2026 BMW i5 xDrive40 Sedan
21" wheels
Electric Hatchback · AWD
Based on battery health, build quality, owner data, EPA range, and market pricing
Above average for 2026 EV Hatchbacks (class avg 65 · top 17%)
Personalize this scoreIs a low score bad?
Last scanned 22 days ago
The 2026 BMW i5 xDrive40 Sedan (21-inch wheels) has 259 miles of EPA range, 205 kW fast charging and a 79 kWh battery, and a mid-pack composite means the records-and-test-drive call matters more than the headline.
Score read
A 70/100 makes this worth comparing, not chasing. The useful split is build quality score at 97/100 versus range and efficiency score at 37/100. Reddit threads cluster around software tech and owner satisfaction — verify both against the service records. If the seller cannot show recall completion, price that risk or move on.
Price context
Used examples are running around $70,600. This trim started from $70,100 new, though options can push the actual sticker higher; treat the market number as your negotiation floor and pull a current KBB Fair Purchase before naming a price.
Who this is for
✓ Good for
- ⏱ Daily commuter ≤50 mi/day, predictable charging
✗ Avoid if you are a
- $ Bargain hunter Best TCO, reliability + low depreciation
Gotchas
- Serviceable Recall paperwork has to match the exact VIN.
Mitigation Use NHTSA and the automaker lookup, then require repair records instead of a verbal promise.
- Built in Range is the easy place to overbuy this trim (37/100).
Mitigation Check your commute, winter margin, and fast-charge plan before you assume the EPA number fits your use.
Pre-purchase inspection
- 1 Run the exact VIN through NHTSA and the automaker recall lookup before discussing price.
- 2 Compare the dashboard range estimate with the EPA 259-mile rating after a full charge.
- 3 Confirm how much of the 8-year/100,000-mile battery warranty remains and whether it transfers.
- 4 If road trips matter, run a short DC fast-charge session and watch whether speed tapers normally.
- 5 Map your normal highway route and winter margin against the EPA range before you treat it as a road-trip car.
VIN status first This model has 1 NHTSA recall record. The exact VIN lookup decides whether the car in front of you is clear.
Complaint context This scan found 0 NHTSA complaint records (0 per 10K VINs, low for any vehicle class). Read the themes below before treating the raw count as the verdict.
Price needs outside confirmation Current market pricing is incomplete, so MSRP should not be used as the deal signal. Compare KBB, J.D. Power, and live listings for this exact trim.
Pricing & Market Value
Score Breakdown
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Vehicle Specifications
The federal $4,000 used-EV credit ended Sept 30, 2025.
But 10 states still run their own used-EV rebate programs — some up to $5,000. Pick your state to see what's available for this trim.
Source & disclaimer
Dealers make ~$3,575 on the average car loan.
After the price is set, the finance manager runs four plays to rebuild margin. Every buyer without a pre-approval is a target. Here's exactly what they run — and what stops each one.
78% of dealer loans carry a hidden +1.13% markup above what the lender actually charges. You never see it — it's buried in the contract. · CFPB
Dealer must match or beat your lender — they can't add margin invisibly. The markup play is dead on arrival.
Once you answer, they stretch the term to hit your number. Median result: $4K less off the price, 12 more months on the loan. · Industry avg
Financing is done. Only the sale price is on the table — and the dealer knows it.
Back-office F&I profit averages $1,975/vehicle, up 8.5% YoY. These products exist — but dealer markup is 4–10x what you'd pay elsewhere. · Dealership Guy
Dealer GAP runs $500–1K. Your insurer sells the same coverage for $100–250 over 5 years. Now you know.
"Your loan fell through — come re-sign." This pulls your APR up +5% on average. It's legal. It works because you've already driven the car home. · Ctr for Responsible Lending
A lender commitment letter means the deal is final. "Pending dealer approval" doesn't apply. You can't be yo-yo'd.
Margin handed to the dealer's finance department — for nothing.
Takes 2 minutes. No obligation to use it — but you'll walk in with all the leverage.
Pre-approval is a soft credit inquiry — no score impact. FICO treats all auto-loan hard pulls within 14 days as one, so you can still shop rates at the dealer.
NHTSA Recalls (1)
BMW of North America, LLC (BMW) is recalling certain 2025 M5 Sportswagon, 2025-2026 M5, 2024-2025 750e xDrive, 2025-2026 550e xDrive, 2023-2025 I7, 2023-2025 7 Series, 2024-2026 i5, and 5 Series vehicles. The electrical wiring harness for the air conditioning system may become damaged during replacement of the cabin air filter.
A damaged wiring harness can short-circuit, increasing the risk of a fire.
Check VIN status at NHTSA.govNHTSA Complaints (0 total · 0 per 10K US vehicles · low for any vehicle class)
No complaints filed with NHTSA for this vehicle.
What Owners Are Saying
"Lease Transfer - 2024 BMW i5 M60 in FL - $1,193 - <19 months Figured I would post here before putting on swapalease but no longer need two cars and looking to swap my 2024 BMW i5 M60 that is in perfect condition, never smoked in, carefully maintained, and is literally my favorite car that I've ever owned. Details: * $1,193 per month with FL taxes * 10,700 miles * 19 months remaining * Basically every package except M Sport (front black grill and spoiler) but has cooling seats which is perfection for the warmer climates * $91k MSRP"
"BMW I5 Touring vs Model S LR 2024 Hi all, We’re currently driving a **BMW i5 Touring eDrive40 (fully loaded)** and recently did a thorough test drive of a **2024 Model S Long Range (built 10/2023, HW4)**. We spent a good amount of time with the car — not just a quick spin — and also compared real-world cargo space using our actual setup: * Stroller + pram frame * Travel bags * The usual family chaos you bring on a weekend trip with 2 small kids And yes — there *is* noticeably more usable space in the Model S. The hatch design and deep trunk make a real difference. From a pure practicality standpoint, the Model S wins. Driving-wise: The BMW drives better. It’s more refined, more planted, more “premium” in how it handles and isolates the road. The Model S definitely doesn’t drive badly — it’s absolutely good enough for us — but it’s not on the same level dynamically as the i5. Now to the part that makes us hesitate. Now that the Model S and X production will stop in Q2 2026. That makes us wonder about the long-term implications of buying one now. The specific car we’re considering: * 2024 Model S Long Range * HW4 * \~10,000 km * Enhanced Autopilot * Free Premium Connectivity for the lifetime of the car * Around 41% cheaper than current new MSRP * Warranty until end of 2027 On paper, that seems like a solid deal. But we’re wondering: * How do you see the future of Model S ownership once production stops? * Will warranty support continue smoothly? * After warranty expires, will parts availability become difficult? * How realistic is it that Tesla would stop pushing meaningful software updates to S/X? * Does the discontinuation make it more of a “halo car”, or a depreciation risk? We’re not new to Tesla — we previously owned a Model Y Performance — so we know the ecosystem. We actually miss Tesla’s navigation and POI search quite a bit in the BMW. But this is a bigger financial decision, and we’re trying to think long-term. Would love to hear thoughts from current Model S owners — especially those who plan to keep theirs well beyond warranty. Thanks 🙌"
"Updated yesterday to the 04/2024.40 version. today my assisted driving plus is missing. the settings greyed out and states “license expired” ?? Anyone else having this issue?? 41.1KRainerM replied Oct 1, 2024 The EV Lounge ElectricBeemer Jan 29, 2025 2026 BMW iX Facelift Revealed BMW announced the new facelifted version of the iX. What do you think of the look? I think they did a good job changing the front of the car, especially the pattern in the grille. 1729PierreLouis replied Jan 30, 2025"
"you're not really caring about a financial decision otherwise you should know already a bmw will cost you thousands only in maintenance as an average case. A Bmw is refined better and this is something I would grant for obvious considering bmw makes cars since more than 100 years and will ask you a considerable premium compared to other brands so nothing new to see here. What bmw or any other carmaker will always miss is the Tesla software, legacy carmakers have this utterly stupid habit of changing their os and hardware with almost every new iteration of the new year car model. Ask bmw drivers from 2021 if their bmw has the same driving assist and capabilities and software like the 2026 bmw. In tesla you already know that 90% of the software is still there. If I was in your place I would take the bmw if I wouldn't care too much about Tesla software and performance to privilege a more traditional and comfortable driving but I would choose Tesla if I would choose by comparing financials and performance and software."
"ChargedUp Apr 4, 2024 What’s on your OTA update wish list? What features and improvements would you like to see BMW include in future OTA software updates? Share your OTA update wish list here and let's see if BMW follows through on what owners want. 116.2KJL72189 replied Jul 9, 2024 2024+ BMW i5 General Discussion Forum RainerM Sep 28, 2024 Updated to 04/2024.40 now assisted driving plus is disabled/expired"
"I have had a i5x40 for about 6 months in Canada. The range shown on the car is all over the place. I have 19” wheels. My epa range should be 430km in nice summer days I get around 400-455km. In winter it is much worse. At the dealer, left inside for a day at 100% charge they got 370km. They put it outside and I got it the next day, temp was 0c and the range was 320km. When it was -15c I was getting 280km. BMW states anything less than 30% of the published range is not a problem They also said the range calculation depends on your driving style outside weather battery temperature on charge… so the range it tells you is fairly accurate I had a Tesla before and it would tell you range but once you started driving, you could lose 2, 3 even 4 km of range for every kilometre you drove in winter. It’s just how they set it up. If you live any super hot climate or super cold, your range is not gonna be great If your temperature is in the 15 to 20 Celsius range you’ll tend to have a pretty good range and if you’re driving style is consistent your full charge range expectancy should be relatively the same That’s what I found They’re coming out with the new ix3. Which is gonna run an 800 V system not the 400 V system. It’s supposed to have better charging better range. But the programming is still the same, so you’ll still have the same calculations on your range which will cost you to fluctuate a lot"
Showing 6 of 8 owner excerpts (sorted by sentiment strength)