We imagine a sleeker two-door i4 Coupe as an addition to the i3 Sedan. Sportier chassis tuning and rear-drive bias would sharpen its dynamic character. Neue Klasse architecture enables quad-motor setups with serious performance. As electric platforms reshape proportions, design identity is facing a quiet but meaningful test across the industry. BMW has stirred up an online storm of controversy with its latest i3 electric Sedan. Set to complement the petrol-powered 3 Series, its Neue Klasse styling and stance have divided opinion far and wide. See: BMW Showed Just Enough Of The i3 Touring For Someone Else To Finish The Job The good news is BMW has confirmed the NA0-coded i3 will get a touring variant to dial back some of the sedan’s less flattering aspects, but a two-door coupe feels like a more natural extension of the range. Curious? Read on as we put pen to pixel and envisage what it might look like. Keeping The Good Bits Illustrations Josh Byrnes / Carscoops Let’s address the elephant in the room – styling. BMW has a long history of iconic design, from strong axle-to-dash ratios to twin kidney grilles, the Hofmeister Kink, and balanced proportions. The i3 Sedan, however, rewrites that familiar playbook in ways that feel unfamiliar. Its front-drive proportions still read as athletic, yet the upright stance exudes nervousness. See: Hyundai’s New Pickup Truck Will Be Everything The Santa Cruz Refused To Be Our study keeps the better aspects of the i3, but translates it into a more svelte two-door form. We’ve lowered the roofline, elongated the doors, and given it a tighter glasshouse, with better proportions skewed toward visual dynamism rather than rear-seat usability. The leading edge of the facia now leans forward in a shark-nosed fashion, and the grille’s lighting signature now has three-dimensional depth to avoid the perspective distortion that plagues the sedan’s nose. Out back, we envisage bolder haunches, a ducktail spoiler and slimmer, 3-dimensional OLED taillights. Digital Drive The interior of the new BMW i3 sedan. Inside, the i4 coupe would ideally mirror the sedan’s radical shift in cabin philosophy, and its Panoramic IDrive display stretching across the dashboard. However, we’d ditch much of the touch-sensitive interfaces (including that steering wheel) for physical controls and swap the dash for one that’s more driver-oriented. Also: Bentley Hasn’t Shown The Barnato SUV’s Face Yet, So We Did It For Them Despite its coupe format, a practical 2+2 layout will be central to the deal, and largely retain the same 114.1 in (2,898 mm) wheelbase as its four-door donor car. Chassis tuning would likely skew sportier than the sedan, with adaptive dampers, rear-wheel-drive bias, and near 50:50 weight distribution forming the baseline. Volts To Velocity Like the sedan, the i4 coupe uses BMW’s sixth-generation eDrive system, which is built around cylindrical battery cells and an 800-volt electrical architecture. Battery capacity would sit around 75–90 kWh usable, delivering up to approximately 600 km (WLTP) or 440 miles (EPA) depending on configuration. Output for the dual-motor i4 50 xDrive model could exceed 463 hp (345 kW) and 476 lb-ft (645 Nm) of torque. A thumping i4M variant would amp the pace, with quad motors generating close to 1000 hp, and a rear-drive mode that decouples the front axle. Future Outlook Illustrations Josh Byrnes / Carscoops BMW has not announced plans for an i4 coupe, so its arrival remains speculative. However, with Neue Klasse models forming the backbone of BMW’s next-generation EV strategy, additional bodystyles beyond the i3 sedan and wagon appear inevitable. Would you love to see the i4 coupe come to life, or rather a straight-six-powered ICE version? Share your thoughts in the comments below. 2027 BMW i3 Sedan