BMW M2 2026 review | A riotous, rear-driven sports coupe
BMW M2 Coupé cars for sale
4.0
Expert review
Pros
Fantastic pace and handling
Calm and civilised ride
Upmarket interior
Cons
Steering could use more weight and feel
Rear seats are rather small
Some optional kit should be standard

The CarGurus verdict
All things considered, the M2 is a hugely impressive car, both in terms of its engineering and its general dynamic ability. Grabbed by the scruff of the neck, it has the capacity to dazzle with its searing pace, deft handling ability and instantaneous responses. Yet treated more gently, it can also cosset enough to make it a genuinely pleasant everyday car.
It excels in other areas, too, with robust quality, decent practicality (compared with two-seat sports car rivals, at least) and plenty of on-board technology. Sure, there are a couple of weaknesses, but none of them are glaring, certainly not enough to put you in any doubt that the car’s rather lofty price is justified. Put simply, if you can afford an M2, and it fits into your lifestyle, you will absolutely adore it.

What is the BMW M2?
The M2 is the entry-level BMW M car. But don’t imagine that makes it a watered-down imitation of other offerings from the German marque – nothing could be further from the truth. The M2 might be small in the M car stakes, but we assure you it's the real deal.
That’s no colossal surprise given the M2 is based on the BMW 2 Series Coupe, which is an impressive car in its own right – particularly in sporty M240i guise. The M2 takes the general abilities of that vehicle and cranks everything up to 11. BMW has squeezed in a revised version of the barnstorming six-cylinder engine from the larger M3 and M4 for even more power, with an active differential and adaptive suspension fitted as standard. The latter is one of myriad dynamic variables, including the steering, throttle response, brakes and exhaust volume, that can be configured via the many programmable driving modes.
Revealed to the world in late 2022, the current generation of BMW M2 is the most extreme yet. It follows a familiar recipe, being rear-wheel drive and having a big turbocharged six-cylinder engine up front, but larger dimensions compared to the previous M2 mean it feels less like the baby of the M lineup. The car was updated in 2024 and a CS version arrived in mid-2025, the latter offering even more power, torque and performance.
In terms of the cars the M2 competes against, that’s a bit of a tricky one because direct rivals are few and far-between. There are similarly priced two-seat sports cars such as the Alpine A110 and (recently discontinued) Porsche 718 Cayman that don’t offer the practicality of the BMW, compact coupes like the Toyota GR86 that don’t have the power, and muscle cars such as the Ford Mustang that are simply much larger. The fastest versions of the Audi TT feel like the closest match, although these are no longer offered for sale as new cars.
If you don’t mind a hatchback body style instead of a coupe, you might be tempted by the Audi RS3 or a Mercedes-AMG A45 S. There’s always been a friendly rivalry between the three big German marques, most notably with the BMW M3, Audi RS4 and Mercedes-AMG C63. While the BMW is a conceptually different car to both the Audi and Mercedes, all could be worth considering if you’re in the market for a small(ish) performance car. The RS3 is also available as a saloon.

How practical is it?
There’s plenty of space in the front of the M2 Coupe, plus a good amount of storage. The centre console has a large lidded cubby and two cupholders, plus you get deep door pockets and a decent glovebox.
It won’t surprise you to learn, however, that space isn’t so generous in the two rear seats. Legroom is actually surprisingly good for what is a very compact car with a short wheelbase, but headroom is in short supply. Children will be fine, but adults and teenagers won’t feel comfortable if they’re anything over five-and-a-half feet tall. Six-footers will struggle to fit at all. Then again, there are no rear seats in a Porsche Cayman or several other comparable cars, so it seems churlish to complain too much.
The M2’s boot is a decent size, at 390 litres, making it fine for a large weekly shop, but the shallow opening and the chunky load lip make it tricky to load larger, bulkier items. These are better passed through the rear doors when you drop the standard 40:20:40 split-folding rear seats (more versatile than the 60:40 arrangement in some cars) but be aware that the aperture this opens up between the boot and the passenger compartment is small and awkwardly shaped. The rear seat-backs also lie at an angle when they’re folded, leaving you with a slight slope and a step in the extended load area.
The M2 is more impressive in terms of interior quality. There are plenty of stitched leather and carbon fibre-effect finishes that make the cabin feel sophisticated as well as sporty, while the large, glossy-looking digital screens that dominate the cabin also deliver a high-tech feel. You’d expect this from any BMW, not least a sporty one, but the M2 delivers on all expectations in this regard.
If you’re looking to extend the capabilities of your M2, BMW offers a 520-litre roof box for £1,350, plus two smaller versions, along with a roof-mounted bicycle rack and a rubber boot mat. It isn’t a particularly expansive accessory range – you can’t get any pet accessories, for example – but that’s the price you pay for performance. The dog will have to follow behind in an X5.

What’s it like to drive?
Predictably for a car like the M2, the engine plays a dominant role in the driving experience. It’s a modified version of the 3.0-litre inline-six twin-turbo petrol unit found in the M3 and M4, but detuned slightly to avoid stepping on the toes of its larger siblings. Early models developed 464bhp and 550Nm of torque, while the current version serves up 486bhp and, if you have the eight-speed automatic transmission, 600Nm of torque (it’s still 550Nm with the six-speed manual). All that is sent to the rear wheels – there’s no xDrive all-wheel-drive option here – via an eight-speed automatic gearbox, or a six-speed manual if you’d like to save yourself £75. That’s a small but welcome discount, given early versions actually cost more with the manual ’box.
With the automatic transmission, the 0-62mph dash is done and dusted in 4.0 seconds, down from 4.1 in pre-2024 update cars. Specify the manual and that’s extended slightly to 4.2 seconds (4.3 pre-update), but the feeling of rowing through the ratios with a manual shifter does add an extra level of engagement that is missing from the automatic, along with many of the M2’s auto-only rivals. The top speed is limited to 155mph, or 177mph if you add the optional M Driver’s Package.
Perhaps the most remarkable thing, given those insane numbers, is how docile the car is when you’re just mooching around town at a snail’s pace. At low revs, the engine is tractable, and it’s also smooth and quiet, keeping life relaxed. Let the revs build a bit, though, and the powertrain responds in a totally proportionate way, and the more the revs you pile on, the more and more aggressive the power delivery becomes. And in the upper reaches of the rev range – the limiter doesn’t intervene until 7,200rpm – the sensation of acceleration you feel is overwhelming. The noise from the exhaust is a sensory treat, too. Given this is the baby of the M model-range, there’s a savage nature to the car that would be barely believable if the car were teleported back to a meet-up of E46 M3 and E90 M5 owners 20 years ago.
The M2 we drove was fitted with the manual gearbox. It shifts in a smooth and satisfying way most of the time, although it can occasionally stumble through really fast gear changes. Even so, let’s enjoy manual gearboxes while we still can. Fewer and fewer performance cars are offered with a stick shift (notably, the RS3 and AMG A45 S are both auto-only), so despite some flaws, our money would be on the manual.
It’s not all about the engine with the M2, though. It’s pretty impressive in the ride and handling stakes as well. The suspension gets adaptive dampers as standard, which vary their stiffness according to which of the various driving modes you select. These modes also offer alterations in the behaviour of various other parameters, including steering, throttle response, exhaust, automatic gearshift (where fitted), brakes and stability control. If you so wish, you can also mix-and-match settings for each parameter to your liking, and you have shortcut buttons on the steering wheel that allow you to instantly select one of two pre-configured modes.
As with the engine, the rest of the M2 has a bit of a Jekyll-and Hyde character, and it’s less to do with the mode selected and more to do with how you drive the car. In its gentler settings, the M2 is surprisingly civilised. Its suspension has enough pliancy to keep you very comfortable indeed, and the controls are exceedingly easy to modulate, so it doesn’t feel like the highly strung sports car you might expect. Even if you set everything to maximum-attack mode, but still continue to drive gently, the M2 remains relaxed. OK, so you can feel a little extra edge to the ride, but it doesn’t become uncomfortable, and the car stays easy and satisfying to drive at a sedate pace.
Whichever of the modes are selected, it’s only when you wind up the revs and start to treat the car a little more meanly that it comes alive, getting progressively more exciting as you do so. Throw the M2 at a set of bends and you’ll detect epic levels of grip from the tyres, especially at the front end, super-tight body control for even sharper turn-in, and an inherent feeling of balance thanks to the rear-wheel-drive layout and near-perfect 50:50 weight distribution. Throttle response is sharp and the brakes provide immense stopping power and decent feedback. This is a car that will get you from point to point with devastating speed, and will provide no shortage of thrills in the process.
If we’re being picky, there’s a little something missing from the steering. It’s wonderfully fast and ultra-responsive, but without feeling twitchy or nervous, so the merest flick of the wrists is enough to place the car accurately on the road. The thing is, it doesn’t quite have the weight or communication through the wheel that you need to immediately feel confident and comfortable about testing the car’s limits. You will work up to this over time as you get used to the car, and for some that might be part of the fun. However, others may wish that the M2’s incredible handling ability was a bit more accessible.
It’s worth mentioning the M2 CS, too. Revealed in mid-2025, it’s the car to go for if you want more of everything the M2 package has to offer. Not only does it have 537bhp and 650Nm of torque (a Ferrari Enzo could muster 657Nm, for comparison), but it weighs 30kg less than the regular M2, rides 8mm lower and will hit 62mph in 3.8 seconds on its way to a top speed of 188mph. It also comes with the automatic gearbox only and is a hefty £22,000 more expensive.

Technology, equipment & infotainment
Like many of the latest BMWs, the M2 comes with the company’s Curved Display infotainment system as standard. This combines a 12.3-inch driver’s display behind the steering wheel with a 14.9-inch central screen. Both are incorporated into a single unit that bends pleasingly around the driver. There’s also a head-up display that projects more information onto the windscreen in front of you.
The system includes satellite navigation, DAB radio, Bluetooth and Apple CarPlay and Android Auto integration, plus two USB ports for connecting and charging devices. Wireless charging is now standard (it wasn’t until the 2024 update), and you get a powerful Harman Kardon surround-sound audio system.
Given the amount of functionality the software has to offer, it’s actually impressively easy to find your way around. Even though it does have touchscreen functionality, you also have the iDrive rotary controller that allows you to scroll through the on-screen menus, which is easier and less distracting on the move. It’s annoying that you don’t have separate buttons and dials to operate the air-con, such is modern carmakers’ obsession with screens, but at least there is a shortcut to the climate menus permanently displayed at the bottom of the central display.
Talking of air-con, it’s a two-zone climate control system. Other standard equipment includes powered and heated front seats, automatic lights and wipers, ambient lighting, and powered and heated door mirrors. You also get plenty of styling enhancements to identify the M2 as a proper M car. The 2024 update brought with it a wider selection of exterior paint colours and wheel selections, as well as a revised steering wheel (an Alcantara wheel is also available as an option, along with carbon fibre bucket seats). The interior as a whole is dark and moody, though. We’d prefer an option for an or red upholstery just to brighten things up.
Standard safety kit, meanwhile, includes lane-departure warning, lane-keep assist, automatic emergency braking, speed limit display and driver attention alert. You also get a parking assistant that uses the front and rear parking sensors and a rear-view camera. Cruise control with a brake function is standard, although proper active cruise control is an optional extra, which seems a tad stingy at this price.

BMW M2 running costs
If you’re planning to buy a brand new BMW M2, prices start at around the £70,000 mark, a £5,000 increase since the car was introduced. That’s before you specify any optional extras, so the amount you end up forking out will likely be substantially more. Performance car rivals such as the Porsche 718 Cayman and Alpine A110 can be had for much less than the BMW, with the Cayman now used-only and the Alpine costing from £55,000. Yet these will have considerably less power, plus plenty of kit you’ll need to spec in with options. Choosing a Porsche with anything like a comparable output will cost you considerably more than the M2.
However, buyers of brand new examples are likely to enjoy incredibly strong residual values, and for a couple of reasons. Firstly, it’s the more compact M cars that have traditionally held on to their value most fastidiously, and the M2 is the most compact of the lot. But there’s also the fact that the M2 might well be the last M car without electrification, and this could give it a certain historical significance that sees it become something of a collector’s item. In fact BMW announced in early 2026 that ‘BMW M will usher in a new era in the high-performance vehicle segment’ in 2027, with a car that uses an 800-volt architecture and an all-wheel-drive system that can have the front axle effectively decoupled for rear-wheel drive only. This will be tremendous news for those who buy an M2 new, but terrible news for used car buyers trying to pick one up on the cheap, because it simply won’t happen.
It’ll come as no surprise that the M2 has a bit of a thirst, with an average official figure of up to around 29mpg, and this applies regardless of whether you choose the automatic or the manual. However, give into temptation and drive your M2 the way its makers intended – which you surely will, and on a very regular basis – and your fuel economy will nose-dive quicker than Tom Daley leaping off a diving board.
The M2 sits in insurance group 42, and that’s whether you go for the manual or the automatic, so premiums won’t be cheap. It’s slightly surprising, though, that the bigger, pricier, and even more powerful BMW M3 actually sits in a lower insurance group, starting at group 41 for the rear-wheel-drive Competition models.

BMW M2 reliability
Prestige brands don’t always do as well as you might expect in this area, but BMW is one of the better ones. In the latest iteration of the What Car? Reliability Survey, the brand came sixth out of 30 car manufacturers considered, which placed it well ahead of Audi and Mercedes-Benz (both in joint 22nd place). The M2 itself is a bit too new for there to be any concrete reliability data available for this model specifically, and you might worry that such a powerful car might be temperamental. Remember that the engine is a detuned version of a unit that has far more power in the M3 and M4, though, so it’s nowhere near as highly strung as it could be.
BMW’s three-year, unlimited-mileage warranty is marginally better than the bare minimum you can expect on a new car these days, too. With Audi, for example, you get three years and 60,000 miles. BMW also offers its own insurance, roadside assistance and an extended warranty called the BMW Insured Warranty, where you can buy in 12-month chunks beyond the standard three years up to 100,000 miles. Pricing is specific to the model, however, so you’ll need to talk to BMW directly to gauge the cost.
- Remember we talked about the M2’s various driving modes and the insane level of customisation you can dial in if you so choose? Well, that’s not an end to it. The car also has a 10-stage traction control system that lets you vary the amount of assistance or interference, which adds even more customisation to the driving experience. So, if you start a track day with maximum help from the M2’s systems, you can work your way across the assistance levels, allowing more and more slip at the rear wheels as the day progresses and your confidence increases.
- Whether you prefer your M2 with an automatic or manual transmission will be up to you, but if you fancy the manual, you need to be aware of this. While the driving position is otherwise spot-on, the pedals in the manual are offset way to the right. This not only feels a bit odd, but could also impact on your long-distance comfort. We’d definitely recommend that you try before you buy.
- A variety of option packs are available if you buy your M2 new. The M Driver’s Pack increases the car’s top speed and gives you a session of dedicated BMW driver training, so that you can learn how to get the best from your car and remain as safe as possible while doing so. The M Race Track package, meanwhile, gives you all that plus a whole array of additional carbon fibre parts, including the hugely supportive M Carbon bucket seats. These do have incredibly high side bolsters, though, which are easy to whack your backside on when sliding in and out.
- If you’re all about the handling: In the M2 family, it’ll be the M2 CS, precisely because it carries a little less weight and rides 8mm lower. But for the thick end of a couple of decades now, the Porsche Cayman has been the handling benchmark for sports cars at this price point, and that remains the case today. It’s a wonderfully sharp and involving car to drive, and it makes every journey an absolute thrill. It’s only the uninspiring noise of the four-cylinder engines in the regular versions that let it down – and the fact that, at the time of writing, the Cayman is only sold secondhand.
- If you want a better noise: You’ll be looking away from BMW and towards the Alpine A110. Like the aforementioned Cayman,it also has a four-cylinder engine, but it sounds better than the Porsche. Frankly, even if it didn’t, that four-cylinder drone would be more forgivable in something that is related to a Renault. Despite its roots, the Alpine has the Porsche matched for handling. But with a maximum output of 296bhp, there is a big power deficit compared with the M2.
- If you want to buy used: It’s not offered as a new car any more, but the Audi TT – particularly the fastest versions of it – feels like the most direct rival to the M2 due to the fact it has rear seats and a decent boot, neither of which the Porsche or Alpine can offer. And because it’s been around for a good while, there are plenty of temptingly priced examples on the used market. We’d have a TT RS with its bonkers five-cylinder turbocharged engine.
- If you must have an M2: Well, we wouldn’t blame you, frankly. It may not be quite as scalpel-sharp as its two-seat rivals, but it’s not far off, plus it’s outrageously fast, and you can bring two extra mates along for the ride. Provided they’re both short…

