BMW News

Best SUVs coming in 2026
By Laura Berry · 02 Dec 2025
The age of SUVs is firmly upon us, and carmakers are rolling out high-riding wagons at an astonishing rate.
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BMW’s new approach could be huge for Oz
By Tim Gibson · 01 Dec 2025
BMW looks to introduce a new type of hybrid.
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Best Family Cars Australia 2026
By Dom Tripolone · 30 Nov 2025
2026 might be one of the best years for Australian families on the hunt for a new ride.
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What you must know before buying a used car
By Tim Gibson · 20 Nov 2025
A new safety report has rated some popular used cars.Monash University’s Accident Research Centre Used Car Safety Ratings for 2025 have been revealed, with 23 new vehicles added to the handbook that covers vehicles built between 1982 and 2023.Top picks of the newly added vehicles were the 2013-22 Ford Transit van, 2014-21 BMW 2 Series, 2019-23 Mazda CX-30, 2017-23 Mitsubishi Eclipse Cross and 2018-23 Subaru Forester.The report revealed the average risk of being killed or seriously injured across all road users involved in a crash is 34 per cent lower in a vehicle manufactured from 2022 onwards, compared to 20 years ago. The ratings report looked at crash data analysing more than 9.5 million vehicles and 2.6 million road users in Australia and New Zealand between 1987 and 2022. It rated 561 vehicle models that were built between 1982 and 2023 looking at factors such as crash location, driver age and the number of vehicles involved. It measured safety through an overall rating with three categories: driver safety, other road user safety and crash avoidance. All are ranked out of five.Certain vehicles received a ‘Safer Pick’, where they scored five stars for overall and driver protection, with at least four stars for other road user safety and crash avoidance. Almost all 'Safer Pick' vehicles are available second-hand for under $25,000 and more than half priced below $10,000, according to Monash University.The report made particular note of the high risk attached to ute crashes, with only one ute achieving a five-star overall rating, and 70 per cent one or two stars.Some of this real-world data does not line up with ANCAP safety ratings. The Ford Mustang, manufactured from 2015-2022, received a two-star rating, which was later upgraded to three-stars with ANCAP. Yet, it achieved a near all-excellent rating in real-world crashes, according to the data.The full data set is available here.
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The brands which are keeping Chinese rivals at bay
By Tim Gibson · 11 Nov 2025
These luxury brands are having a smashing time in the SUV game.
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This tech could change EVs forever
By Tim Gibson · 23 Oct 2025
A new battery breakthrough could revolutionise electric cars.
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Convertibles are bad in every way | Opinion
By Laura Berry · 12 Oct 2025
Recently one of my colleagues wrote an opinion piece praising the virtues of convertibles and sadly made the observation that affordable new ones have now become extremely rare. I’d like to set the record straight and clarify my own position on cars without a roof — they’re terrible in every way.
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Is this iconic BMW design element gone for good?
By Tim Nicholson · 10 Oct 2025
BMW has revealed the look of all of its future models with the iX3, but don’t expect every new BMW to look the same from here out.
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European EV gets a nip and tuck
By Tim Gibson · 09 Oct 2025
A revamped all-electric luxury sedan will hit the Aussie market before the end of this year.
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15,000-plus cars recalled for fire risk
By James Cleary · 09 Oct 2025
The Federal Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development, Communication, Sport and the Arts has issued a safety recall notice impacting 15,352 BMWs across multiple models sold new in Australia from 2016 to 2020.It confirms that in examples of the 320d, 320i, 330i, 420i, 430i, 520d, 520i, 530i, 620d, 630i, X3, X4 and Z4, “Due to a manufacturing defect, inadequate sealing of the starter motor may allow moisture to enter into the unit. If this occurs, corrosion may result in the engine not starting.”The department said, “In rare cases, it could also cause a short circuit leading to overheating of the starter motor and in the worst case, to a vehicle fire while parked or driving.“A vehicle fire could increase the risk of injury or death to vehicle occupants, other road users, bystanders and/or damage to property,” it said.Owners of affected vehicles will be contacted by BMW requesting they schedule an appointment immediately with their preferred authorised BMW dealer to replace the starter motor free of charge.Alternatively, BMW Australia can be contacted on a dedicated Recall Hotline (1800 243 675), via email (info@bmw.com.au) or through a recall-specific website (https://www.recall.bmw.com.au).
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