One of the first questions anyone asks about a touring bike is fuel economy. And on the Indian Pursuit, with its 22.7-liter (6-gallon) tank, the answer determines whether you're stopping for fuel every 200 km (124 miles) or stretching fuel stops to 350+ km (217+ miles).
Real-world fuel economy on a big cruiser isn't about what the manufacturer claims. It's about how you ride, where you ride, and what weight you're carrying. I've been tracking fuel efficiency across New Brunswick highway runs and backroad touring, and the differences are significant.
Let's start with what I'm actually seeing on the odometer. The Indian Pursuit PowerPlus 108ci engine with Stage 1 modifications delivers consistent fuel efficiency in the 6.0โ6.7 L/100km range (15โ18 US MPG, 18โ22 UK MPG).
With the factory 22.7-liter tank, that translates to approximately 320โ360 km (200โ224 miles) per tank in mixed touring conditions. That's solid for a 937-pound bagger with luggage and passenger weight fully loaded.
But "mixed conditions" hides the real story. Highway and backroads burn fuel very differently.
Steady-state highway running is where the Pursuit is most efficient. Cruising the Trans-Canada Highway through New Brunswick at 100โ110 km/h (62โ68 mph) in top gear, holding steady throttle โ this is where you'll see the best numbers.
Highway runs consistently deliver 6.0โ6.3 L/100km (15โ17 MPG). That's because:
If you're planning a long-distance highway trip โ Dieppe to Halifax, or the full Trans-Canada stretch โ expect closer to 350โ360 km (217โ224 miles) per tank. That's planning distance: you can fuel up every 300 km (186 miles) comfortably without hunting for gas.
Now flip to the roads that actually make touring fun. Winding New Brunswick backroads, Cape Breton curves, PEI coastal loops โ this is where fuel economy takes a hit.
Backroad touring delivers 6.5โ6.7 L/100km (15โ16 MPG). That doesn't sound like much different than highway, but the effective range drops to 320โ340 km (200โ211 miles) per tank because:
On a recent backroad touring day through rural New Brunswick โ roughly 280 km (174 miles) of winding terrain with passenger and luggage weight โ I saw 6.6 L/100km and needed to fuel up before reaching a point that had been 320 km away.
Here's what changes when you're planning a multi-day touring trip across New Brunswick or beyond:
More important than highway vs backroads, here's what actually moves the needle:
The Indian Pursuit is a reasonably fuel-efficient big cruiser for touring. With a 22.7-liter tank and 6.0โ6.7 L/100km real-world economy, you're getting 320โ360 km (200โ224 miles) per tank depending on the riding.
For Atlantic Canada touring, plan fuel stops every 250โ300 km (155โ186 miles). That's 3โ3.5 hours of riding on backroads, or 2.5โ3 hours on the highway. Build that into your route planning, fuel up at known stations in rural areas, and you'll never be stranded hunting for gas on a winding backroad in the middle of nowhere.
That's solid cruiser economy. Enjoy the ride.