BMW Says Its New EVs Will Charge Faster, Drive Farther, and Use Smarter Motors
The 2027 BMW iX3 SUV and its i3 sedan stablemate will go farther on less electricity that can be replenished quicker and more conveniently.
While the four brains and “heart of joy” electronic architecture powering BMW’s coming new Neue Klasse models has been grabbing all the headlines, the German automaker’s sixth-generation electrical architecture is new enough to warrant a closer look, as well. Just as the 2027 BMW iX3 aims to entice owners to use its driver assist systems by making them less annoying and more cooperative, so is it aiming to reduce or eliminate the pain points around driving range and battery charging.
Battery: Out with Prismatic, in with Cylindrical
BMW says its sixth-generation electrical architecture was developed from a blank slate, allowing it to evaluate all available options. This resulted in scrapping the previous battery pack’s densely packaged prismatic cells in favor of new, BMW-designed cylindrical units that boast sufficiently improved energy density to overcome their seemingly looser packaging relative to the relatively rectilinear prismatic predecessors.
The cells themselves measure 46mm in diameter and 95mm in height, and because a cylinder resists outward pressure more effectively than a box, more uniform pressure can be applied to the layers of electrodes and electrolytes with a thinner shell casing, maximizing active material. Cylindrical cells also present shorter heat paths for more uniform temperature distribution. Inactive material is further minimized by doing away with modules for a direct cell-to-pack approach. The energy density of the 108.7-kWh battery pack is improved by 20 percent according to BMW, but even more weight and space are saved by employing a pack-to-open-body approach, where the battery pack effectively forms the vehicle floor.
Lighter, More Efficient, Cheaper Motors
BMW pioneered its externally excited synchronous motors (EESM) on the 2020 iX3 (only sold in Europe and China) and subsequently used them for the BMW i4 compact sedan and iX SUV models sold here, powering one or both axles. While this design can’t quite match the peak torque density of a permanent-magnet machine, its ability to weaken its magnetic field makes it more efficient at higher speeds. The updated sixth-gen variant realizes incremental improvements in cooling and packaging efficiency, and it swaps in an asynchronous induction type motor at the front axle.
This motor type tends to be considerably cheaper to build. It's also lighter and somewhat smaller while nearly matching the freewheeling efficiency of an EESM when no torque is required. Finally, these motors are powered by silicon-carbide (SiC) inverter technology. Altogether, BMW says the sixth-gen motor setup reduces energy losses by 40 percent, manufacturing costs by 20 percent, and mass by 10 percent.
Better Public Charging Experience
The big numbers—800-volt architecture capable of 400-kW DC fast-charging speeds, good for adding up to 230 miles of range in as little as 10 minutes—are just the foundation. BMW also seeks to eliminate the pain points of trip planning and charging through AI-based improvements to its MyBMW app’s route-planning service. By sensing and reporting actual (not claimed) maximum charge rates at various stations as reported by users, charging-time prediction accuracy is continuously improved, and by fine-tuning charger locations based on where cars actually plug in, drivers won’t find themselves searching a location for the plugs. The app will also predict the cost of charging at various locations and handle billing. (These features are rolling out to all BMW EV owners in 2026.)
Bi-Directional and Home Charging
All Neue Klasse vehicles will be capable of exporting power—either 3,600 watts of glamping juice via a three-outlet power strip that plugs into the NACS socket or 19.2 kW worth of whole-home power when connected to a properly wired BMW Wallbox Professional system. Vehicle-to-grid capability will be available in Germany at launch, and BMW says its customers could see an annual benefit of as much as 250 euro simply for allowing the grid access to the power in their batteries (respecting the customer’s preset minimum state-of-charge settings). V2G compliance for other regions will follow.
Bottom-Line Sixth-Gen Electrical Efficiency
Add up the reduced motor and inverter losses and the improved battery efficiency, then figure in the iX3’s sleek aerodynamics, and BMW is claiming a driving efficiency of 15.1 kWh/100 km. That boils down to 4.1 miles/kWh in quasi-American terms. For reference, over two years and 30,717 miles of use, our Tesla Model Y—long a paragon of electric SUV efficiency—averaged 3.1 mi/kWh. We very much look forward to a long-term test of what BMW casts as its most significant new vehicle line since the 1960s.