BMW Unleashes New 5 Series

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

Score one for the vanishingly few people who still prefer a sedan over an SUV (read: just about everyone working here). BMW has introduced a new 5 Series sedan, one which will be available either as a gasser or an EV when it goes on sale later this year.

First up are the 530i and 530i xDrive, powered by a 2.0L turbocharged four making 255 horsepower and 295 lb.-ft of torque. An 8-speed automatic is the sole transmission choice, regardless the number of driven wheels, and 60 mph should be yours in a hair under 6 seconds. Those of you seeking a slightly hotter gasoline-fed option will be pointed towards the 540i xDrive – until the inevitable M variants appear – which packs a 3.0L inline-six turbo good for 375 horses and a maximum of 398 lb.-ft of torque. Those are healthy increases (40 and 52, respectively) over the old cars.

Further up the food chain we find a pair of trims which start with the letter i, a vowel which BMW uses to denote its electric wares. Why not e, you ask? Such are the mysteries of Munich. Setting an opening bid for the all-electric fünf is the i5 eDrive40 with an electric motor on the rear wheels belting out 335 ponies and 295 lb.-ft of twist. Not enough? Then check out the i5 M60 xDrive which appends another motor to up front, creating all-wheel drive and 590 horsepower with a roughly like amount of torque.


The lithium-ion battery is the same across both the 40 and 60, with a usable energy content of 84.3 kWh and a maximum charging rate of 205 kW. The latter means it will be able to hoover up fresh electrons from suitably burly fast chargers to the tune of juicing itself from 10 – 80 percent in about half an hour. Interestingly, the more powerful i5 has a staggered tire setup, with 275s in the rear instead of 245s all around. Four-wheel steering is available.

You’ll have noticed the new styling by this time, and we’ll let you draw yer own conclusions. At least BMW restrained itself from any 4 Series or XM grille shenanigans here. In true German form, roughly eleventy billion pages of information is available about the new interior, though the upshot is it mimics much of what is now found in the 7 Series. Enormous curved displays are available, driving and parking active helper abound, ventilation registers are nearly invisible, and a variety of styling options ensure you don’t have the same interior as your neighbours. We’ll point your eyes to That Shifter and infotainment dial, as well.


In 2022, BMW sold 20,589 of the sedans in North America, a sum nearly twice the volume of the 2 Series and roughly a couple thousand units shy of the X4 and X6 combined. King of the Hill is, as you may expect, the X5 which found 82,372 homes on this continent in 2022, comprising nearly one-quarter of all BMWs sold in this neck of the woods last year.

Prices start at $57,900 for the four-banger, $64,900 for the six pot, and $66,800 for the EV. The global market launch of BMW’s new 5 Series will begin in October 2023.


[Images: BMW]


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Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

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  • Zerofoo Zerofoo on May 26, 2023

    I haven't admired the look of a BMW since the 90s.

  • Bobby D'Oppo Bobby D'Oppo on May 26, 2023

    The loss of the V8 is very sad but certainly no big surprise. The design is more generic than the last 5er but does make this model look more "current" than the 5 has since at least the F10's first year.


    It's great to see BMW continuing to experiment with different design languages and I believe this boxy "geometric" detailing they've been playing around with serves the 5 series particularly well. There's some design cues we've seen on other models and from other brands but it all blends into a surprisingly coherent package that seems more handsome every time it catches the eye. Overall, a very clean and well proportioned assemblage of coachwork that clears a lit path for more enhanced versions down the line.



  • ED I don't know what GM is thinking.I have a 2020 one nice vehicle.Got rid of Camaro and was going to buy one.Probably won't buy another GM product.Get rid of all the head honchos at GM.This company is a bunch of cheapskates building junk that no one wants.
  • Lostjr Sedans have been made less practical, with low rooflines and steeply raked A pillars. It makes them harder to get in and out of. Probably harder to put a kid in a child seat. Sedans used to be more family oriented.
  • Bob Funny how Oldsmobile was offering a GPS system to help if you were lost, yet GM as a company was very lost. Not really sure that they are not still lost. They make hideous looking trucks, Cadillac is a crappy Chevy pretending to be fancy. To be honest, I would never step in a GM show room now or ever. Boring, cheap ugly and bad resale why bother. I get enough of GM when i rent on trips from airports. I have to say, does anybody at GM ever drive what everyone else drives? Do they ever then look at what crap they put out in style fit and finish? Come on, for real, do they? Cadillac updated slogan should be " sub standard of the 3rd world", or " almost as good as Tata motors". Enough said.
  • Sam Jacobs I want a sedan. When a buy a car or even rent one, I don’t want to ride up high. I don’t want a 5-door. I want a trunk to keep my stuff out of sight. It’s quieter, cars handle better, I don’t need to be at the same height as a truck. I have a 2022 Subaru Legacy Touring XT, best car ever, equipped as a luxury sedan, so quick and quiet. I don’t understand automakers’ decisions to take away sedans or simply stop updating them — giving up the competition. The Camry and Accord should not be our only choices. Impala and Fusion were beautiful when they were axed.
  • Spamvw I think you need to remember WHY the big 2 and 1/2 got out of the car business. Without going political, the CAFE standards signed into law meant unless you had a higher gas mileage fleet, you couldn't meet the standards.The Irony is that, the law made sedans so small with low roof lines, that normal people migrated to SUV's and Trucks. Now we get worse mileage than before.
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