The BMW iX3 arrives in Singapore as the brand’s first Neue Klasse model, and it signals a wholesale reinvention
It’s been a long time coming, but BMW’s most significant leap forward in recent memory is finally here. Now available in Singapore, the new BMW iX3 is, by every meaningful measure, a different kind of car. As the first series-produced vehicle from BMW’s Neue Klasse platform, it announces a new design language, a new electronics architecture, and a new way of thinking about what an electric vehicle can be.
The numbers alone are enough to reframe the conversation. A usable battery capacity of 108.7 kWh, a WLTP range of up to 805 kilometres, and a peak DC charging rate of 400 kW — sufficient to add up to 372 kilometres of range in just ten minutes. The twin-motor all-wheel-drive system produces 345 kW and 645 Nm, dispatching the century sprint in 4.9 seconds.

But the more compelling story is what you cannot quantify on a spec sheet. The Neue Klasse platform gave BMW’s designers the freedom to start entirely afresh, and they have used it well. The exterior carries a pared-back confidence: clean, wide-shouldered, and unmistakably a BMW X model, without resorting to visual theatre.

Inside, the BMW Panoramic iDrive system projects information the full width of the windscreen, while a 17.9-inch central display and a newly designed steering wheel quietly reorder the relationship between driver and machine. Four high-performance computers (BMW calls them “superbrains”) underpin everything, processing driving dynamics data ten times faster than previous systems.
For Singapore, the iX3 50 xDrive arrives as standard with the M Sport package. Pricing is available through authorised BMW Asia dealers.