Range anxiety might finally have met its match. BMW’s new i3 50 xDrive claims a staggering 559-mile WLTP range, potentially making it the longest-range production EV on the planet. That’s 196 miles more than Tesla’s Model 3 Long Range manages on the EPA cycle—the kind of leap that could fundamentally change how you think about electric road trips.
Power and Performance That Backs the Range Claims
Dual motors deliver 469 horsepower while a revolutionary chassis computer promises true sports sedan dynamics.
The i3 50 xDrive packs dual electric motors generating 469 hp and 476 lb-ft of torque through BMW’s all-wheel-drive system. More intriguing is the “Heart of Joy” chassis computer, which processes driving inputs 10 times faster than previous BMW systems. This isn’t just marketing speak—the computer constantly adjusts acceleration, braking, and torque distribution in real-time, promising to preserve that Ultimate Driving Machine feel in electric form.
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BMW’s sixth-generation eDrive technology and new cylindrical battery cells enable what the company calls 30% better efficiency than its previous EVs. The system manages roughly 108 kWh of usable capacity through a cell-to-pack design that eliminates intermediate modules for better energy density.
Image: BMW
The Tech Stack Behind Those Big Numbers
Purpose-built platform and 800-volt architecture separate this from adapted gas-car EVs.
Unlike BMW’s current electric models, which adapt existing gas-car platforms, the i3 rides on the ground-up Neue Klasse architecture. The 800-volt electrical system supports DC fast charging up to 400kW—among the highest rates announced for any production car. BMW claims you can add 249 miles of range in just 10 minutes under optimal conditions.
The car also supports bidirectional charging, turning your sedan into a mobile power station for your home during outages. That WLTP range translates to roughly 440-450 miles on the EPA cycle, still comfortably ahead of today’s long-range champions like the Lucid Air.
When Reality Meets the Road
Production starts this August at BMW’s historic Munich plant, with first deliveries arriving as 2027 models.
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Here’s where things get real. Starting in August 2026, BMW’s Munich plant—the same facility that built the original 2002—will begin producing the i3 exclusively. First customer deliveries happen this fall, with U.S. buyers getting 2027 model-year cars. Expected pricing hovers around $50,000-$55,000, positioning the i3 against the Tesla Model 3 and Polestar 2.
The bigger story: From 2027 onward, Munich goes all-electric, underscoring just how seriously BMW takes this platform. The i3 represents BMW’s first genuine attempt at an electric sports sedan rather than an electrified gas car.
Whether those range claims hold up in independent testing will determine if this is truly revolutionary—or just really, really good marketing. Either way, Tesla’s dominance in premium EVs just got more complicated.
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