A motorcycle in the US of A is an emotional purchase, an aspiration if you will. Not only does a rider develop a connection with their steed of choice, but they’ll also go to lengths for it to look unique and personalized. And that urge to personalize is exactly what has bankrolled an entire wing of the American motorcycle business for decades. For most of those decades, only one company built the factory parts to feed it.Harley-Davidson worked this out a long time ago, that the sale of the motorcycle is just an opening transaction. Screamin' Eagle turned owners into returning customers, selling exhausts, cams, tuning hardware, and crate engines off the dealer shelf with a warranty behind it. Indian, meanwhile, has sold accessories and upgraded parts before, but never under a single identity, even as it has spent recent seasons with motorcycles that have been quietly beating Harley at its own game. That changes now. Why The Aftermarket Catalog Is What Indian And Harley Are Really Fighting Over Indian MotorcycleA rider who buys factory pipes, then a factory intake, then a factory tune, keeps walking past the independent shop and heads back to the dealer who sold the bike in the first place. That loop is high-margin, repeatable, and stubbornly hard to break. Of course, both brands know this well enough, which is part of why Indian has steadily given Harley-Davidson's CVO program a headache at the premium end.Indian MotorcycleThere are other factors in play, too, among which credibility is what unlocks it. Riders do not bolt on factory performance parts simply to add bits to their bikes, and no owner’s manual suggests them either. They buy when the hardware traces to something that won on a closed course, because the win is the part of the story a rider wants to own. Without a racing record to point at, a performance division is just another price list wearing a logo, which is why ARO leans on the championship-winning King of the Baggers program that so many fans already love. Indian's American Racing Operations Is Its First Arrow Aimed At Screamin' Eagle Indian MotorcycleIndian Motorcycle has launched American Racing Operations (or ARO, and pronounced “Arrow”), which is an in-house performance division. “About time,” I hear you say, and we’d totally agree with you on that, but there is a bigger picture to be painted with that move. That being launching a performance parts division puts it into direct competition with Harley-Davidson's Screamin' Eagle catalog, for the first time ever.Indian’s American Racing Operations has been built to develop factory-backed parts, accessories, and future technologies inspired by 125 years of legacy forged in competition. The brand distills the intent into five words on the ARO landing page: "Born on the track. Built for the street." It lands squarely where Harley-Davidson has found success for years with Screamin' Eagle, and the move is actually one that has been long overdue rather than opportunistic. CEO Mike Kennedy calls ARO a race-inspired, factory-backed performance halo brand, framing it as the continuation of a company founded by two racers. The King Of The Baggers Record That Gives ARO Its Credibility Indian MotorcycleThe timing is no accident, and the results are the real reason. Indian's factory team went into Road America this season, having won all four races and claimed 9 of 12 podium spots over 2026's first two rounds. Race 2 at Road Atlanta on April 19, 2026, produced a full Indian podium, a King of the Baggers first. That same winning pedigree is what Indian once packaged for the public as the limited-run Indian Challenger RR race bike, and it is exactly the proven success bank that ARO draws from. The factory team debuted an ARO two-into-one exhaust developed exclusively for the race program at Road America. Win on Sunday, sell on Monday, as they say, and it’s an old formula that Indian is optimistic about. The Terry Vance Connection The pedigree behind the first product is worth a case study (we’re looking at you, Harley). The debut ARO GP Slip-On Exhaust was designed by Terry Vance, founder of Vance & Hines and, more importantly, principal of the factory Indian race team. The division pulls development directly from the factory bagger program run alongside Vance & Hines. Kennedy ran a prototype himself, saying he had been riding one on his own Indian Challenger since Daytona (earlier this year), the same platform that reached close to a record-setting 200 mph. So Vance is not just a rented name for a product launch and a press release, because when the CEO is the test mule, the part tends to ship sorted. ARO GP Slip-On Exhaust Price, Fitment, And What It Signals Indian MotorcycleThe opening piece is deliberately modest, a restraint that’s actually disguised as strategy. The ARO GP Slip-On Exhaust is priced at $799.99 and reaches dealerships in June 2026, fitting 2018 to 2026 Thunderstroke and PowerPlus models, with exhaust screens styled after international road-racing bikes. The note is tuned deep at idle before opening into a high-output tone under acceleration. That production window pulls in the PowerPlus-powered Challenger and Pursuit alongside the Thunderstroke-powered Chieftain, Roadmaster, and Springfield. By reaching back to 2018 rather than current bikes alone, Indian is addressing riders who bought their bagger years ago, exactly the kind of long-haul owner behind the bagger that rewards riders who never trade up. ARO Against Screamin' Eagle And The Years Ahead Indian MotorcycleOne slip-on offering does not topple a whole catalog of performance parts that Harley-Davidson has spent decades curating. Screamin' Eagle offers a deep, dealer-backed upgrade path covering a plethora of hardware, the sort that feeds the Harley-Davidson with the biggest V-twin engine today, and that ARO cannot match, at least today. What Indian, however, holds to its advantage is current heat in the form of an active championship-winning program feeding parts into the pipeline as the trophies stack up.Indian has confirmed that air intakes and performance hard parts are coming next, and this roadmap signals a company that’s settling in for the longer contest over who keeps the customer spending for years after the bike is paid off. Are they late to the game, all things considered? Maybe, but it’s the same considered approach that already makes Indian's take on luxury feel more thoughtful than flashy.