Skip advert
Advertisement
Road tests

New BMW M4 Competition 2021 review

The new BMW M4 Competition coupe is a great all-round performance car, but it comes at a cost

Overall Auto Express Rating

4.5 out of 5

Find your BMW 4 Series
Offers from our trusted partners on this car and its predecessors...
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Customers got an average £1000 more vs part exchange quotes
Advertisement

Verdict

The M4’s design is the obvious talking point, but beneath its dramatic makeover lies a car with a broader breadth of ability than before. It’s easy to live with day to day and now delivers its thundering performance in a more user-friendly and manageable way. As a road car the M4 is superb, a track assessment will come, but from this early drive BMW looks to have nailed it. Just be prepared to pay for it. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

It's always quite an occasion when a new M car comes along, but the arrival of the all-new BMW M3 and M4 have perhaps been the most anticipated in a generation. The design overhaul will be a topic that is unlikely to recede for some time, but viewed from a mechanical as well as a marketing point of view, the latest M4 has also undergone quite a shift. 

Let's start with the cost. At a whopping £76,055 - that’s before you even glance and BMW’s exhaustive and not-so-cheap options list - the M4 has moved quite some distance from the £56,356 coupe that arrived in 2013. The M4 Competition in 2016 nudged that figure up to £60,055, but this all new version is in another league entirely.

And in that league sits another famous and highly capable German sports car - the Porsche 911. Some might argue that the basic 911 isn’t a direct rival given that the latest 992 generation has morphed into a softer GT car. But if you have almost £80,000 to spend on a fast, practical two-door coupe you’ll almost certainly be considering it - or at least you should be. 

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

The version we have here, once fully loaded with an assortment of options, actually costs an eye-watering £87,495. The big ticket items include the £6,750 M Carbon pack, which adds admittedly very smart carbon fibre bucket seats and exterior carbon fibre detailing. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

BMW’s Laserlights (£1,500), the Comfort Pack, adding a heated steering wheel and electric boot (£990), and Parking assistant Plus (£650) inflate the price to that figure you see above. In truth, it doesn’t take too much more digital box ticking to make this M4 a near-£100,000 car. The Ultimate Package (£11,750) fancy BMW Individual paint work (£3,985), M Driver’s Pack (£2,095) take it close to six figures. Really.

The big news under the skin is that the M3 and M4 both go four-wheel-drive, but the xDrive system will be an option costing around £2,000. However, you’ll have to wait until the summer to order an M3 or M4 with the system as the early cars are rear-wheel drive only. 

UK buyers are also restricted to the flagship Competition models - no hardship - which means the new twin-turbo six-cylinder engine churns out a thumping 503bhp and 650Nm of torque. Power is diverted to the rear wheels in this case via an eight-speed auto rather than the dual-clutch unit used by the old M4. The reason for ditching the dual clutch is down to the fact that engineers got the best results with the xDrive four-wheel drive system using the traditional auto. 

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Enough of the preamble, then, what’s the M4 actually like to drive? On the road, mightily impressive. The M4 has a pretty solid foundation to work from - given a standard 420d is better to drive than a diesel coupe has any right to be. So hand the car over to the BMW M boffins and throw in a load of extra power and technology and the result was unlikely to be a disappointment. 

The first thing you notice, however, is how relaxed and laid back the M4 appears to be. Despite its snarling snout and flared arches, it’s no more taxing to drive than a 420d; the ride is firm, yes, but its supple and the damping takes the edge of what you’d expect to be harsh road imperfection allowing smooth and pretty easy progress at low speeds. 

In contrast to the old M4, which was, let's be honest, quite feral, this new version feels more mature and more rounded as if it's been shipped off to a high-end German finishing school to clean up its act. 

But BMW’s M division hasn’t forgotten about the M4’s wilder side, and given the level of adjustability you have when it comes to the car’s key parameters, such as engine performance, gearbox ferocity, steering, brake feel and traction control, you can dial the M4 into delivering as much or as little performance as you like.

The caveat here is that there are so many programmable modes and so many different levels to adjust, you could spend a long time trying them all before you find one configuration that suits you. In its most extreme setting with everything in Sport Plus mode the M4 doesn’t feel intimidating because the chassis balance and feeling you get through all of the car’s major controls let you know exactly what’s going on at all times. 

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

The steering is quick off centre, and communicates pretty clearly how much grip you have at the front end. It’s the same at the rear, there’s a huge level of traction despite the amount of power going through the rear wheels only here. Even so, be too aggressive with the throttle and you’ll feel the back axle shimmy through the base of your seat. 

The engine has some serious punch to it, but doesn’t really get into its stride until about 3,000rpm once the turbos really wake up. Once beyond that magic number the engine pulls and pulls with unrelenting force - 0-62mph takes a claimed 3.9 seconds and feels entirely believable. The eight speed-auto cuts cleanly and quickly through the gears on the way up, but does labour a little with its downshifts when you ask for several downchanges in quick succession.

One gripe is that the M4 just doesn’t sound that good; there are no rasps, bangs or barks as you accelerate even with the sports exhaust activated. It all sounds a little tame from inside, and if you turn the sports exhaust off it muffles the noise further still . 

A word on practicality and running costs, not that either of these things are a top priority to M4 buyers, but in the real world you’re looking at 18mpg rather than BMW’s claim of 28mpg. The boot can easily swallow a couple of suitcases and you can drop the middle seat to load through longer items while transporting two people in the back at the same time. 

Anyone approaching six-feet tall will feel their head brush against the roof lining in the rear, but those pricey carbon fibre buckets seats do leave a nice amount of space for you to slide your feet beneath then - so it's more comfortable for adults back there than you might think. 

Model:BMW M4 Competition
Price:£76,055
Engine:3.0-litre 6cyl twin-turbo
Power/torque:503bhp/650Nm
Transmission:Eight-speed automatic, rear-wheel drive 
0-62mph:3.9 seconds
Top speed:155mph
Economy:28.2mpg
CO2:228g/km
On saleNow
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

More on 4 Series M4 Coupe

BMW M4 Competition Pack raises the bar to 444bhp
BMW M4 Competition Pack front
News
14 Jan 2016

BMW M4 Competition Pack raises the bar to 444bhp

The BMW M3 and M4 benefit from a host of upgrades that add more kit and more power
New BMW M4 GTS arrives with a 493bhp, £122k bang
BMW M4 GTS - front
News
6 Oct 2015

New BMW M4 GTS arrives with a 493bhp, £122k bang

Meet BMW's latest lightweight thriller, the BMW M4 GTS. Just 30 are coming to UK, priced at £121,770 each
Audi RS5 vs BMW M4 & BMW M3 drag race
RS5 vs M4 vs M3 drag race
Videos
26 Aug 2015

Audi RS5 vs BMW M4 & BMW M3 drag race

We pit the Audi RS5 against the BMW M4 in this drag race... but for an extra bit of fun, an E92 BMW M3 turned up to join in!
BMW M4 Coupe
BMW M4 front 3/4
Car group tests
21 Jul 2015

BMW M4 Coupe

BMW M4 MotoGP Safety Car review
Road tests
7 Apr 2015

BMW M4 MotoGP Safety Car review

Clever new engine tech on MotoGP Safety Car improves efficiency and performance
Lexus RC F vs BMW M4
Lexus RC F vs BMW M4
Car group tests
1 Apr 2015

Lexus RC F vs BMW M4

471bhp Lexus RC F has on-paper advantage over 425bhp BMW M4. Does it translate to the road?
CES 2015: Lasers light up BMW M4 Concept Iconic Lights
News
7 Jan 2015

CES 2015: Lasers light up BMW M4 Concept Iconic Lights

BMW's new lighting signature previewed for front and rear lights on the M4 performance coupe
BMW M4: 1,000-mile road trip video review
BMW M4 video
Videos
10 Jul 2014

BMW M4: 1,000-mile road trip video review

Video: Mat Watson takes the new BMW M4 on a 1,000-mile road trip to really put it to the test
BMW M4 vs Porsche Cayman S vs Audi RS5
Car group tests
10 Jul 2014

BMW M4 vs Porsche Cayman S vs Audi RS5

We see if new turbo BMW M4 Coupe leaves Porsche and Audi rivals trailing
BMW M4 vs Audi RS5: video track battle
M4 vs RS5
Videos
25 Jun 2014

BMW M4 vs Audi RS5: video track battle

We test the new BMW M4 against the benchmark fast coupe, the Audi RS5, on track
BMW M4 Coupe 2014 review
BMW M4 front cornering
Road tests
13 Jun 2014

BMW M4 Coupe 2014 review

The UK-spec BMW M4 Coupe makes a compelling case for itself
BMW M4 Coupe and Cabriolet spied
BMW M4 Cabriolet front
News
15 Aug 2013

BMW M4 Coupe and Cabriolet spied

BMW M4 Coupe and Carbiolet caught undergoing testing in Europe
Skip advert
Advertisement
BMW M4 spied
BMW M4 Coupe front cornering
News
25 Apr 2013

BMW M4 spied

The new BMW M4 Coupe has been spotted undergoing performance testing at the Nurburgring