Buyer's guide

15 min read

Suzuki Jimny SJ413

Buyer's guide & specs

Production
1970-present
Market range
$6K–$45K
Engine
G13A
1.3L
Suzuki Jimny — JDMBUYSELL wiki hero image
Suzuki Jimny — the world's smallest serious 4×4 and the longest-running kei-class off-roader.

Background

Overview

The SJ413 launched in 1984 with a 1.3 L G13A four — Suzuki's first wide-body Jimny with enough displacement to compete outside the kei tax bracket. From 1985 model year through 1995 it was federalised and sold in the United States as the Suzuki Samurai, paired with a 5-speed manual transmission and the part-time 4WD system Suzuki has carried through every generation since. The Samurai is the only Jimny generation ever sold new in the US, which makes it the only Jimny available to American buyers without using the 25-year import rule.

The 1988 Consumer Reports rollover finding damaged US Samurai demand, and Suzuki withdrew the model from the US after the 1995 model year. Today the Samurai sits in a different valuation regime than its imported JDM siblings: it's open-import in all 50 states, the aftermarket is the deepest of any Jimny generation in North America, and tidy stock examples regularly sell in the $8,000–$18,000 range on Bring a Trailer. The WP source's death-wobble warning applies here as much as anywhere — front-axle rod bushes, kingpin bearings, and tie rod ends all wear together and should be replaced as a set.

Browse JDM Jimny SJ413 listings for sale

Chassis Code Explained

S Model series
J Model
413 Engine code
Segment Meaning Detail
S Model series S — SJ-series Jimny platform
J Model J — Jimny
413 Engine code 413 — 1.3L engine (G13 four-cylinder)

The SJ413 used the 1.3L G13B petrol engine; earlier SJ30/SJ40 variants used smaller two-cylinder engines. The SJ series retained the ladder-frame and solid-axle configuration through its full production run (1981–1998).

Editorial notes

Key Takeaways

The Jimny has been in continuous kei 4x4 production since April 1970, which makes it the longest-running small off-roader ever built. The LJ10 started it with a 359 cc air-cooled two-stroke. The SJ413 brought the Jimny to the United States as the Samurai from 1985 through 1995. The JB23 launched in October 1998 and ran for 20 years, and that's the Jimny most people are importing today. The JB64 and the wider JB74 Sierra arrived in July 2018 and they're still building them.

  • Body-on-frame 4x4 in a tiny footprint
  • Rust and prior off-road use drive pricing most
  • Kei turbo JB23 is the common import sweet spot
  • JB64/JB74 demand is high where sold new
  • Stock examples outperform lifted/modified trucks
  • US 25-year rule boosts interest each year

Technical Specifications

Every kei Jimny stays under the 660 cc and 64 PS ceiling Japan set for the kei class. The LJ10 was 359 cc, the LJ80 jumped to 797 cc for export, and from the JB23 onward the kei engines are 660 cc turbos at the 64 PS cap. The wide-body cars sold outside Japan run bigger engines, like the 1.3 L G13A in the SJ413 Samurai and the 1.5 L K15B in the JB74 Sierra at 102 PS. The chassis itself hasn't changed much. Ladder frame, solid axles, part-time 4WD with low range, all the way through.

Engine Options

ChassisEngineDisplacementPower — JDMNotes
SJ413G13A1.3LestimatedNA I4; carb/EFI by market

Transmission Options

Type Ratios Availability Notes
4-speed Manual estimated LJ/SJ early models Early kei/off-road spec; market dependent
5-speed Manual estimated SJ413, JA/JB series (varies) Common Jimny MT; ratios vary by model
3-speed Automatic estimated Some JB23/JB43 markets Aisin 3AT in select markets/years
4-speed Automatic estimated JB23/JB43/JB64/JB74/JC74 (varies) Aisin 4AT; market/year dependent

Livability

Headroom
39.0"
Upright seating; tall drivers fit but narrow cabin
Rear Seats
Tight
Short trips only; limited legroom; best for kids
Cargo
12-30 cu ft
Tiny with seats up; usable with seats folded flat

Variants & Trims

Every Jimny generation ships in two flavors. There's a kei version built to Japan's 660 cc tax bracket, and there's a wide-body export version with a bigger engine. The kei cars get names like JB23 and JB64. The wide-body cars get names like SJ413 Samurai, JB43, and JB74 Sierra. Same chassis underneath. Different engine, wider fenders, different tax bracket.

Generation Trim Engine Key Features
SJ413 (2nd gen, SJ series) SJ413 / Samurai (export) G13A 1.3L NA I4 Part-time 4WD, leaf springs, 5MT, export spec

Should You Buy a Suzuki Jimny SJ413?

The Jimny is honest about what it is. It's a body-on-frame 4x4 with solid axles and low range, and Suzuki never tried to make it pretend to be anything else. The pros are real off-road ability and a curb weight under 1,100 kg that lets it go where heavier trucks get stuck. The cons are everything you give up to get there. It's slow, it's noisy on the highway, and the kei engines are working hard from the moment you start moving.

Why You'll Love It

  • True 4x4 hardware Ladder frame, low range, solid axles deliver real trail ability beyond most crossovers.
  • Compact size advantage Fits tight trails and cities; easy to store, maneuver, and transport compared with larger 4x4s.
  • Strong global demand Cult following supports resale; clean, stock trucks often sell quickly at a premium.
  • Simple, serviceable design Older gens are mechanically straightforward; many jobs are DIY-friendly with basic tools.
  • Huge aftermarket support Suspension, armor, gearing, lockers, and recovery gear widely available for SJ/JB platforms.
  • Kei tax/size benefits abroad JB23 kei models can be cheaper to run in Japan; plentiful supply helps parts availability.
  • Character and usability Practical boxy cabin, good visibility, and iconic styling; great as a second vehicle/adventure rig.

Why You Might Not

  • Rust is the #1 killer Frames, sills, floors, and mounts rust; repairs can exceed vehicle value on cheap examples.
  • Slow highway performance Short wheelbase, gearing, and modest power make sustained high-speed driving tiring and noisy.
  • Short wheelbase dynamics Can feel twitchy in crosswinds; lifted setups worsen stability and braking performance.
  • Modified trucks are risky Big lifts/tires stress axles and steering; poor installs cause wobble, wear, and driveline vibes.
  • Parts sourcing varies JDM-specific trims can require import parts; lead times and costs vary by region.
  • Crash repair quality varies Imports may have hidden repairs; inspect chassis alignment, paint depth, and underbody seams.
  • Safety/comfort are basic Older gens lack modern crash protection and refinement; expect noise, vibration, and firm ride.

Who Should NOT Buy This

  • Anyone expecting quiet, stable highway cruising
  • Drivers doing 75+ mph daily commutes
  • People who hate steering wander and body roll
  • Buyers needing real rear-seat adult space
  • Families needing crash safety like modern SUVs
  • Anyone unwilling to chase rust aggressively
  • Buyers without a trusted 4x4/rust repair shop
  • People who won't maintain diffs/TC after water use
  • Those wanting strong acceleration or easy passing
  • Owners who won't tolerate frequent small repairs
  • People in salt states without indoor storage
  • Anyone needing high towing capacity
  • Drivers sensitive to vibration from lifts/MT tires
  • Buyers wanting cheap OEM parts everywhere
  • People needing modern infotainment and insulation
  • Anyone who can't inspect import/title legality
  • Those who plan big tires without budget for fixes
  • People expecting car-like handling and braking
  • Owners who won't do preventative cooling work
  • Anyone needing lots of cargo with seats in use

Common Issues & Solutions

The Jimny is a tough little truck mechanically. Most of the trouble comes from age and the way owners use them, not the engineering. Death wobble is the one issue you'll hear about, and it's a front-axle wear problem. Rod bushes, kingpin bearings, and tie rod ends all wear together. Replace them as a set or the wobble comes back. Rust on the ladder frame is the other thing to watch, especially on the earlier LJ and SJ cars.

Issue Cause Solution Est. Cost
Frame rust perforation Salt exposure; trapped mud inside rails Probe/repair sections; internal wax; avoid undercoat $1500-6000
Rear crossmember rot Mud/salt packs behind bumper and tank area Replace/repair crossmember; treat and cavity wax $800-2500
Body mount/outrigger rust Water traps at mounts; poor drainage Cut/weld mounts; replace bushings; rust proof $1200-4000
Front knuckle oil leak Worn wiper seals; inner axle seal failure Knuckle rebuild: seals, bearings, grease, shims $450-1200
Death wobble/shimmy Kingpin bearings, tie rods, caster off, tires Rebuild knuckles; align; add caster correction $400-1800
Wheel bearing failure Water ingress; incorrect preload; old grease Replace bearings/seals; set preload correctly $300-900
Bent front axle housing Hard impacts off-road; oversized tires Replace/straighten housing; align; check knuckles $800-2500
Propshaft U-joint clunk Dry joints; lifted angles; mud contamination Replace U-joints or shaft; correct driveline angles $200-900
Transfer case whine Worn bearings/gears; low oil; abuse in 4L Rebuild transfer case; replace bearings/seals $900-2500
4WD won't engage Vacuum/actuator issues or stuck freewheel hubs Diagnose lines/solenoids; service hubs/actuator $150-900
Manual synchro grind Worn 2nd/3rd synchros; wrong oil; hard shifting Rebuild gearbox; correct oil; replace clutch if needed $1200-3500
Clutch slip/chatter Worn disc; oil contamination; weak pressure plate Clutch kit; resurface flywheel; fix leaks $700-1600
Overheating Radiator clog/crack; fan clutch; thermostat Replace rad/thermostat; verify fan; flush properly $350-1200
Head gasket failure Repeated overheating; old coolant; warped head Machine head; gasket set; new bolts; cooling refresh $1200-2800
Timing chain rattle Worn chain/guides/tensioner; poor oil changes Replace chain set and tensioner; inspect oil pump $700-1800
Oil leaks (common) Aged seals/gaskets; crankcase pressure Reseal VC/front/rear; address PCV/breather $200-1500
Rough idle/hunting Dirty IAC; vacuum leaks; TPS wear Clean IAC/throttle; smoke test; replace TPS $150-600
Fuel filler neck rust Road salt; trapped debris behind filler area Replace neck/hoses; inspect tank straps and vent lines $250-900
Brake line corrosion Rust at frame clips/unions; old fluid Replace hard lines; flush fluid; protect routing $400-1400
Caliper slide seizure Dry pins/boots torn; winter corrosion Service/replace calipers; new pads/rotors as needed $250-900
Weak handbrake Stretched cable; drum out of adjustment; seized lever Adjust drums; replace cables; clean/replace hardware $150-600
Steering box play/leak Wear from big tires; low fluid; seal aging Adjust box; reseal or replace; check frame cracks $300-1500
Panhard bracket cracks Lifted suspension; off-road impacts; poor welds Weld/plate bracket; correct geometry; inspect both ends $200-900
Suspension bushing wear Age; oil contamination; lift stress Replace arm bushes; align; consider quality rubber $300-1200
Driveline vibration (lift) Bad pinion angle; worn joints; no caster correction Correct angles; double-cardan shaft; caster correction $300-1800
Water ingress in diffs Low breathers; hot diffs submerged; clogged vents Extend breathers; change oils; replace seals if milky $120-800
Heater core leak Corrosion from old coolant; electrolysis Replace heater core; flush; new coolant; check grounds $600-1400
A/C weak or inop Leaks at O-rings; tired compressor; condenser damage Leak test; replace failed parts; evac/recharge $250-1500
Alternator failure Heat, mud/water exposure; worn bearings/diodes Replace alternator; clean grounds; belt/tension check $250-700
Starter hot soak Worn starter; heat shielding missing; cable corrosion Replace starter; refresh cables/grounds; add shield $200-600
Exhaust manifold crack Heat cycling; thin castings; broken studs Replace manifold; extract studs; new gasket/hardware $300-1200
Catalyst/O2 issues Oil burning; rich running; age-related sensor slow Fix oil/mixture; replace O2/cat as needed $200-1800
Window regulator failure Dry tracks; worn motor; water in doors Service tracks; replace regulator/motor; reseal vapor $150-500
Tailgate hinge sag Heavy spare/bumper; rusted hinge pins Replace hinges; reinforce carrier; adjust latch $150-700
Softtop/hardtop leaks Aged seals; warped top; clogged drains Replace seals; adjust latches; clear drains $100-900

Differences between JDM & USDM

The Jimny had a brief official US run as the Suzuki Samurai (SJ413 chassis) from 1985 model year through 1995 — the only Jimny generation ever federalised for North America. The Samurai sold strongly until a 1988 Consumer Reports rollover report damaged demand and Suzuki withdrew the model from the US in 1995. Every subsequent Jimny generation — JA11/JA12/JA22 (1990–1998 kei), JB23 (1998–2018 kei), JB32/JB33/JB43 (1998–2018 wide), JB64/JB74 (2018–present) — was never sold new in the United States. They reach US owners exclusively through the 25-year import rule, which means JB23 cars from 1998–2000 are eligible now, JB43 cars from 1998–2000 are eligible now, and the 2018-onwards JB64/JB74 generation does not become US-legal until 2043. Canada's 15-year rule opens the JB64/JB74 earlier (2033) and already permits all JB23/JB43 cars. The Samurai itself is open-import in all 50 US states and has been since new.

Pre-Purchase Inspection Checklist

Walk this list with the seller, not in front of them. The death wobble check is the first thing to do. Drive it at 40 to 50 mph and lift off. If the front end shakes, you're buying a front axle rebuild on top of the purchase price. The Critical items mean walking away if there's no paperwork. The High items can be priced into the deal.

Critical Priority

High Priority

Medium Priority

Low Priority

Generation History

LJ/SJ (1st gen) (1970-1981)

  • LJ10/20/50/80 early lightweight 4x4
  • Leaf springs, simple carb engines
  • Iconic mini-4x4; rust is common
  • Collector niche; parts vary by market

SJ410/SJ413 (2nd gen) (1981-1998)

  • Wider global sales; Samurai in US
  • Leaf springs; strong aftermarket
  • 1.0/1.3 NA; simple, durable driveline
  • Rust and frame condition are key

JA11/JA12/JA22 (kei) (1990-1998)

  • Japan kei variants; compact and light
  • Turbo kei engines in later trims
  • Leaf spring era; very mod-friendly
  • Good originals are getting scarce

JB23 (kei, coil) (1998-2018)

  • Coil springs; better ride/articulation
  • K6A 660cc turbo; huge Japan supply
  • Common import target; watch rust/repairs
  • Auto exists; manuals hold value better

JB33/JB43 (wide, coil) (1998-2018)

  • 1.3L wide-body for export markets
  • More torque than kei; better highway
  • Often better equipped; still slow by US norms
  • Rust and crash repairs affect value

JB64/JB74 (4th gen) (2018-present)

  • Modern safety; still ladder frame
  • JB64 660T, JB74 1.5 NA (Jimny Sierra)
  • High demand; long waitlists in some markets
  • Not US-legal yet under 25-year rule

Market Data

Every Jimny generation ships in two flavors. There's a kei version built to Japan's 660 cc tax bracket, and there's a wide-body export version with a bigger engine. The kei cars get names like JB23 and JB64. The wide-body cars get names like SJ413 Samurai, JB43, and JB74 Sierra. Same chassis underneath. Different engine, wider fenders, different tax bracket.

Production Numbers & Rarity

Generation Years Total Built Notes
LJ series (LJ10/LJ20/LJ50/LJ80) 1970-1981 estimated Exact global totals vary by source
SJ series (SJ10/SJ20/SJ30/SJ410/SJ413) 1981-1998 estimated Includes Samurai exports; totals not unified
JA/JB (3rd gen Jimny family: JA11-22, JB23/32/33/43) 1990-2018 estimated JB23/JB43 long run; many market builds
JB64/JB74 (4th gen 3-door) 2018-present estimated High demand; production split by plant/market
JC74 (4th gen 5-door) 2023-present estimated India-built; totals still emerging

Original MSRP & Pricing

Original MSRP: $5,000 at launch in 2022. WP source cites typical JDM dealership prices around $5,000 for a Jimny in 2022; locally used Samurai units often listed under $3,000. Original Suzuki Samurai launch MSRP in the United States was approximately $6,200 (1985 base) — not the JDM figure. Treat this as a market-anchored 'typical asking' rather than a factory launch price; JDM launch MSRPs for kei Jimnys were set in yen and varied by trim grade.

How It Compares

Among small 4x4s, the Jimny is the lightest, the cheapest to run, and the easiest to fit on a Japanese trail. The Wrangler is faster and easier to live with on the highway but it's twice the weight. The Land Rover Defender ended UK production in 2016 after 67 years, and the Jimny outlasted it. That's the comparison overlanders keep coming back to. The Jimny survived by staying small.

Feature SJ413 Suzuki Escudo/Vitara 1st Daihatsu Terios Kid
Chassis/4x4 type Ladder frame, 2H/4H/4L Unibody, AWD (no low range) Ladder frame, 4H/4L
Axles/suspension Solid axles; coils on JB23+ IFS/IRS (most trims) Solid axles; coils
Engine (common JDM) 660cc turbo (JB23 K6A) 660cc turbo 660cc turbo
Engine (wide models) 1.3 NA (JB43) / 1.5 NA (JB74) 1.6 NA (typical) 2.4 NA (typical)
Highway comfort Noisy, short wheelbase More stable, quieter More stable, heavier
Off-road agility Excellent; tiny footprint Good but larger Good; slightly larger
Running costs Low; simple, light Moderate; more complex Higher; heavier drivetrain
Reliability baseline Strong if stock/maintained Strong; parts easy Good; watch cooling/rust
Aftermarket support Huge (SJ/JB platforms) Large (global) Moderate
Cargo/space Limited; 2+2 tight Better rear space Better cargo volume
Collector upside Rising; clean stock wins Stable; less cult Strong; iconic but pricier

Comparable Alternatives

If the Jimny doesn't end up being the right truck, the natural alternatives depend on what you actually want to do with it. The Suzuki Escudo is bigger and more usable on the highway. The Toyota Land Cruiser 70 series is the grown-up version of the same idea. A Jeep Wrangler is the closest American equivalent, but you're giving up the kei advantages and adding weight.

In Pictures

Suzuki Jimny — JDMBUYSELL wiki hero image
Suzuki Jimny — the world's smallest serious 4×4 and the longest-running kei-class off-roader. Flickr Image by Rocking Cars

The Buyer's Read

The safest import to start with is a documented JB23 manual built between 1998 and 2000. Those cars are US-legal under the 25-year rule now, the K6A turbo is the most refined 660 cc engine Suzuki put in the third-generation Jimny, and coil-spring suspension rides measurably better than the leaf-sprung JA cars. Prioritise timing chain history and check for death wobble on a test drive at 40–50 mph; rust on the ladder frame is a structural problem that costs more to fix than a tired engine.

If you want a Jimny you can register without an import broker, the SJ413 Suzuki Samurai is the only route — the sole Jimny generation federalised for the United States, sold 1985 through 1995 and open-import in all 50 states today. Clean stock examples sell in the $8,000–$18,000 range on Bring a Trailer; rougher project trucks list at half that. The 1.3 L G13A is slow but durable, and the same death-wobble checklist applies: rod bushes, kingpin bearings, and tie rod ends wear together and should be replaced as a set.

LJ10 and LJ20 cars are now 50-plus years old. Two-stroke parts inventories have thinned, ladder frames rust through, and body panels are hard to source — clean survivors trade at collector prices well above the $5,000 used-kei baseline. If you want one to drive, hold out for a documented example; a parts-hunt project is a multi-year commitment, not a weekend rebuild.

The JB64 and JB74 Sierra are not US-legal until 2043; Canada's 15-year rule opens them in 2033. No show-or-display exemption or other workaround covers 2018-or-newer Jimnys for US road registration — the seizure risk on non-compliant imports is real.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which Jimny is best to buy for value?
Best value is a clean JB23 manual with service history and minimal rust; avoid heavily lifted builds.
What are the biggest rust areas to inspect?
Check frame rails, body mounts, sills, rear arches, floorpans, and suspension brackets for rot/patches.
Is the 660cc turbo Jimny too slow?
Around town it's fine; on highways it’s busy. Expect modest passing power; gearing/tires matter a lot.
Manual or automatic—what holds value better?
Manuals typically command a premium for off-road control and simplicity; autos can be fine if maintained.
What mods hurt resale the most?
Poorly done big lifts, oversized tires, cut fenders, deleted emissions, and cheap steering parts hurt value.
What should I budget for baseline maintenance?
Plan fluids, belts, hoses, brakes, tires, and cooling system refresh; also address any rust immediately.
Are parts easy to get in the US?
Wear items are manageable via importers; JDM-specific trim can take time. Stocking filters/ignition helps.
What’s the best use case for a Jimny?
Ideal as a city + trail second car, overland-lite, or farm runabout; not great for long high-speed commutes.

8 sources cited below

Sources & References

Sources (8)
  1. Suzuki Jimny — encyclopedic overview — WikipediaVerified
  2. Suzuki Samurai — US-market history and rollover controversy — WikipediaVerified
  3. Big Jimny — Common problems overview (JA/JB-series owner reference) — Big Jimny owners' wikiVerified
  4. Suzuki Jimny used review — buying advice — What Car?Verified
  5. Suzuki Jimny auction results — sold/no-sold history — Bring a TrailerVerified
  6. Suzuki Samurai auction results — Bring a TrailerVerified
  7. Suzuki Jimny — Japanese encyclopedic overview — Wikipedia (Japanese)Verified
  8. Suzuki Jimny — current-generation Japanese product page — Suzuki Motor Corporation (Japan)Verified

Sources last verified:

Market & demand on JDMBUYSELL

Reported sold prices and buyer-inquiry trend for the Suzuki Jimny SJ413 on the JDMBUYSELL marketplace.

Source: /api/market-data/suzuki/jimny/sj413.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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