RE: 2025 BMW M5 (G90) | PH Review

RE: 2025 BMW M5 (G90) | PH Review

Friday 25th October

2025 BMW M5 (G90) | PH Review

The weight of expectation is considerable. Can the new hybrid M5 deliver?


While it’s easy to fondly recall every generation of M5 as a near-enough-flawless flagship 5 Series, controversy is never far from the nameplate. Nobody really liked the swap from manual-only V8 to SMG-only V10, remember; to have that then ditched for a less charismatic turbo V8 (but a much better DCT) had its detractors also. Then that car became something without a dual-clutch transmission but with four driven wheels. To initial outcry in some corners. The point is that for as long as there’s been an M5, the progress of technology has demanded change. So the move to hybridisation shouldn’t really come as a surprise. And yet…

This plug-in M5 has met with a level of opposition and opprobrium that M cars just don’t, really - even the ugly ones. Mostly we can thank its enormous weight (2,435kg is half a tonne more than before), dubious styling upgrades and a very complex interior for that. Undeniably, there’s a lot here to unpack. But it’s not unfamiliar territory for a new M5. ‘No thanks - I'd much rather have the earlier V10!’; ‘In fact, all M cars these days seem a bit fat and dull’; ‘Wish premium manufacturers locked in the current power arms-race would focus less on driver modes and more on back-to-basics driver smiles’ are all comments from December 2017 and the then-new F90 M5. Which, lest we forget, eventually became the seminal CS. So there’s hope yet for the plug-in version. 

There will be no mistaking it for anything else, that's for sure. Those doubts that lingered before about an M5 looking too subtle have apparently been listened to: the G90 is about as discreet as a sea mine in a bird bath. Partly, that is its sheer size talking, though an i5 boasts the same dimensions and nowhere near the impact. It’s the M bits, from the huge increase in track width (plus the arches to go with it) to the dramatic slashing of both bumpers, that really ram the M status home with undeniable force. Old car too subtle? Try an M5 Klitschko-spec. Even in black, with grilles the sizes of sharing platters, intakes to lose pets in and lights that apparently pierce even daylight, you’ll know the first time you see an M5. And probably try to move out the way. And then try for a closer look, because the rear - complete with quad exhausts and some rude arches - is the G90’s best angle. If not maybe as divisive as an M3 or M4, this is a more unapologetic M5 than we’ve ever known. It’s easy to imagine a few being put off by the overtness. And just as many buying right into it.

The inside is perhaps a little more familiar, in that it combines a 5 Series interior with some fantastic seats and more configurability than it seems possible anyone could ever use. Even after recent M4 experience, it’s baffling to the point of bemusement. As well as the setup button (now with regen strength to add to brake, steering, powertrain, shift speed, sound, suspension and so on) plus 4WD modes, there’s the M Mode (three settings for driver assistance features) plus another five for how the hybrid drive (18.6kWh battery, 197hp motor) is configured. As you’re interested that’s eControl (which holds a set amount of charge for whenever required), pure electric running, a hybrid setting that will mix and match between ICE and EV depending on requirements, Dynamic that will prioritise power over a sustained period and Dynamic Plus that primes the battery for short bursts of giving it everything. It’s so much - too much, really - to think about in a car on first acquaintance.

As the G90 now always starts in EV, it makes sense to see what an M5 is like as a (sort of) electric car. Probably as expected, it delivers agreeable but not emphatic progress. The EV sound is easy listening (probably better than the Hans Zimmer funkiness), the pedals weights are good and the realistic range (40ish miles) more than sufficient for everyday errands - in a way that it isn’t, for example, with an AMG GT 4-door mad machine. The M5 is a very easy car to rub along with the battery doing all the work, supremely refined, comfy and luxurious in a way that the old Comp could never be. Even ignoring the obvious powertrain difference, an F90 couldn’t relax at low speed like this can. Which would probably be quite nice on the way back from the office or a big shop. 

Where the M5 then falls short in silent running is when it requires much more than adequate performance, because it just isn’t there. It’s hot hatch power in a car the weight of a 7 Series, so it’d be daft to expect much. But the feeling is much more of a V8 sidekick rather than, really, an alternative power source. At least on this experience. Guess it’d be even heavier with more battery power…

Handy, then, that with V8 and electric combined (occasionally with a slight hiccup at handover), the M5 is fantastically fast. Ignore a launch that’s a tiny bit slower than before (and a process that doesn’t actually feel very aggressive), because once up and running it accelerates like an atlas stone being dropped from a plane. It’s big, it’s massive, and yet the further it goes the faster it gets. Almost another 150lb ft up on before, means mid range muscle is Olympia spec, charging harder and harder with seemingly every gear. Away from the stats and in real-world situations (or overtaking people on the autobahn, at least) this feels faster and more immediate than before. With a more convincing augmented V8 burble, too, and excitingly thumpy gearshifts with some electric torque fill. Perhaps the PHEV side of the M5 makes for mode overkill, though it’s hard not to be impressed at how it can do zero emissions commuter one moment and 911-baiting ‘bahnstormer the next. 

The autobahn was the most exciting part of a very long and uninteresting test route. Lots of impressions will have to wait for a more thorough test to be absolutely sure, owing to traffic, harsh speed limits, freakishly smooth roads and precious few changes of direction. Plenty is good, however. That initially impressive ride continues at higher speeds and with some mild imperfections, the M5 is utterly undisturbed and much less coarse than a Comp could be. It’s a proper luxury saloon, then, even by M car standards. The new suspension tech, with dampers that can individually adjust, plus some chunky (and attractive) sidewalls are probably helping there. The brake pedal inspires confidence throughout, the steering rear axle confers some useful agility, and obviously there’s all the traction in the world. Nothing’s going to come past; partly because it feels like you’re always taking up more than your lane, but also since the M5 can accrue and shed speed at such a ferocious rate. 

It’ll still skid, too, though it never feels quite as natural as an M5 should. There’s never quite that sense of connection to the rear of the car through pedal, seat and wheel that’s there in all good M cars, even the xDrive ones - so it's notable that any oversteer comes as a bit of a surprise after a super grippy front end. There’s balance, mind, and the power to do what’s required, but it doesn't seem entirely organic in that famed M car way. A couple of starts and skids threw up the odd thump and bump from the rear axle, too, to further dampen enthusiasm. 

But nobody really skids their M5. Given the size of it, you’d probably want a private facility to do so. What customers might do, however, is take a brisk cross-country route instead of the motorway, and there the M5 is… well, mixed, it seems. The combination of a properly plush, almost Alpina-like quality to the ride, combined with the urgency of two steering axles, makes for an odd cornering experience, because the body doesn’t always feel in tune with the steering response. There's an element of catch-up as the car reacts to the input, rather than moving all of a piece. Oddly it didn’t seem as much of a concern on the prototype drive (though lots of attention was being paid to not crashing at the Salzburgring), and on the road the M5 made the most sense with the million modes at their sportiest and pushing on. But the slight disconnect of steering response and roll remained, even when travelling faster than is advisable. 

Perhaps what’s most noticeable about this drive though is that the M5 always feels heavy. While outrage remains about what an M3 weighs, the truth is that it masks the weight very convincingly indeed. It feels like a 1,600kg M3 when it’s actually 1,800kg; similar methods here haven’t had quite the same effect. The M5 does a decent job with a lot of mass, but it’s not a miracle worker. Where the (slightly) smaller car encourages you to push on, the same let's-go feeling never materialises in the M5. You feel like cruising and taking it easy because a) the car is very good at that, and b) the confidence in the axles, which is so often an M hallmark, isn’t quite there to push on. And you don’t want to be guessing with a car this big and powerful. 

At the same time, plenty about the G90 is admirable. Compared to the AMG E53, probably the M5’s closest rival, the ride is more agreeable, the V8 more stirring (and speedier) and the brake pedal firmer. The gearbox is significantly better, too. It would be a surprise to find the six-cylinder AMG is preferable to the BMW in Britain (though we’ll have to wait and see), even with its superior charging and range, Race Start silliness and Benz bling. A Panamera Turbo S E-Hybrid is a masterclass of V8 thunder and Porsche precision, albeit at a lot more money.

The M5 isn’t approximate, or vague, or anything less than an exceptionally capable super-saloon. But as well as being a tad disjointed to drive it feels distant. Partly that’s due to its remit - as the M3 has matured into something grander, so too has the M5 - and it seems daft to criticise a car like this for effortless performance, crushing ability and swathes of technology. It just would have been nice to enjoy the resulting experience a little more. The eagerness to try one again is more about seeing whether or not that damping really stacks up when UK-specific bumps are introduced, how fast it feels in a world of MG3s and Corsas, and whether that steering makes more sense, rather than a compulsion to get behind the wheel again. Which there most definitely was with cars like the xDrive M3. 

Maybe that’s the point. As the G80 has effectively morphed into what an M5 probably should be, so this car assumes the position of ultimate luxury express. There won’t be an Alpina version and there won’t be a V8-powered 7 Series with an M badge again, so the M5 is free to take the best bits of what those cars used to be. And when creeping through traffic or storming past slower cars, there’s a lot to enjoy about the hybrid M5 experience. The running costs could be a whole lot scarier than before, too, if used properly, and that shouldn’t be ignored. All that being true, however, the M5 still feels a bit muddled, never quite sure if it wants to complete its journey to full-on luxury status or cling on to its hard-charging, V8 hellraiser reputation. Both attributes are present to some degree, but not in sufficient quantity to be entirely convincing. Perhaps a great BMW saloon will be buried in the modes somewhere with a proper drive. For now, the new M5, not for the first time, ranks as good rather than great. 


SPECIFICATION | BMW M5 (G90)

Engine: 4,395cc, twin-turbo V8, plus 18.6kWh battery and permanently excited synchronous motor
Transmission: 8-speed auto (electric motor incorporated), all-wheel drive
Power (hp): 727 (system output; engine 585@5,600-6,500rpm, motor 197@6,000rpm)
Torque (lb ft): 738 (system output; engine 553@1,800-5,400rpm, motor ‘effective torque resulting from pre-gearing' 332)
0-62mph: 3.5 seconds
Top speed: 155mph (189mph possible with M Driver’s Pack)
Weight: 2,435kg (DIN)
MPG: 27.4-27.7
CO2: 37-39g/km (42-43 miles WLTP electric running)
Price: £111,755

Author
Discussion

salmanorguk

Original Poster:

213 posts

99 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
As attractive, fleet-footed, and desirable as the school bus that that particular version looks like

beetroute

46 posts

214 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
Please come back Chris Bangle - all is forgiven !

Wills2

24,384 posts

182 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
It's just a gargantuan blob what were they thinking and this is from an M car fanboy I've had 6.


"Perhaps what’s most noticeable about this drive though is that the M5 always feels heavy" No st Sherlock, it's over 2.5 tonnes with a driver onboard.



Edited by Wills2 on Thursday 24th October 23:30

Scott-R

126 posts

112 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
I really wish this car was fully electric. It seems like such a missed opportunity to only go PHEV, but fingers crossed we get there for the next gen. And I can’t get over just how much metal surrounds a wheel that is 21 inches!


Arsecati

2,500 posts

124 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
No. Just................... no.

CG2020UK

2,027 posts

47 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
I’m going to wait to I drive this before making my mind up. Loved the previous gen and its peak car for me personally.

Don’t mind the looks but prefer the latest M3.

I think this might not review as well because it’s not outright sports car but I have a feeling this will be fabulous to actually own.

Terminator X

16,327 posts

211 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
I'd be shocked to hear that one single person has bought this car. Horrific.

M Division are on a roll though, M3 has the front end of a gargoyle whilst the M2 rear end is bizarre in the extreme.

TX.

Edited by Terminator X on Thursday 24th October 23:34

J4CKO

42,819 posts

207 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
I normally don’t go on about the weight of cars but nearly two and a half tons ? Three quarters of a ton more than a fairly hefty E39 M5.

M5s have never been lightweights but that’s a hell of a heavy car, and we go on about EVs being so heavy ?

MissChief

7,237 posts

175 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
Ugly as Sin and two and a half tonnes? Dear God what has happened to car design at BMW? 1*, only because I can't give it none. vomit

Evolved

3,761 posts

194 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
Clearly BMW are catering for markets I’m no longer able to relate too. I used to love their cars!

salmanorguk

Original Poster:

213 posts

99 months

Thursday 24th October
quotequote all
J4CKO said:
I normally don’t go on about the weight of cars but nearly two and a half tons ? Three quarters of a ton more than a fairly hefty E39 M5.

M5s have never been lightweights but that’s a hell of a heavy car, and we go on about EVs being so heavy ?
As a joke I thought I'd find something that conventional thinking would assume to be heavier, but turns out to be lighter, and I've found the Sprinter L2 H2 variant to be 100kg slimmer!

Unbelievable really...


Pughmacher

415 posts

50 months

Friday 25th October
quotequote all
Scott-R said:
I really wish this car was fully electric. It seems like such a missed opportunity to only go PHEV, but fingers crossed we get there for the next gen. And I can’t get over just how much metal surrounds a wheel that is 21 inches!

Agree with that. If it’s going to weigh that much may as well make it EV. I’m sure BMW know what they are doing. Something will have to give at some point because roads ain’t getting any wider! Is it just me or is a trend setting in that ICE vehicles seem to be responding with more weight to match EV’s in turn?

cerb4.5lee

33,614 posts

187 months

Friday 25th October
quotequote all
Evolved said:
Clearly BMW are catering for markets I’m no longer able to relate too. I used to love their cars!
I genuinely get sick of moaning about the weight of cars nowadays, with EVs and Hybrids especially. However I just need to understand that my time has come and gone now though, and stuff like this is for the current and future generations really.

rusti

34 posts

257 months

Friday 25th October
quotequote all
The styling makes me want to throw up.

pycraft

925 posts

191 months

Friday 25th October
quotequote all
TheByline said:
The weight of expectation is considerable.
Not as much as the expectation of weight.

To be fair to BMW, I think this is just a reflection of market demand (which BMW do seem quite good at judging). We all want a stripped-out racer, but I think the company has seen that the much bigger market is for people who want something E-class size but with bragging rights. They don't want a stripped-out, uncomfortable racer, they don't even want to drive particularly quickly. But they do want to wipe the smug smirk off the face of their mate who has an E63 and also doesn't drive it quickly, but just uses it to spread a "more money than you" halo. Like AMG, M is a status symbol, and the people who buy them are often more interested in the status than what it can actually do. I mean, how many people paying the extra for a chronograph on their Rolex will actually use it to time anything?

Perhaps BMW's acquisition of Alpine might reconcile this. The issue is that the company is trying to reconcile the fact that its halo car has to be both luxurious and really fast. What's needed is two halo cars, one to fulfil each brief.

If nothing else, it probably suggests there's a market for an E/5-series - sized RR or Bentley.

SDK

1,204 posts

260 months

Friday 25th October
quotequote all
Scott-R said:
I really wish this car was fully electric. It seems like such a missed opportunity to only go PHEV, but fingers crossed we get there for the next gen.

[pic]/pic]
Same - I would take the i5 M60 over this M5
Hybrids are just a compromise for the people who like change to happen slowly.

blasos

383 posts

169 months

Friday 25th October
quotequote all
"Used to call me Castro, now they call me fatso" ~ The Notorious BMW

blueovercream

295 posts

98 months

Friday 25th October
quotequote all
I never thought a car with 20 inch rims would look under-wheeled but that massive slab of a side view makes the wheels look too small.

There’s so much wrong with this

Kawasicki

13,471 posts

242 months

Friday 25th October
quotequote all
blueovercream said:
I never thought a car with 20 inch rims would look under-wheeled but that massive slab of a side view makes the wheels look too small.

There’s so much wrong with this
BMW have a platform that can be EV, ICE or PHEV… that comes with styling disadvantages… the whole body is raised to make room for a huge battery.

Forester1965

2,804 posts

10 months

Friday 25th October
quotequote all
Not for me. Don't really understand what it's for? Far too big, fast and heavy to be enjoyable on B roads. A million other, better cars to take on track at that money. Not pretty enough to buy and look back over your shoulder when you get out. Too complicates just to germin and enjoy for the tactility alone.

May as well have a boggo 5 and something else for fun because this M5 is so compromised in every direction it's no longer the master of anything.