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Will Specialized e-bike prices drop anytime soon?

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Honest answer: nobody outside Specialized HQ knows, but there's enough pattern here to give you something useful rather than a shrug.

What's actually happening right now

The Levo 4 / Levo 4 Comp launched in 2025 at £6,799, with the standard Turbo Levo (Gen 3) sitting at £5,999 and the SL 2 Comp at £6,499. Top-tier S-Works builds still push toward the £14–15k mark — @Fangs2k noted Specialized's flagships sit around £15k (→ view post).

Where the discounts already are

You don't really need to wait for Specialized themselves to drop RRP — the discounting is happening through the dealer network and the grey/used channels:

Freeborn Bikes is well-known on here for solid Specialized discounts.
Leisure Lakes had 2023 Levo Carbon 700Wh builds at £3,999 — @Zimmerframe flagged that one, and similar leftover-stock deals keep surfacing.
Upway (used/refurb) is, per @Ndanger, awash with 2024 Levo SLs — roughly 78% of their Spesh stock (→ view post). That tells you the SL didn't sell through at full whack.

Why the SL range in particular is under pressure

@Dax summed up the market reality bluntly (→ view post): an 18kg SL with 50Nm and 320Wh now sits next to DJI Avinox bikes offering 130Nm and 600–800Wh at similar money. That mismatch forces price action one way or another — either official cuts or aggressive dealer clearance. The SL 2 at £6,499–£8,500 is the range most likely to see movement.

My read

Don't expect Specialized to slash RRPs across the board mid-cycle — they rarely do. What you will see:

• End-of-model-year clearances (typically late summer / early autumn as 2026 stock lands).
• Continued dealer discounting on Levo 3 stock now the Levo 4 is the headline bike.
• SL 2 builds discounted hardest, because the lightweight category is getting squeezed by full-power Avinox bikes.

If you've got a specific model in your sights, tell me which one and your rough budget — I can point you at where the actual deals are sitting right now.
 
SL 2 builds discounted hardest, because the lightweight
Honest answer: nobody outside Specialized HQ knows, but there's enough pattern here to give you something useful rather than a shrug.

What's actually happening right now

The Levo 4 / Levo 4 Comp launched in 2025 at £6,799, with the standard Turbo Levo (Gen 3) sitting at £5,999 and the SL 2 Comp at £6,499. Top-tier S-Works builds still push toward the £14–15k mark — @Fangs2k noted Specialized's flagships sit around £15k (→ view post).

Where the discounts already are

You don't really need to wait for Specialized themselves to drop RRP — the discounting is happening through the dealer network and the grey/used channels:

Freeborn Bikes is well-known on here for solid Specialized discounts.
Leisure Lakes had 2023 Levo Carbon 700Wh builds at £3,999 — @Zimmerframe flagged that one, and similar leftover-stock deals keep surfacing.
Upway (used/refurb) is, per @Ndanger, awash with 2024 Levo SLs — roughly 78% of their Spesh stock (→ view post). That tells you the SL didn't sell through at full whack.

Why the SL range in particular is under pressure

@Dax summed up the market reality bluntly (→ view post): an 18kg SL with 50Nm and 320Wh now sits next to DJI Avinox bikes offering 130Nm and 600–800Wh at similar money. That mismatch forces price action one way or another — either official cuts or aggressive dealer clearance. The SL 2 at £6,499–£8,500 is the range most likely to see movement.

My read

Don't expect Specialized to slash RRPs across the board mid-cycle — they rarely do. What you will see:

• End-of-model-year clearances (typically late summer / early autumn as 2026 stock lands).
• Continued dealer discounting on Levo 3 stock now the Levo 4 is the headline bike.
• SL 2 builds discounted hardest, because the lightweight category is getting squeezed by full-power Avinox bikes.

If you've got a specific model in your sights, tell me which one and your rough budget — I can point you at where the actual deals are sitting right now.
Turbo Levi 4 comp alloy
 
RRP is dropped in USA and Canada but not EU and never will since there is different rules HQ makes to those countries.
 
Turbo Levi 4 comp alloy
Good timing on this one - there's actually been a significant development in the last fortnight that changes the picture considerably.

@Stecorn - good news, and it's already happened rather than being something to wait for.

Levo 4 Comp Alloy - current UK pricing The Levo 4 Comp Alloy is currently £5,499.

That's already the "dropped" price - here's why.

The big news: Specialized just did a permanent price reset

Specialized permanently lowered prices on its entire Turbo Levo lineup earlier this month, with MSRP reductions of 6% to 27% and wholesale drops of 3% to 27%.

The official line from Specialized was "operational improvements on the Levo platform reduced cost structures specific to this product line, and the competitive moment in e-MTB made now the right time to act."

Translate: Avinox has been eating their lunch.

Community sentiment on here is that the price reductions have so far focused on the top-tier models, and many expect all models to be adjusted further as the market pressure continues.

Worth noting: the Levo 4 LTD and Levo 4 Comp Carbon were the only two models that saw no price reduction - the alloy variants were already repositioned separately.

What you get for £5,499 The Comp Alloy gets a Fox piggyback shock with GENIE dual-chamber technology, SRAM Maven Bronze brakes, Eagle 90 T-Type drivetrain, and a Fox 38 Rhythm fork with 160mm travel, plus Roval Traverse DH wheels.

It uses the 3.1 motor and 840Wh battery, with the same geometry adjustments as the carbon bikes.

Motor note: The Comp Alloy runs the 3.1 at 101Nm (non-S-Works tune).

Bottom line: The price drop has already landed.

£5,499 is the new normal, not a temporary sale.

Further cuts are possible later in the year if competitive pressure from Avinox/Bosch continues, but don't hold your breath waiting for another round - the permanent reset is the move they've made.
 
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