BMW IX vs Nissan Sukura

What's the difference?

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BMW IX
BMW IX

$136,900 - $233,400

2026 price

Nissan Sukura
Nissan Sukura

2024 price

Summary

2026 BMW IX
2024 Nissan Sukura
Safety Rating

Engine Type
0.0L

Fuel Type
Electric

-
Fuel Efficiency
0.0L/100km (combined)

-
Seating
5

-
Dislikes
  • Huge battery should mean more range
  • Lack of physical controls
  • No cover on sunroof

  • Not enough driving range for Australia
  • A city that EV that should never leave it
  • More power would be nice
2026 BMW IX Summary

When the BMW iX first showed up a few years ago, it was a promising look at what BMW seemed capable of when it comes to electric cars.

While mildly flawed, the iX was fast, comfortable and felt properly premium. Now it’s had a decent update, with the iX xDrive45 M Sport here to replace the former entry-level xDrive 40.

BMW claims among other mechanical and tech updates a power increase of 25 per cent, a 30 per cent greater energy content for the battery, a 38 per cent increase in driving range and a 17 per cent faster charging rate.

But in the time since the iX launched, there have been big strides in the premium electric SUV space, including new arrivals from European opposition like the Polestar 3; even a new American in the form of the Cadillac Lyriq.

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2024 Nissan Sukura Summary

It is no secret that the Chinese brands have taken Australia’s affordable EV market by storm. The three most affordable electric models in Australia are all Chinese, and all start under $40k.

But this is the Nissan Sakura, a Japanese-market EV that has global potential, with the brand’s most senior executives saying they want to bring cheaper electric vehicles to the masses.

How cheap? Well this one starts at around 2.5m yen, which is less than $27,000.

So, does Nissan have something here that can upset the cheap EV apple cart? Let’s go find out.

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Deep dive comparison

2026 BMW IX 2024 Nissan Sukura

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