2007
BMW Z4

Starts at:
$40,400
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New 2007 BMW Z4
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Available trims

See the differences side-by-side to compare trims.
  • 2dr Roadster 3.0i
    Starts at
    $36,400
    21 City / 30 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas I6
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2dr Coupe 3.0si
    Starts at
    $40,400
    21 City / 30 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas I6
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2dr Roadster 3.0si
    Starts at
    $42,400
    21 City / 30 Hwy
    MPG
    2
    Seat capacity
    Gas I6
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs

Photo & video gallery

2007 BMW Z4 2007 BMW Z4 2007 BMW Z4 2007 BMW Z4 2007 BMW Z4 2007 BMW Z4 2007 BMW Z4 2007 BMW Z4

Notable features

215- or 255-hp engine
Six-speed manual or automatic
Roadster or coupe
Manual or powered fabric top (roadster)
High-performance M version

The good & the bad

The good

Handling and stability
Ride comfort on smooth surfaces
Quietness
Seat comfort and support

The bad

Ride comfort on rough surfaces
Difficult entry and exit
Cargo space

Expert 2007 BMW Z4 review

our expert's take
Our expert's take
By Dan Neil
Full article
our expert's take

INTRODUCED at a time (2002) when BMW design chief Chris Bangle was championing what he called “flame surfacing,” the Z4 convertible suffered from terrible inflammation. Hilariously over-styled and seriously weird, the Z4 ragtop trots out more complicated geometry than the GRE math exam — rays, vectors, bevels, chamfers, contours, concavities and cut lines all skirmish along the fuselage, and the whole is summed in a way that less suggests a fit of inspiration than an overdose of cold medicine.

Too harsh? Try this experiment. The next time you see a Z4 parked on the street, hold up your thumb in a way that blocks that nutty isosceles triangle on the front quarter panel. Better, right? I can only assume Bangle was fresh out of thumbs.

The other damnably curious thing about the Z4 convertible is its lack of visual balance. The Z4 has an extravagantly long hood, but as the eye moves back along the car it seems to shorten up and dwindle, almost as if the modelers were running out of clay. Compared to the blustery prow, the truncated rear quarter and deck seem to belong to another car altogether, perhaps something driven by fat men in fezzes.

The Z4’s styling is well-flogged dead horse, and while I certainly can go on, I won’t. Suffice it to say that the car hasn’t sold up to expectations — production was scaled back last year at the Spartanburg, S.C., plant where the Z4 is made — and it’s safe to assume that Bangle’s successor, BMW brand styling maestro Adrian van Hooydonk, will extinguish the flames when it is redesigned for the 2009 model year.

Meantime, we have the new Z4 Coupe, a fixed-roof, fastback riff on the Z4 that is surprisingly attractive, a Venus emerging from a sea of geometric hash. By adding some visually balancing mass to the back of the car, the fastback lid vastly improves the Z4’s looks, while adding 4 more cubic feet of usable cargo space, now up to 12 cubes. At some angles, the car looks a little like a Zagato-bodied Aston Martin from the early 1960s — no small praise. One commendable detail: Rather than add one more shut line on a car zigzagged with them, the hatch is a form-fitted shell that hides the shut lines in the contours around the windows and below the rear fender bevel. A clean bit of manufacturing, that.

The coupe model is part of a mid-lifespan makeover for the Z4, which includes minor tweaks in interior and exterior styling, revised suspension and various equipment upgrades. The 2006 models offer three new engines: the base engine is a 3.0-liter, 215-hp mill (“3.0i” in BMW nomenclature); a gustier version of the 3.0-liter putting out 255 hp (3.0si); and the smash-mouth M variant with a 3.2-liter, 330-hp motor. The coupe is available only with the 3.0si and M trim. Cog-swapping duties in the Z4 models are handled by either a six-speed manual or a six-speed automatic transmission. BMW’s unfriendly Sequential Manual Gearbox (SMG) is no longer available, even in the M version.

I tested the Z4 3.0si Coupe with the six-speed automatic and, coming a week after I drove the SMG-equipped M6, which might as well be called the Ronco Lurch-o-Matic, the Z4 Coupe drove like an opium dream. As tormented as the SMG is, the auto-six, with button-like shifters on the steering wheel, is that close to transmission heaven. The step-off acceleration is potent, the shift intervals are almost imperceptible and various sport-seeking algorithms keep the transmission in the most aggressive gear for hard driving. These cybernetic-smart slush boxes (the Porsche 911’s is another one) are beginning to make me wonder if the conventional, gated manual transmission has not finally seen its day.

Under the hood of the 3.0si is one of BMW’s composite-alloy engines, an inline six-cylinder with the very latest in scuba equipment on the head: the Double Vanos variable valve timing (and lift on the intake side), three-stage variable intake plenum and electronic throttles. This is a stupendously smooth, free-revving piece of reciprocation, spewing an oily pressurized stream of torque all over the tach. Peak torque (220 pound-feet) arrives at 2,750 rpm and doesn’t start to fade until well north of 6,000 rpm.

From a standing start, the Z4 Coupe nips to 60 mph in less than 6 seconds, yet the more interesting velocities come at mid-throttle. At highway speeds, when you double-click down to a passing gear, the car’s cabin fills with a lusty buzz and the car surges ahead with a gliding aggression. And, by the way, the small, racy three-spoked steering wheel in this car is just about perfection.

It’s been awhile since I’ve been in a Z4 convertible — I have my image to think of — so it’s difficult to judge how much of the coupe’s marmoreal solidity is a consequence of the new fixed roof. The car feels unbendable, though. Wind and road noise is muted, wheel vibration and scrub is funneled down to milliamp surges fed conductively through the seat and steering wheel, and the ride is tensed but compliant. This is, after all, a small car, without much attenuating distance between driver and road. So, BMW has deployed a variety of exotic hydraulic mounts, couplings and suspension bushings to fluff up the refinement. Especially notable is the acoustically decoupled hydraulic final drive mount, which is technology I’d associate more with Lexus than the Werks.

This isn’t the first German two-seater to get a hat transplant recently. Porsche screwed a lid on the Boxster and gave us the fantastic Cayman. A comparison is natural. The Cayman is a superb mid-engine sports car, a state of grace on four wheels, but it might be a little too vivid, loud and hard-handed for some tastes. The heavier (3,156 pounds), less powerful Z4 Coupe, especially with the Steptronic gearbox, doesn’t match the performance of the Cayman, but it’s so easy to live with that I’m happy to forgive whatever few tenths of a second it yields on a road course. Should you be so miserly as to fret about cost, the Z4 is 10 grand cheaper than the Cayman.

The Z4 Coupe is easily more car than you can fully indulge in on the street. With the Sport package’s 18-inch, 40-series tires, it grabs asphalt like a Florida congressman (what, too soon?). The steering is accurate to nine decimals, the brakes faultless.

The biggest downside of the fixed roof is the loss of the convertible’s 100 miles of headroom. Even though the top has slight bubble shapes incorporated into the profile, the headroom is pretty tight for me, at 6 foot 1, and the cabin generally is fairly restrictive. Seat rake is limited to about 20 degrees, and fore-and-aft travel runs afoul of the large bulkhead behind the seats. Add the optional deeply socketed Nubuck-leather sport seats, and the Z4 Coupe can feel like wearing your clothes from junior high. This car needs to come with a low-carb cookbook in the glove box.

On another note: A limited-function nav system is optional with the Z4 Coupe. I appreciate that BMW didn’t offer the maddening iDrive controller; however, in its place, this nav system seems to have taken limited function to a whole new level. This is one of the great riddles in automotive technology: that a company as certifiably brilliant as BMW can’t get these kinds of human interfaces right. You know, I have Ford’s number if they need it.

I’m sure I’ll hear from BMW partisans now. Let the flaming, or flame-surfacing, begin.

BMW Z4 Coupe 3.0si

Base price: $40,795

Price, as tested: $45,545

Powertrain: 3.0-liter, 24-valve, DOHC inline six with variable-valve timing and variable lift on the intake side, three-stage intake, electronic throttles; optional six-speed automatic transmission with manual-shift mode; rear-wheel drive

Horsepower: 255 at 6,600 rpm

Torque: 220 pound-feet at 2,750

Curb weight: 3,156 pounds

0-60 mph: 5.6 seconds

Wheelbase: 98.2 inches

Overall length: 161.1 inches

EPA fuel economy: 21 miles per gallon city, 29 mpg highway

Final thoughts: Topper

dan.neil@latimes.com

2007 BMW Z4 review: Our expert's take
By Dan Neil

INTRODUCED at a time (2002) when BMW design chief Chris Bangle was championing what he called “flame surfacing,” the Z4 convertible suffered from terrible inflammation. Hilariously over-styled and seriously weird, the Z4 ragtop trots out more complicated geometry than the GRE math exam — rays, vectors, bevels, chamfers, contours, concavities and cut lines all skirmish along the fuselage, and the whole is summed in a way that less suggests a fit of inspiration than an overdose of cold medicine.

Too harsh? Try this experiment. The next time you see a Z4 parked on the street, hold up your thumb in a way that blocks that nutty isosceles triangle on the front quarter panel. Better, right? I can only assume Bangle was fresh out of thumbs.

The other damnably curious thing about the Z4 convertible is its lack of visual balance. The Z4 has an extravagantly long hood, but as the eye moves back along the car it seems to shorten up and dwindle, almost as if the modelers were running out of clay. Compared to the blustery prow, the truncated rear quarter and deck seem to belong to another car altogether, perhaps something driven by fat men in fezzes.

The Z4’s styling is well-flogged dead horse, and while I certainly can go on, I won’t. Suffice it to say that the car hasn’t sold up to expectations — production was scaled back last year at the Spartanburg, S.C., plant where the Z4 is made — and it’s safe to assume that Bangle’s successor, BMW brand styling maestro Adrian van Hooydonk, will extinguish the flames when it is redesigned for the 2009 model year.

Meantime, we have the new Z4 Coupe, a fixed-roof, fastback riff on the Z4 that is surprisingly attractive, a Venus emerging from a sea of geometric hash. By adding some visually balancing mass to the back of the car, the fastback lid vastly improves the Z4’s looks, while adding 4 more cubic feet of usable cargo space, now up to 12 cubes. At some angles, the car looks a little like a Zagato-bodied Aston Martin from the early 1960s — no small praise. One commendable detail: Rather than add one more shut line on a car zigzagged with them, the hatch is a form-fitted shell that hides the shut lines in the contours around the windows and below the rear fender bevel. A clean bit of manufacturing, that.

The coupe model is part of a mid-lifespan makeover for the Z4, which includes minor tweaks in interior and exterior styling, revised suspension and various equipment upgrades. The 2006 models offer three new engines: the base engine is a 3.0-liter, 215-hp mill (“3.0i” in BMW nomenclature); a gustier version of the 3.0-liter putting out 255 hp (3.0si); and the smash-mouth M variant with a 3.2-liter, 330-hp motor. The coupe is available only with the 3.0si and M trim. Cog-swapping duties in the Z4 models are handled by either a six-speed manual or a six-speed automatic transmission. BMW’s unfriendly Sequential Manual Gearbox (SMG) is no longer available, even in the M version.

I tested the Z4 3.0si Coupe with the six-speed automatic and, coming a week after I drove the SMG-equipped M6, which might as well be called the Ronco Lurch-o-Matic, the Z4 Coupe drove like an opium dream. As tormented as the SMG is, the auto-six, with button-like shifters on the steering wheel, is that close to transmission heaven. The step-off acceleration is potent, the shift intervals are almost imperceptible and various sport-seeking algorithms keep the transmission in the most aggressive gear for hard driving. These cybernetic-smart slush boxes (the Porsche 911’s is another one) are beginning to make me wonder if the conventional, gated manual transmission has not finally seen its day.

Under the hood of the 3.0si is one of BMW’s composite-alloy engines, an inline six-cylinder with the very latest in scuba equipment on the head: the Double Vanos variable valve timing (and lift on the intake side), three-stage variable intake plenum and electronic throttles. This is a stupendously smooth, free-revving piece of reciprocation, spewing an oily pressurized stream of torque all over the tach. Peak torque (220 pound-feet) arrives at 2,750 rpm and doesn’t start to fade until well north of 6,000 rpm.

From a standing start, the Z4 Coupe nips to 60 mph in less than 6 seconds, yet the more interesting velocities come at mid-throttle. At highway speeds, when you double-click down to a passing gear, the car’s cabin fills with a lusty buzz and the car surges ahead with a gliding aggression. And, by the way, the small, racy three-spoked steering wheel in this car is just about perfection.

It’s been awhile since I’ve been in a Z4 convertible — I have my image to think of — so it’s difficult to judge how much of the coupe’s marmoreal solidity is a consequence of the new fixed roof. The car feels unbendable, though. Wind and road noise is muted, wheel vibration and scrub is funneled down to milliamp surges fed conductively through the seat and steering wheel, and the ride is tensed but compliant. This is, after all, a small car, without much attenuating distance between driver and road. So, BMW has deployed a variety of exotic hydraulic mounts, couplings and suspension bushings to fluff up the refinement. Especially notable is the acoustically decoupled hydraulic final drive mount, which is technology I’d associate more with Lexus than the Werks.

This isn’t the first German two-seater to get a hat transplant recently. Porsche screwed a lid on the Boxster and gave us the fantastic Cayman. A comparison is natural. The Cayman is a superb mid-engine sports car, a state of grace on four wheels, but it might be a little too vivid, loud and hard-handed for some tastes. The heavier (3,156 pounds), less powerful Z4 Coupe, especially with the Steptronic gearbox, doesn’t match the performance of the Cayman, but it’s so easy to live with that I’m happy to forgive whatever few tenths of a second it yields on a road course. Should you be so miserly as to fret about cost, the Z4 is 10 grand cheaper than the Cayman.

The Z4 Coupe is easily more car than you can fully indulge in on the street. With the Sport package’s 18-inch, 40-series tires, it grabs asphalt like a Florida congressman (what, too soon?). The steering is accurate to nine decimals, the brakes faultless.

The biggest downside of the fixed roof is the loss of the convertible’s 100 miles of headroom. Even though the top has slight bubble shapes incorporated into the profile, the headroom is pretty tight for me, at 6 foot 1, and the cabin generally is fairly restrictive. Seat rake is limited to about 20 degrees, and fore-and-aft travel runs afoul of the large bulkhead behind the seats. Add the optional deeply socketed Nubuck-leather sport seats, and the Z4 Coupe can feel like wearing your clothes from junior high. This car needs to come with a low-carb cookbook in the glove box.

On another note: A limited-function nav system is optional with the Z4 Coupe. I appreciate that BMW didn’t offer the maddening iDrive controller; however, in its place, this nav system seems to have taken limited function to a whole new level. This is one of the great riddles in automotive technology: that a company as certifiably brilliant as BMW can’t get these kinds of human interfaces right. You know, I have Ford’s number if they need it.

I’m sure I’ll hear from BMW partisans now. Let the flaming, or flame-surfacing, begin.

BMW Z4 Coupe 3.0si

Base price: $40,795

Price, as tested: $45,545

Powertrain: 3.0-liter, 24-valve, DOHC inline six with variable-valve timing and variable lift on the intake side, three-stage intake, electronic throttles; optional six-speed automatic transmission with manual-shift mode; rear-wheel drive

Horsepower: 255 at 6,600 rpm

Torque: 220 pound-feet at 2,750

Curb weight: 3,156 pounds

0-60 mph: 5.6 seconds

Wheelbase: 98.2 inches

Overall length: 161.1 inches

EPA fuel economy: 21 miles per gallon city, 29 mpg highway

Final thoughts: Topper

dan.neil@latimes.com

Available cars near you

Safety review

Based on the 2007 BMW Z4 base trim
NHTSA crash test and rollover ratings, scored out of 5.
Frontal driver
4/5
Frontal passenger
4/5
Nhtsa rollover rating
5/5
Side driver
3/5

Factory warranties

New car program benefits

Basic
4 years / 50,000 miles
Corrosion
12 years
Powertrain
4 years / 50,000 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

4.8 / 5
Based on 52 reviews
Write a review
Comfort 4.5
Interior 4.5
Performance 4.8
Value 4.7
Exterior 4.9
Reliability 4.7

Most recent

BMW's Roadster is Bad@ss

I am in love with my "new" 2007 si roadster convertible. The stock exhaust and engine have such a great sound. Performance output is just enough to excite and feed your senses for speed. If you want more speed get a dragster and race it at a local dragstip. In my eyes BMW truly built a great machine the Z4 is already a sought after classic sports car for the auto enthusiast!
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Having fun
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 4.0
Performance 5.0
Value 5.0
Exterior 5.0
Reliability 5.0
6 people out of 7 found this review helpful. Did you?
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Happy owner of 2007 Z4 roadster.

I have owned my 2007 BMW Z4 3.0si roadster since I bought it new in 2007. I love the car! As a disagreement with the review, I was in the dealership for servicing in 2009 and viewed the longer rear end added to the new Z4 to allow for the new retractable hardtop. I visually disliked the car because it became so big it was no longer a roadster in my opinion. Same reason that I did not purchase the 2007 Corvette (runner-up to the Z4). The Corvette was too big and bulky of a car. So to each their own. I do believe that sales of Z4 dropped in 2009 with this longer version. Others did not like it as well.
  • Purchased a New car
  • Used for Having fun
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 5.0
Performance 5.0
Value 5.0
Exterior 5.0
Reliability 5.0
13 people out of 14 found this review helpful. Did you?
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FAQ

What trim levels are available for the 2007 BMW Z4?

The 2007 BMW Z4 is available in 2 trim levels:

  • 3.0i (1 style)
  • 3.0si (2 styles)

What is the MPG of the 2007 BMW Z4?

The 2007 BMW Z4 offers up to 21 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 2007 BMW Z4?

The 2007 BMW Z4 compares to and/or competes against the following vehicles:

Is the 2007 BMW Z4 reliable?

The 2007 BMW Z4 has an average reliability rating of 4.7 out of 5 according to cars.com consumers. Find real-world reliability insights within consumer reviews from 2007 BMW Z4 owners.

Is the 2007 BMW Z4 a good Convertible?

Below are the cars.com consumers ratings for the 2007 BMW Z4. 96.2% of drivers recommend this vehicle.

4.8 / 5
Based on 52 reviews
  • Comfort: 4.5
  • Interior: 4.5
  • Performance: 4.8
  • Value: 4.7
  • Exterior: 4.9
  • Reliability: 4.7

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