2019
BMW X3

Starts at:
$54,650
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New 2019 BMW X3
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Available trims

See the differences side-by-side to compare trims.
  • sDrive30i Sports Activity Vehicle
    Starts at
    $41,000
    23 City / 30 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Intercooled Turbo Premium Unleaded I-4
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • xDrive30i Sports Activity Vehicle
    Starts at
    $43,000
    22 City / 29 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Intercooled Turbo Premium Unleaded I-4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • M40i Sports Activity Vehicle
    Starts at
    $54,650
    20 City / 27 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Intercooled Turbo Premium Unleaded I-6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs

Photo & video gallery

2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3 2019 BMW X3

Notable features

Newly standard active safety features
New rear-wheel-drive base trim level
Five-seat compact luxury SUV
Choice of turbocharged engines
All-wheel drive available
Lane-centering steering available

The good & the bad

The good

Ride quality
Refined four-cylinder engine
Front-seat comfort
Integration of available Apple CarPlay
Many ways to customize

The bad

Backseat position
Numb steering
Modest cargo room
No Android Auto
Not much nicer than the X1

Expert 2019 BMW X3 review

our expert's take
Our expert's take
By Kelsey Mays
Full article
our expert's take

Redesigned for 2018, the BMW X3 has standard all-wheel drive and comes in four-cylinder (xDrive30i) and six-cylinder (M40i) configurations. We drove a well-optioned X3 xDrive30i.

Cleaner Styling

The new X3 is decluttered versus the 2017 model, emulating the smaller X1 — a handsome place to start. Three bumper openings replace the prior four, with lighting elements in the outboard units instead of last year’s separate foglight dimples. Styling is subjective, of course, but I suspect this will age well — unlike the first- and second-generation X3s, which struck me as too busy-looking.

Exterior dimensions haven’t changed, but the wheelbase is 2.2 inches longer. Eighteen-inch alloy wheels, LED low-beam headlights and dual tailpipes are standard. So is dark lower cladding that brings a durable, go-anywhere look; that’s a check the BMW X3’s 8 inches of ground clearance should be able to cash. The M40i swaps that cladding for body-colored ground effects, though an optional M Sport Package on the xDrive30i emulates much of the look for less cash. You can also get adaptive headlights, LED high beams and wheels up to 21 inches.

How It Drives

A poky eight-speed automatic transmission holds back an otherwise strong driving experience in the X3 xDrive30i, whose 2.0-liter turbo four-cylinder makes 248 horsepower and 258 pounds-feet of torque. It’s a capable engine with broad power that comes early and stays late. That’s much needed, as the transmission resists downshifts in its normal driving mode until you push the gas hard. (A Sport mode helps by holding lower gears longer, but it does so inconsistently.) But even absent a downshift, the xDrive30i has enough low-rpm muscle to maintain highway speed with multiple occupants aboard.

The SUV’s rear-drive roots reveal competent balance if you push it hard, but numb steering and modest body roll don’t encourage spirited driving. Sport mode shores up some of the body lean and relaxes power-steering assist to improve feedback through the turn, but the initial numbness remains. On the flip side, at least ride quality is strong. With its optional adaptive shock absorbers, our xDrive30i had a degree of sophistication that’s rare for this class — better than the unsorted Volvo XC60 and busy Lexus RX, and quieter on broken pavement than the Audi Q5.

If you want something more hardcore, the X3 M40i employs a turbocharged 3.0-liter inline-6 (355 horsepower, 369 pounds-feet of torque). BMW says it hits 60 mph in a scant 4.6 seconds, versus 6 seconds flat for the xDrive30i. The M40i also gets higher-performance suspension tuning, plus a litany of hardware that’s optional on the xDrive30i: a performance steering ratio, upgraded brakes and AWD that sends more power to the outside wheels during corners. (Numb reflexes and all, our xDrive30i test car had those options.) Adaptive shock absorbers are also optional on the M40i.

EPA-estimated fuel economy for the xDrive30i is 22/29/25 mpg (city/highway/combined), which is competitive with the class. Over some 360 miles of mostly highway driving, I hit the highway rating on the dot. The M40i sacrifices 2 mpg across the board. Like most German luxury models, all versions of the BMW X3 prefer premium gas. Competitors like the RX and Cadillac XT5 are less efficient but run fine on the cheap stuff. It’s a toss-up.

The Inside

The new X3’s cabin follows BMW’s norm, with a mashup of stacked controls below a tablet-like screen that floats above the center air vents. Storage provisions are good, and handsome materials adorn all eye-level areas, with an optional stitched vinyl wrap on upper sections of the dashboard and doors. Still, grainier finishes and unpadded surfaces sit below elbow level — on par with most competitors, though the Mercedes-Benz GLC-Class and XC60 feel a cut above.

Power-adjustable front seats and vinyl upholstery, which BMW calls SensaTec, are standard. Leather is optional, as are heated and ventilated front seats and heated rear seats. The seats are comfortable overall, with good headroom in both rows despite our test car’s optional panoramic moonroof (a feature that typically cuts overhead space). Chunky grab handles on the front doors invade outboard knee space, and adults in back may find their knees uncomfortably elevated because the bench sits so low to the floor. Overall legroom in back is merely so-so.

The 40/20/40-split backseat reclines a few degrees but doesn’t slide. A power liftgate is standard, and BMW pegs cargo volume at 28.7 cubic feet behind the backseat and 62.7 cubic feet with the seats folded. We’ve found cargo specs unreliable, but BMW says it measured the X3 in apples-to-apples fashion with its other SUVs. At minimum, that suggests cargo volume closer to that of the X1 (27.1 cubic feet behind the rear seats; 58.7 cubic feet with the seats folded) than the X5 (35.8 and 76.7 cubic feet).

HD radio, Bluetooth and a 6.5-inch display with a backup camera — but not a touchscreen — is standard. Some more premium package options include a 10.3-inch display that works via touchscreen or BMW’s iDrive system controls. You can also get wireless Apple CarPlay, BMW’s newfangled gesture control, a 12.3-inch digital instrument panel, LTE in-car Wi-Fi and a bevy of device compatibility (smartphone and smartwatch apps, plus Amazon Echo integration). Despite all this, Android Auto is unavailable.

The X3 has yet to be crash-tested, but forward collision warning with automatic emergency braking remains optional, not standard. That’s an important safety provision that’s widely standard in the class; it’s even standard on a $16,530 Toyota Yaris. BMW needs to get with the program. Other options run the semi-autonomous gamut, from lane-centering steering to adaptive cruise control. Both systems can work all the way down to a stop, though the steering feature requires periodic driver inputs; it isn’t hands-free like Cadillac’s Super Cruise.

Versus the Alternatives

Shopping the X3 M40i? Have at it. We haven’t driven the high-performance X3, which starts in the mid-$50,000s and runs to about $70,000 with all options; it gives enthusiasts an alternative to the Audi SQ5, Mercedes-AMG GLC43 and others of that ilk.

But I suspect most X3 shoppers want the xDrive30i, which accounts for some 85 percent of the 2018 model-year X3 inventory on Cars.com as of this writing. It starts around $43,500 and tops out in the low $60,000s with a full slate of factory options. That’s in line with competing, base-engine luxury SUVs. Just look around the showroom first.

The X1 runs from the mid-$30,000s with similar standard features (albeit optional AWD) to the low $50,000s with a slew of options. Luxury cars have a way of playing up the numbers, but the X3 is not automatically better. Its smaller sibling gives up some front-seat comfort but repays it in back, with a higher seating position plus an optional reclining and sliding backseat. Cargo space and acceleration are comparable, as is cabin quality. The X1 rides notably firmer with no handling payoff to show for it — its weakest point, to be sure, but something I doubt will rankle many SUV drivers in practice.

Seldom does a class beg you to upgrade more than subcompact SUVs do. They seem to want you to opt for their larger, compact siblings — even among luxury brands. The X1 is the exception. It’s a remarkable SUV in an unremarkable class, and it gives X3 shoppers a compelling alternative at substantial savings.

Cars.com’s Editorial department is your source for automotive news and reviews. In line with Cars.com’s long-standing ethics policy, editors and reviewers don’t accept gifts or free trips from automakers. The Editorial department is independent of Cars.com’s advertising, sales and sponsored content departments.

Assistant Managing Editor-News
Kelsey Mays

Former Assistant Managing Editor-News Kelsey Mays likes quality, reliability, safety and practicality. But he also likes a fair price.

2019 BMW X3 review: Our expert's take
By Kelsey Mays

Redesigned for 2018, the BMW X3 has standard all-wheel drive and comes in four-cylinder (xDrive30i) and six-cylinder (M40i) configurations. We drove a well-optioned X3 xDrive30i.

Cleaner Styling

The new X3 is decluttered versus the 2017 model, emulating the smaller X1 — a handsome place to start. Three bumper openings replace the prior four, with lighting elements in the outboard units instead of last year’s separate foglight dimples. Styling is subjective, of course, but I suspect this will age well — unlike the first- and second-generation X3s, which struck me as too busy-looking.

Exterior dimensions haven’t changed, but the wheelbase is 2.2 inches longer. Eighteen-inch alloy wheels, LED low-beam headlights and dual tailpipes are standard. So is dark lower cladding that brings a durable, go-anywhere look; that’s a check the BMW X3’s 8 inches of ground clearance should be able to cash. The M40i swaps that cladding for body-colored ground effects, though an optional M Sport Package on the xDrive30i emulates much of the look for less cash. You can also get adaptive headlights, LED high beams and wheels up to 21 inches.

How It Drives

A poky eight-speed automatic transmission holds back an otherwise strong driving experience in the X3 xDrive30i, whose 2.0-liter turbo four-cylinder makes 248 horsepower and 258 pounds-feet of torque. It’s a capable engine with broad power that comes early and stays late. That’s much needed, as the transmission resists downshifts in its normal driving mode until you push the gas hard. (A Sport mode helps by holding lower gears longer, but it does so inconsistently.) But even absent a downshift, the xDrive30i has enough low-rpm muscle to maintain highway speed with multiple occupants aboard.

The SUV’s rear-drive roots reveal competent balance if you push it hard, but numb steering and modest body roll don’t encourage spirited driving. Sport mode shores up some of the body lean and relaxes power-steering assist to improve feedback through the turn, but the initial numbness remains. On the flip side, at least ride quality is strong. With its optional adaptive shock absorbers, our xDrive30i had a degree of sophistication that’s rare for this class — better than the unsorted Volvo XC60 and busy Lexus RX, and quieter on broken pavement than the Audi Q5.

If you want something more hardcore, the X3 M40i employs a turbocharged 3.0-liter inline-6 (355 horsepower, 369 pounds-feet of torque). BMW says it hits 60 mph in a scant 4.6 seconds, versus 6 seconds flat for the xDrive30i. The M40i also gets higher-performance suspension tuning, plus a litany of hardware that’s optional on the xDrive30i: a performance steering ratio, upgraded brakes and AWD that sends more power to the outside wheels during corners. (Numb reflexes and all, our xDrive30i test car had those options.) Adaptive shock absorbers are also optional on the M40i.

EPA-estimated fuel economy for the xDrive30i is 22/29/25 mpg (city/highway/combined), which is competitive with the class. Over some 360 miles of mostly highway driving, I hit the highway rating on the dot. The M40i sacrifices 2 mpg across the board. Like most German luxury models, all versions of the BMW X3 prefer premium gas. Competitors like the RX and Cadillac XT5 are less efficient but run fine on the cheap stuff. It’s a toss-up.

The Inside

The new X3’s cabin follows BMW’s norm, with a mashup of stacked controls below a tablet-like screen that floats above the center air vents. Storage provisions are good, and handsome materials adorn all eye-level areas, with an optional stitched vinyl wrap on upper sections of the dashboard and doors. Still, grainier finishes and unpadded surfaces sit below elbow level — on par with most competitors, though the Mercedes-Benz GLC-Class and XC60 feel a cut above.

Power-adjustable front seats and vinyl upholstery, which BMW calls SensaTec, are standard. Leather is optional, as are heated and ventilated front seats and heated rear seats. The seats are comfortable overall, with good headroom in both rows despite our test car’s optional panoramic moonroof (a feature that typically cuts overhead space). Chunky grab handles on the front doors invade outboard knee space, and adults in back may find their knees uncomfortably elevated because the bench sits so low to the floor. Overall legroom in back is merely so-so.

The 40/20/40-split backseat reclines a few degrees but doesn’t slide. A power liftgate is standard, and BMW pegs cargo volume at 28.7 cubic feet behind the backseat and 62.7 cubic feet with the seats folded. We’ve found cargo specs unreliable, but BMW says it measured the X3 in apples-to-apples fashion with its other SUVs. At minimum, that suggests cargo volume closer to that of the X1 (27.1 cubic feet behind the rear seats; 58.7 cubic feet with the seats folded) than the X5 (35.8 and 76.7 cubic feet).

HD radio, Bluetooth and a 6.5-inch display with a backup camera — but not a touchscreen — is standard. Some more premium package options include a 10.3-inch display that works via touchscreen or BMW’s iDrive system controls. You can also get wireless Apple CarPlay, BMW’s newfangled gesture control, a 12.3-inch digital instrument panel, LTE in-car Wi-Fi and a bevy of device compatibility (smartphone and smartwatch apps, plus Amazon Echo integration). Despite all this, Android Auto is unavailable.

The X3 has yet to be crash-tested, but forward collision warning with automatic emergency braking remains optional, not standard. That’s an important safety provision that’s widely standard in the class; it’s even standard on a $16,530 Toyota Yaris. BMW needs to get with the program. Other options run the semi-autonomous gamut, from lane-centering steering to adaptive cruise control. Both systems can work all the way down to a stop, though the steering feature requires periodic driver inputs; it isn’t hands-free like Cadillac’s Super Cruise.

Versus the Alternatives

Shopping the X3 M40i? Have at it. We haven’t driven the high-performance X3, which starts in the mid-$50,000s and runs to about $70,000 with all options; it gives enthusiasts an alternative to the Audi SQ5, Mercedes-AMG GLC43 and others of that ilk.

But I suspect most X3 shoppers want the xDrive30i, which accounts for some 85 percent of the 2018 model-year X3 inventory on Cars.com as of this writing. It starts around $43,500 and tops out in the low $60,000s with a full slate of factory options. That’s in line with competing, base-engine luxury SUVs. Just look around the showroom first.

The X1 runs from the mid-$30,000s with similar standard features (albeit optional AWD) to the low $50,000s with a slew of options. Luxury cars have a way of playing up the numbers, but the X3 is not automatically better. Its smaller sibling gives up some front-seat comfort but repays it in back, with a higher seating position plus an optional reclining and sliding backseat. Cargo space and acceleration are comparable, as is cabin quality. The X1 rides notably firmer with no handling payoff to show for it — its weakest point, to be sure, but something I doubt will rankle many SUV drivers in practice.

Seldom does a class beg you to upgrade more than subcompact SUVs do. They seem to want you to opt for their larger, compact siblings — even among luxury brands. The X1 is the exception. It’s a remarkable SUV in an unremarkable class, and it gives X3 shoppers a compelling alternative at substantial savings.

Cars.com’s Editorial department is your source for automotive news and reviews. In line with Cars.com’s long-standing ethics policy, editors and reviewers don’t accept gifts or free trips from automakers. The Editorial department is independent of Cars.com’s advertising, sales and sponsored content departments.

Available cars near you

Safety review

Based on the 2019 BMW X3 base trim
NHTSA crash test and rollover ratings, scored out of 5.
Overall rating
5/5
Combined side rating front seat
5/5
Combined side rating rear seat
5/5
Frontal barrier crash rating driver
5/5
Frontal barrier crash rating passenger
5/5
Overall frontal barrier crash rating
5/5
Overall side crash rating
5/5
Rollover rating
4/5
Side barrier rating
5/5
Side barrier rating driver
5/5
Side barrier rating passenger rear seat
5/5
Side pole rating driver front seat
5/5
17.1%
Risk of rollover
Side barrier rating driver
5/5
Side barrier rating passenger rear seat
5/5
Side pole rating driver front seat
5/5
17.1%
Risk of rollover

Factory warranties

New car program benefits

Basic
4 years / 50,000 miles
Corrosion
12 years
Powertrain
4 years / 50,000 miles
Maintenance
3 years / 36,000 miles
Roadside Assistance
4 years

Certified Pre-Owned program benefits

Age / mileage
Certified Pre-Owned Elite with less than 15,000 miles; Certified Pre-Owned with less than 60,000 miles
Basic
1 year / unlimited miles from expiration of 4-year / 50,000-mile new car warranty
Dealer certification
196-point inspection

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Consumer reviews

4.6 / 5
Based on 105 reviews
Write a review
Comfort 4.7
Interior 4.7
Performance 4.8
Value 4.3
Exterior 4.8
Reliability 4.6

Most recent

Lot of Coolant Leaking problems, BAD manufacturing using

Lot of Coolant Leaking problems, BAD manufacturing using plastic components on Hoses , water pump , and radiator. Disapointed with BMW , maybe is not german made anymore
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Commuting
  • Does not recommend this car
Comfort 4.0
Interior 3.0
Performance 3.0
Value 3.0
Exterior 4.0
Reliability 2.0
2 people out of 2 found this review helpful. Did you?
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This vehicle was very fun to drive, it is comfortable and

This vehicle was very fun to drive, it is comfortable and sporty, and the handling was excellent. Barely any issues, just overall a great driving experience.
  • Purchased a New car
  • Used for Commuting
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 5.0
Performance 5.0
Value 5.0
Exterior 5.0
Reliability 5.0
1 person out of 2 found this review helpful. Did you?
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FAQ

What trim levels are available for the 2019 BMW X3?

The 2019 BMW X3 is available in 3 trim levels:

  • M40i (1 style)
  • sDrive30i (1 style)
  • xDrive30i (1 style)

What is the MPG of the 2019 BMW X3?

The 2019 BMW X3 offers up to 23 MPG in city driving and 30 MPG on the highway. These figures are based on EPA mileage ratings and are for comparison purposes only. The actual mileage will vary depending on vehicle options, trim level, driving conditions, driving habits, vehicle maintenance, and other factors.

What are some similar vehicles and competitors of the 2019 BMW X3?

The 2019 BMW X3 compares to and/or competes against the following vehicles:

Is the 2019 BMW X3 reliable?

The 2019 BMW X3 has an average reliability rating of 4.6 out of 5 according to cars.com consumers. Find real-world reliability insights within consumer reviews from 2019 BMW X3 owners.

Is the 2019 BMW X3 a good SUV?

Below are the cars.com consumers ratings for the 2019 BMW X3. 86.7% of drivers recommend this vehicle.

4.6 / 5
Based on 105 reviews
  • Comfort: 4.7
  • Interior: 4.7
  • Performance: 4.8
  • Value: 4.3
  • Exterior: 4.8
  • Reliability: 4.6

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