BMW M4 vs Lexus LS500H (hybrid)

What's the difference?

VS
BMW M4
BMW M4

2025 price

Lexus LS500H (hybrid)
Lexus LS500H (hybrid)

2021 price

Summary

2025 BMW M4
2021 Lexus LS500H (hybrid)
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Turbo 6, 3.0L

V6, 3.5L
Fuel Type
Premium Unleaded Petrol

Premium Unleaded/Electric
Fuel Efficiency
10.2L/100km (combined)

6.6L/100km (combined)
Seating
4

5
Dislikes
  • Uncomfortable in the city
  • Hard-edged seats a necessary evil
  • Fuel bill will be sizeable

  • Styling looking a little dated
  • Multimedia system too downmarket and also looking dated
  • A bit more driver involvement would be terrific
2025 BMW M4 Summary

To say the BMW M4 CS is a hot ticket in Australia is something of an understatement.

Consider this. There is an even more expensive one, the M4 CS Edition VR46 – at a cool $346,900 – and it sold out in less than an hour. Now, granted, Australia only got four examples, but still, demand was running hot.

That car makes this one, the regular M4 CS, seem like an absolute steal. It's only $254,900 (yes, the word 'only' is doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence), and it shares the same upgrades, and makes the same monstrous power, as the VR46 – for Valentino Rossi’s 46th birthday – only it does it for around $100K less.

See? A bargain. At least, that's how I'd be justifying it to myself if I had a quarter of a million burning a hole in my pocket.

So, this or a Porsche 911? Read on.

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2021 Lexus LS500H (hybrid) Summary

Lexus is returning to its roots and playing to traditional strengths with the 2021 LS update, as the Japanese luxury brand braces itself for the imminent release of an all-new Mercedes-Benz S-Class.

On sale now from $195,953 before on-road costs, the facelift ushers in a raft of comfort, refinement, driveability and technological upgrades, striving to deliver the quietest and most luxurious experience in the upper luxury sedan segment.

The blink-and-you'll-miss-it makeover runs to redesigned headlights, wheels, bumpers and tail-light lenses, as well as the inevitable multimedia screen update, improved seating revised trim and better safety.

Along with an all-in equipment list and unparalleled levels of ownership benefits, the goal is to emulate the dramatic differences that existed between the LS and its mostly German competition more than 30 years ago, which helped make Lexus a disruptor, decades before the term was even coined.

The MY21 range will continue offering two grades – the racier F Sport and opulent Sports Luxury – in either V6 twin-turbo petrol LS 500 or V6 petrol-electric hybrid LS 500h powertrain choices, as per the XF50-generation's Australian debut back in late 2017.

The question is: has Lexus gone far enough with its limousine flagship?

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Deep dive comparison

2025 BMW M4 2021 Lexus LS500H (hybrid)

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