2027 BMW X5 Brings Neue Klasse Style and the First All-Electric iX5 to the Lineup

The BMW X5 has come a long way since the original model arrived in 1999 and helped prove that a luxury SUV could still carry the spirit of a sport sedan. Now, nearly three decades later, the 2027 BMW X5 is preparing to move into its fifth generation with one of the most important overhauls in the nameplate’s history. The big news is not just a fresh design or a more advanced cabin, but the arrival of the first all-electric iX5, giving BMW’s long-running midsize luxury SUV its broadest powertrain lineup yet.

Visually, the 2027 X5 steps into BMW’s Neue Klasse era with a cleaner and more modern look. The proportions remain familiar, but the wheelbase grows by 2.4 inches, which BMW says helps improve rear-seat legroom. The SUV also gets a taller stance, a raised beltline, smoother body sides, narrow vertical kidney grilles, and thin rear lighting that gives the back end a more technical appearance. It is still recognizably an X5, but the detailing is much more futuristic than before.

There are also some design tricks that will likely spark conversation. Traditional door handles give way to touch-capacitive winglets integrated into the pillars, and soft-close doors come standard. Available electrically powered doors add another layer of theater. Up front, the new double-X lighting signature gives the X5 a distinctive face, combining low beams, daytime running lights, side lights, and turn signals into one compact design. For those who prefer a slightly calmer look, one of the internal lighting elements can reportedly be switched off.

The interior takes an even bigger leap. BMW’s new Panoramic iDrive setup replaces the traditional gauge cluster with a full-width information display at the base of the windshield. That means speed, range, navigation prompts, and other core driving information are pushed higher into the driver’s line of sight. A 17.9-inch central infotainment screen anchors the dashboard, while an available 14.6-inch passenger display brings more entertainment and interaction to the front seat.

BMW’s latest cabin philosophy is clearly built around technology, lighting, and atmosphere. The new dual-spoke steering wheel may take some getting used to, especially with its touch-sensitive controls and distinctive shape, but it fits the brand’s broader Neue Klasse direction. Ambient lighting runs through the dash and doors, and the center console adds a more premium feel with a slate-style panel housing key controls like the parking brake, hazard lights, and rear-window defrost.

The headline powertrain is the new iX5 60 xDrive, the first fully electric version of the X5. It uses dual electric motors, one at each axle, with a reported 570 horsepower and 593 pound-feet of torque. BMW estimates a 0-to-60 mph time of 4.4 seconds, which puts this family-sized electric SUV firmly in performance territory. More importantly, the iX5 is expected to offer an estimated 435 miles of driving range, giving it one of the more impressive projected range figures in the luxury electric SUV segment.

Under the skin, the iX5 uses BMW’s sixth-generation eDrive technology with an 800-volt electrical architecture and a large 144-kWh battery pack. The cylindrical battery cells are said to offer 20% higher energy density than BMW’s previous prismatic cells, helping improve both range and charging performance. On a suitable DC fast charger, BMW claims the iX5 can charge at up to 460 kW and move from 10% to 80% in about 22 minutes, numbers that show just how serious BMW is about making the electric X5 a true long-distance luxury SUV.

For buyers not ready to go fully electric, BMW is keeping plenty of familiar choices in the lineup. The X5 40 and X5 40 xDrive continue with a turbocharged 3.0-liter inline-six, now tuned to 394 horsepower and 428 pound-feet of torque. BMW says that is enough to move the gas-powered models to 60 mph in 5.1 seconds. A V-8-powered performance version is also planned, keeping traditional BMW SUV muscle in the conversation.

The plug-in hybrid X5 50e xDrive may end up being the sweet spot for many buyers. It pairs the updated inline-six with a 194-horsepower electric motor integrated into the eight-speed automatic transmission, producing a combined 483 horsepower and 516 pound-feet of torque. A 27-kWh battery pack gives it an estimated 44 miles of electric-only range, making it useful for short daily drives while still offering gasoline flexibility for longer trips. BMW also plans diesel and hydrogen versions for certain markets, with the hydrogen fuel-cell technology developed in partnership with Toyota.

Pricing starts at $71,250 for the rear-wheel-drive 2027 BMW X5 40, while the all-wheel-drive X5 40 xDrive begins at $73,550. The X5 50e xDrive plug-in hybrid starts at $78,950, and the all-electric iX5 60 xDrive opens at $81,250. The X5 40 xDrive is expected to begin the rollout in October, with the X5 40, X5 50e xDrive, and iX5 60 xDrive following in the first quarter of 2027. For a model that helped define the modern luxury SUV, the new X5 looks ready to stretch that legacy into a much more electrified future.














Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Previous post Why Efficient Logistics Is the Driving Force Behind the Automotive Industry