Do not shop this page by the word scooter alone. The first visible listings already show how mixed the inventory is: Aprilia Scarabeo 150, Yamaha CA50K / Riva 50, Honda CH125, Yamaha Zuma 50 / YW50 / YW50FB, Honda SA50 / SA50P Elite, Piaggio Vespa ET4 150, Honda NQ50 Spree, Yamaha XC125N/NC Riva, Yamaha Jog 50 / CE50 / CG50, KYMCO People 50, Keeway ARN125 / ARN150, Daelim Besbi SC 125, Piaggio Fly 50 4T, Daelim Cordi 50, a Chinese GY6 150cc scooter listing, and several Vespa entries. That means the right match depends on the exact model line, the engine size, and any extra code in the title.
The easiest mistake here is buying by brand and displacement only. Yamaha is a good example right at the top: Riva 50, Zuma 50, Riva 125, Jog 50, and Riva 80 all appear as separate paths. Honda does the same with CH125, SA50 / SA50P Elite, NQ50 Spree, NB50 Aero / NB50M, and CH150 Elite. On this page, 50cc by itself is not enough, and a familiar brand name is definitely not enough.
The first listings also show why the full code matters. Yamaha titles use codes like CA50K, YW50, YW50FB, XC125N, XC125NC, CE50, CG50, CV80K, XC180DN, and XC180DNC. Honda uses CH125, SA50, SA50P, NQ50, NB50, NB50M, and CH150. Those extra letters are not filler. They are often what separates the correct scooter from another machine in the same family.
Grouped titles need extra care on this page. A listing such as Yamaha Zuma 50, YW50, YW50FB is helpful when your exact version is named there. The same goes for Honda SA50 / SA50P Elite, Keeway ARN125 / ARN150, or Yamaha Jog 50 / CE50 / CG50. But if your exact version is missing, the title is only a near match. Read the whole line before you click through.
The page also mixes very different scooter styles close together. Early on you move between classic Vespa models, Japanese step-through scooters, modern automatic city scooters, Korean models, and generic Chinese GY6-based machines. A Vespa ET4 150 is a completely different buying path from a Yamaha Riva, a Honda Elite, or a GY6 150cc platform scooter. The shared scooter label does not help much once the listings start getting specific.
Year range is another filter you should not skip. The top results run from older 1980s Yamaha and Honda scooters through 2000s Piaggio, Daelim, and Keeway entries, up to 2011–2014 Yamaha Zuma 50 coverage. That matters because some scooter names stay familiar across long periods, while the actual machine, engine setup, or code family changes.
The type of reference comes after the model match, not before it. The first visible results already mix service manuals, workshop manuals, operation and maintenance books, and owner material. On this page, it is safer to confirm the scooter first and then decide whether the file type fits what you need. The wrong scooter with the right kind of book is still the wrong purchase.
Use this page by matching in a strict order: brand, exact scooter name, engine size, then every visible code in the title, and finally the year range. That works much better here than browsing for something broad like “Honda scooter manual” or “Yamaha 50cc scooter manual.” The first visible listings are close enough in naming that one missing letter or code can easily send you to the wrong manual.