/unique layout

Comparable Alternatives

If the Every isn't the right kei van, the natural alternatives are the Honda Acty if you want car-like steering, the Subaru Sambar if you want the rear-engine layout, or the Daihatsu Hijet if you want the cheapest entry. The Suzuki Carry truck is the same platform with a bed instead of a cargo box.

Daihatsu Hijet S100V

Huge supply; practical 4WD; easy parts sourcing

Mitsubishi Minicab U42V

Often cheaper; simple mechanicals; 4WD common

Suzuki Carry Truck DD51T

Same family; truck bed utility vs van volume

In Pictures

Suzuki Every kei van
Suzuki Every kei van
Suzuki Every kei microvan, front three-quarter view
Suzuki Every — the kei microvan that anchors Suzuki's commercial-van line in Japan.FlickrImage by Rutger van der Maar
Suzuki Every interior cabin layout
The Every's flat-floor cargo area takes a bed platform without major fabrication — a key reason camper-conversion builders choose it.EditorialImage by JDMBUYSELL editorial
Suzuki Every cargo van rear view
Cargo-van bodywork with side and rear sliding access — the same dimensional envelope used by the Carry van.EditorialImage by JDMBUYSELL editorial
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The Buyer's Read

Start by deciding what you actually want to do with the van. A delivery errand van around town is one chassis decision. An overlander or camper conversion is a different one.

For a daily shop vehicle, a clean DA64V Join from 2010 or later is a practical target. The K6A engine has mature electronics by that point, interior plastics are modern enough to live with, and parts route through any Suzuki kei specialist. Skip anything with rust visible under the rear or at the rocker panels — a cheap Every almost always reflects deferred bodywork.

For overlanding or camper builds, the target combination is a K6A turbo with part-time 4WD. That means the Joypop Turbo on the DA62, the Join Turbo on the DA64, or the Wagon PZ Turbo trims for passenger comfort. The K6A turbo's oil-feed line wants replacing on any car past 100,000 km, and the intercooler hoses split at the clamps from heat cycling — both are inexpensive repairs caught early and expensive once the turbo damages the catalyst.

The one Every to pass on is anything with body filler at the sills or a patched rear crossmember. The chassis is load-bearing on a cab-over kei van and there's no structural workaround. Cars from western Japan's milder prefectures hold up better than anything that wintered on salted Hokkaido roads.

Check your state's kei-van registration path before purchase — NHTSA's import exemption guidance covers the federal side, but Maine, Rhode Island, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Georgia have all contested kei registration in recent years. A van you can't plate is one you can't use.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Suzuki Every, and how is it different from Carry?
Every is the passenger/cargo van; Carry is typically the truck. Many parts and engines overlap.
Which years are best to buy for US import?
Target the newest 25-year eligible year with clean history. Condition beats year; avoid heavy rust.
How much should I pay for a good Suzuki Every?
Most land $4k-$12k in the US. Clean 4WD, low-rust, and wagon/turbo trims push higher.
Is 4WD worth it on an Every?
Yes for snow/rural use. 4WD adds resale value and usability; inspect CV boots, hubs, and transfer operation.
Can a Suzuki Every handle US highways?
It can, but expect slow acceleration and wind sensitivity. Best for 45–65 mph routes; keep tires and brakes fresh.
What are the biggest problem areas to inspect?
Check rust (sills/rails), cooling system, oil leaks, sliding door rollers, and worn suspension bushings.
Are parts and service difficult in the US?
Routine service is easy. Many parts cross with Carry/kei catalogs; body/interior bits can take longer to source.
Can I register and insure a Suzuki Every in my state?
Usually yes if 25-year imported, but rules vary. Verify DMV classification and insurer acceptance before buying.

9 sources cited below

Sources & References

Sources (9)
  1. Suzuki Every — encyclopedic overview — WikipediaVerified
  2. Suzuki Carry — encyclopedic overview (sibling platform) — WikipediaVerified
  3. Suzuki Every — official JDM product page — Suzuki Motor CorporationVerified
  4. Suzuki Every Wagon — official JDM product page — Suzuki Motor CorporationVerified
  5. Suzuki Every — Japanese encyclopedic overview — Wikipedia (Japanese)Verified
  6. Kei truck and kei van regulatory overview — WikipediaVerified
  7. Goo-net Exchange: Suzuki Every JDM listings — Goo-netVerified
  8. NHTSA 25-year import exemption guidance — NHTSAVerified
  9. EPA import exemptions for older vehicles — EPAVerified

Sources last verified:

Market & demand on JDMBUYSELL

Reported sold prices and buyer-inquiry trend for the Suzuki Every DA64V on the JDMBUYSELL marketplace.

Source:/api/market-data/suzuki/every/da64v.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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