The Suzuki VS750 Intruder window sticker (Monroney label) lists its original factory MSRP, the 1.0L, 3-cyl, Regular fuel, Front-Wheel Drive build, standard and optional equipment, EPA fuel economy (up to 42 mpg combined) and NHTSA safety ratings. ForCar recreates it from the VIN using official NHTSA data — free.
Get this Suzuki VS750 Intruder window sticker
Enter a VIN to pull the build details from NHTSA's database and recreate the original window sticker — the factory MSRP, the options it left the lot with, its EPA fuel economy and safety ratings.
The Suzuki VS750 Intruder window sticker — build, options & years
The Suzuki VS750 Intruder ran from 1981–1991. Its Monroney label captures exactly how each one left the factory — the build, the options it was optioned with and the price, built around the 1.0L, 3-cyl, Regular fuel, Front-Wheel Drive powertrain.
Which year's sticker do I need? Any Suzuki VS750 Intruder VIN works — ForCar reads the exact model year automatically. On owner data the cleanest years are 1981, 1982, 1983; the most-complained-about are 1991, 1990, 1989. For year-by-year recalls, MPG and safety, see the full Suzuki VS750 Intruder VIN decoder.
What's on a window sticker
The Monroney sticker is the label legally required on every new vehicle. It lists exactly how the vehicle was equipped and priced from the factory:
- MSRP & pricing — The manufacturer's suggested retail price plus the price of every option and package.
- Standard equipment — Everything that came included on the trim from the factory.
- Optional equipment — Factory options and packages that were added, each with its price.
- Fuel economy — The EPA city/highway/combined MPG (or MPGe / range for electrics).
- Safety ratings — NHTSA crash-test star ratings for that model year.
- Warranty — Basic and powertrain warranty coverage as sold.
- Parts content — US/Canadian vs foreign parts content and the country of assembly.
- Assembly plant — Where the vehicle was built — also encoded in the VIN.
How to read a window sticker
Every Monroney label follows the same layout. Here's what each zone tells you, top to bottom:
- Header — year, make, model, trim and body style, plus the exterior and interior colors.
- Standard equipment — everything included on the trim at no extra cost: mechanical, comfort and safety features.
- Optional equipment & packages — factory add-ons listed with individual prices that raise the total.
- Pricing block — base MSRP, each option's price, the destination charge and the Total MSRP.
- Fuel economy label — EPA city / highway / combined MPG (or MPGe and range for EVs) and the estimated annual fuel cost.
- Safety ratings — NHTSA 5-star crash-test scores for that model year.
- Parts content — US/Canadian parts percentage, country of origin and the final assembly plant.
- VIN & barcode — the 17-character VIN that ties the label to that exact vehicle.
How to get your window sticker by VIN
- Find the VINWindshield (driver's side), door-jamb sticker, or your registration.
- Enter it aboveForCar reads the build from NHTSA's vPIC database.
- View the stickerOriginal equipment, EPA MPG and safety, recreated by model year.
Window sticker vs build sheet
People mix these up — they overlap, but they're not the same.
- Consumer-facing label, required by law
- MSRP plus the price of every option
- EPA fuel economy & NHTSA safety ratings
- Posted on the window at the dealer
- Internal factory spec list
- Option codes, paint code, axle ratio
- Assembly plant & production details
- Used to build that exact VIN
Enter a VIN above and ForCar pulls the factory build from NHTSA — you get the window-sticker content and the underlying build details (engine, plant, options, paint) in one place, free.
Window stickers for used & older cars
You don't need a brand-new car — ForCar rebuilds the original window sticker for used and older vehicles straight from the VIN.
For most cars, trucks and SUVs from the 1990s onward you'll get full equipment, EPA MPG and safety. Very old or low-volume models may have partial data — you'll still see everything NHTSA holds for that VIN.
Lost your window sticker? Reprint it by VIN
Dealers toss the original after the sale and paper is easy to lose. You don't need to call the manufacturer — rebuild and reprint it from the VIN in seconds.
- Enter the VINType or paste the 17-character VIN into the lookup above.
- View the labelForCar rebuilds the Monroney from official NHTSA data.
- Save as PDFPrint or keep a clean copy for records, insurance or a sale.
Why window stickers exist — the Monroney Act
The window sticker isn't marketing — it's the law.
The Automobile Information Disclosure Act of 1958 — the Monroney Act, after Senator Mike Monroney — requires every new car sold in the US to state the MSRP, the price of each option, the destination charge and the total. Removing it before sale is a federal offense. Later rules added the EPA fuel-economy label and NHTSA safety ratings.
We're still compiling NHTSA data for the Suzuki VS750 Intruder — its score will appear once that's in.
How we score: NHTSA crash-test safety (40%), recall frequency (25%) and the share of owner complaints involving a crash, fire or injury (35%) — not user reviews. For full recalls, MPG and safety see the Suzuki VS750 Intruder VIN decoder.
VS750 Intruder window sticker — every model year
This covers the Suzuki VS750 Intruder for 1981–1991. Just enter the VIN above — ForCar pulls the exact build and Monroney label for that specific year automatically. No need to pick a year.
Want recalls, MPG, safety and reliability too? See the full Suzuki VS750 Intruder VIN decoder →
Other Suzuki window stickers
Where to find the VIN
- WindshieldLower-left corner, driver's side, visible from outside.
- Door jambSticker on the driver's door frame.
- DocumentsRegistration, title and insurance card.
Window sticker — frequently asked
What is a window sticker (Monroney label)?
The Monroney sticker is the label legally required on every new US vehicle — MSRP, standard and optional equipment with prices, EPA fuel economy, safety ratings and warranty.
Can I get a window sticker by VIN for free?
Yes — enter the VIN and ForCar recreates the build (equipment, MPG, safety) from NHTSA's public database, free with no signup.
Is this the same as CarEdge or Monroney.com?
Like those sites, ForCar recreates the original window sticker from the VIN for free — equipment, EPA MPG and safety from official NHTSA and EPA data, plus a built-in editor to add pricing and options.
Is the recreated sticker the same as the original?
It rebuilds the factory equipment, EPA MPG and safety from official data. Exact dealer-added pricing may differ, but the core Monroney content matches.
Where do I find the VIN?
Lower-left of the windshield, the driver's door-jamb sticker, or your registration and insurance documents.
What's the difference between a window sticker and a build sheet?
The window sticker (Monroney label) is the consumer-facing label with MSRP, equipment, MPG and safety. A build sheet is the factory's internal spec list — option codes, paint code and assembly details. ForCar's VIN lookup pulls both.
Can I get a window sticker for a used or older car?
Yes. ForCar rebuilds the original window sticker for used and older vehicles from the VIN. Coverage runs back to about 1981, when the 17-character VIN became standard; most cars from the 1990s on have full data.
I lost my window sticker — can I get a copy?
Yes. Enter the VIN, view the recreated Monroney label and use Print / Save as PDF to keep a copy for your records, an insurance claim or a sale. There's no need to contact the dealer or manufacturer.
Why might the recreated MSRP differ from the original?
The factory equipment, EPA MPG and safety match the original. Dealer-added options, regional packages and destination charges can vary, so the exact total may differ slightly from the printed sticker.