Hyundai Nexo vs BMW 220i

What's the difference?

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Hyundai Nexo
Hyundai Nexo

2021 price

BMW 220i
BMW 220i

$14,888 - $29,890

2017 price

Summary

2021 Hyundai Nexo
2017 BMW 220i
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Not Applicable, 0.0L

Turbo 6, 3.0L
Fuel Type
Hydrogen/Electric

Premium Unleaded Petrol
Fuel Efficiency
1.0L/100km (combined)

7.4L/100km (combined)
Seating
5

4
Dislikes
  • You can't actually buy one yet
  • Limited infrastructure
  • Price will be policy-dependent

  • Turbo-petrol fours' lag
  • Tight rear room
  • Fiddly (8sp auto) gear shift
2021 Hyundai Nexo Summary

The first time I drove the Hyundai Nexo it was in a place called Goyang in South Korea.

Goyang was a place of pure contrast. The old Korea clashed with the new as you walked through ancient seafood markets toward the towering Hyundai Motorstudio, an ultra-modernist expression of design, perched like a steel battleship above a simultaneously crumbling and rapidly modernising city. 

Part museum, part design expo, part car dealership of the future, it was as though the whole place was a metaphor for the breakneck pace at which megacorp Chaebols like Hyundai were advancing Korea at a faster rate than its populace could keep up with.

The brand’s Nexo SUV is the same in a lot of ways. It’s a mid-size SUV that might be popular right now, but it contains the technology of the future wrapped in a digestible format for the masses.

Of course, it’s the future from a certain point of view. VW would argue EVs alone are set to drive our brave zero emissions future, but Hyundai is of a different mind.

What you’re looking at here, or so Hyundai’s representatives tell us, is the ultimate replacement for diesel. Long range, high load capacity, and an ultra-fast refuelling time are part of the hydrogen fuel cell promise. One that promises to out-do many of Australia’s qualms with EVs.

A statement of the future it may be, but what’s the Hyundai Nexo actually like as a car? We went to its Australian launch to find out

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2017 BMW 220i Summary

If one is good, two must be better, right? Or twice as good. The question is whether that simple equation adds up for BMW's upgraded 1 and 2 Series siblings – the former, a range of five-door hatches, the latter, a line-up of cabriolets and coupes, with a major addition in the shape of the full-house, performance-focused M2.

Prices are up, and changes are mostly under the skin, so you're not getting  big visual bang for your extra bucks. But the new and improved 2 has plenty to offer when it comes to added spec and tech.

BMW invited us to the new car's Australian launch program along Tasmania's wet and wild west coast.

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Deep dive comparison

2021 Hyundai Nexo 2017 BMW 220i

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