Disclosure: This is sponsored content produced in partnership with Kemimoto. All observations reflect general product research and testing criteria used across the powersports accessory category; specific results will vary by vehicle, terrain, and use case.
Anyone who’s owned a UTV for more than a season knows the truth: the machine you bought off the lot is rarely the machine you actually need for the terrain you ride. Stock windshields fog up. Factory mirrors rattle loose on washboard roads. Cargo space disappears the second you pack for a weekend at camp. That’s where the aftermarket side by side accessories market comes in — and it’s also where a lot of riders get burned by gear that looks good in a product photo and falls apart after two trail rides.
This piece takes a closer look at Kemimoto’s UTV accessory lineup — what the category promises, what actually matters when you’re evaluating gear like this, and where Kemimoto’s approach to side by side parts fits into a rider’s setup.
Why This Category Matters
Side-by-side accessories aren’t a luxury — they’re how a stock machine becomes a purpose-built rig. Whether you’re running trails on weekends, hauling gear on a ranch, hunting in the backcountry, or building out an overlanding setup, the accessories you add determine how well your UTV actually performs for your use case. Storage, weather protection, visibility, and comfort upgrades all compound over a season of riding.
The problem is that off-road gear takes abuse that on-road accessories never see: constant vibration, dust infiltration, water crossings, UV exposure, and temperature swings that can crack cheap plastics or corrode budget hardware within a single season. That’s the bar any serious UTV accessories brand has to clear.
What Riders Should Actually Evaluate
Before naming names, it’s worth laying out the criteria that separate gear worth buying from gear worth skipping. Anyone shopping side by side accessories should be looking at:
Ease of installation. Does it bolt to factory mounting points, or does it require drilling, cutting, or fabrication? Clear instructions and included hardware matter more than most buyers expect going in.
Fitment accuracy. Aftermarket parts are only as good as their fit to your specific make and model. A windshield that’s a quarter-inch off can whistle at speed or let dust straight into the cab.
Material quality. UV-stabilized polyethylene, marine-grade fabric, powder-coated steel — the materials used directly predict how gear ages. Cheap plastics go brittle in the sun; cheap fabric mildews after one wet camping trip.
Durability under real conditions. Mud, dust, rock strikes, branch scrapes — trail riding is hard on everything bolted to a vehicle. Gear needs to survive that, not just a showroom.
Weather resistance. Rain, snow, and dust are not edge cases for off-road riders — they’re Tuesday. Sealed seams, drainage design, and corrosion-resistant hardware are non-negotiable.
Storage convenience and rider comfort. Accessories should make the ride better, not add friction — awkward latches, poor accessibility, or bulky designs that get in the way defeat the purpose.
Value for money. Not the cheapest option — the option that survives long enough to be worth what you paid.
Where Kemimoto Fits In
Kemimoto has built out a fairly broad catalog of side by side parts — windshields, mirrors, storage bags, roofs, doors, and cab enclosures among them — aimed at riders who want to upgrade without going custom-fabrication levels of involved. A few things stand out about how the category is approached:
Installation is designed around factory mounting points. Most of the lineup is built to use existing bolt patterns on popular platforms like Polaris RZR, Can-Am Maverick, and Honda Talon models, rather than requiring aftermarket brackets or drilling. For riders who want to swap gear seasonally — say, a windshield for winter riding and mesh doors for summer — that kind of straightforward compatibility is the difference between a project and a ten-minute job in the garage.
Storage solutions are built with actual trail use in mind. Cargo and door bags in the lineup are designed with riders’ real pain points in mind: things sliding out on rough terrain, gear getting soaked in a downpour, and dash clutter with nowhere to put a phone, gloves, or a multi-tool. Reinforced stitching and water-resistant fabric are common specs across the storage line, which matters more than most riders realize until they’ve had a bag fail on them mid-trip.
Windshields and mirrors focus on vibration resistance. Anyone who’s ridden washboard roads or rock-crawled a technical section knows that mirrors and windshields take a beating from constant vibration, not just impact. Kemimoto’s mounting hardware for these components is built to resist loosening over time — a detail that matters far more on trail than it does in a parking lot demo.
The catalog spans multiple riding disciplines. Whether the use case is trail riding, overlanding gear setups, hunting rigs, or ranch work, there’s a broad enough range of off-road gear in the lineup that most riders can outfit an entire machine from one place rather than piecing together parts from five different vendors with inconsistent fitment.
What Riders Should Consider
No accessory line is perfect for every rider, and it’s worth being clear-eyed about the trade-offs:
- Universal-fit items require more diligence. Where Kemimoto offers vehicle-specific fitment, installation tends to be straightforward. Universal or semi-universal products (some racks, some tie-down systems) require more careful measuring and occasional minor adjustment — standard for the aftermarket category, but worth knowing going in.
- Budget-conscious pricing means checking reviews on newer releases. Kemimoto positions itself in the value-to-mid tier of the powersports accessories market, which is a strength for riders comparing cost against premium competitors — but it also means it’s worth reading recent buyer feedback on newer product releases before committing, the way you would with any accessory brand.
- Heavy-duty ranch or commercial use may call for premium-tier upgrades. For riders putting serious daily hours on a machine in commercial or heavy ranch use, it’s worth comparing mid-tier accessories against premium options for wear items like doors and roofs specifically.
Who This Gear Is Best For
Kemimoto’s UTV accessories lineup is a reasonable fit for:
- Weekend trail riders who want reliable upgrades without a custom fabrication budget
- Overlanding and camping riders who need functional storage and weather protection
- Hunters who need quiet, durable cargo solutions and weatherproofing
- DIY vehicle upgraders who want straightforward, bolt-on installation
- Riders comparing value-tier options against premium competitors for a full accessory build-out
It’s a less obvious fit for riders who need highly specialized, application-specific components (competition racing setups, for instance) where purpose-built aftermarket brands may offer narrower but more specialized options.
Final Verdict
The side by side accessories market is crowded, and a lot of it is built to look good in a listing photo rather than survive a season of actual trail use. What separates the gear worth buying is fitment accuracy, material quality that holds up to weather and vibration, and installation that doesn’t require a fabrication shop.
Kemimoto’s catalog checks those boxes for a broad range of riders — particularly those looking to outfit a UTV across multiple use cases (trail, camp, hunt, haul) without assembling parts from a dozen different brands. As with any accessory purchase, matching the specific product to your vehicle’s make/model and your primary use case is the deciding factor, so it’s worth browsing the full UTV accessories collection against your own build list before ordering.
For riders building out a full setup, Kemimoto’s site is worth a look as a one-stop source for windshields, mirrors, storage, and cab accessories across most major
