The smallest, ‘purest’ M car, the M2 coupe, is larger, faster, and more powerful – but does it lose its driver-pleasing nature in the gamble?
2023 BMW M2
Launch: Q2 2023 – Price: S$380,000 without COE or VES
Two-door, small sports coupe, four seats
460hp, 3.0-litre petrol engine, VES TBC, 9.7L/100km
PROS
Faster, but still a proper M driver’s car
Wide spectrum of performance
Manual option for more fun
CONS
Styling will polarise opinion
Optional carbon seats fudge legs
ARIZONA, USA
BMW M’s repertoire now encompasses a spectrum that’s gone far beyond its three-stripe logo, but for those who just want A Proper M car, the second-gen M2 is still very much it.
BMW M is now much more than simply the go-faster, motorsport arm of BMW. It’s a sub-brand unto itself too now: Last year it sold more cars than it ever has in its history, around 177k units. To get there, in the past decade or so it’s gone the SUV route with cars like the X3 M, X5 M, and so on. This year, it’ll go even further with its largest, most expensive car to date, the PHEV performance SUV, the XM. In other words, it’s come far from a skunkworks outfit whose spiritual home is the Nordschleife.
But a large part of M will always be a coupe/sedan with a screaming inline six driving only the rear wheels and the driver rowing his own gears. That’s exactly what the second-gen M2 doubles down on – it sits on the other end of the spectrum from the XM, the smallest, lightest car that BMW M makes, and is almost one third the cost.
The M2 first appeared in 2016, as the successor to the sold-out limited 1 Series M, and like that car it was an immediate hit. CarBuyer tested it both at its 2016 launch at Laguna Seca, and in updated 2018 M2 Competition format and loved it, so it’s no surprise the M2 became the best-selling model for M around the world.
Styling and Appearance
But now that the 2 Series has evolved into its second-gen, so too does the M2. It hasn’t grown by much, thankfully – it’s 119mm longer, but only 16mm wider, and almost the same height, being just 11mm taller.
We enjoyed the styling of the new 2 Series Coupe, which we tested in Singapore as the all-wheel drive M240i, a handsome, muscular, and sporty small coupe. The M2 builds on that the ‘muscular’ bit – it’s a whopping 49mm wider – but the front end styling will certainly be divisive.
BMW M opted for a frameless kidney grille and a very square theme on the lower front. That could be, like the round headlamp projectors, another cue to BMWs of yore, but to our eyes, it simply doesn’t gel with the rest of the car, or the rest of the M sedan/coupe range. The rear, in contrast, doesn’t have that problem – it looks thoroughly sporty and modern with its diffuser and fat quad-tailpipes.
We like that BMW loves to take design risks, sometimes they don’t pay off immediately. While you’ll be the ultimate judge of the design. Yet, it’s also fitting that the M2 is not the sort of machine for people who buy a car with their eyes, but with their heart – and ass.
Driving Experience
This might be the baby of the M range, but the M2 is pretty much stuffed with bits from the M3 and M4 – to continue our tradition of making stupid numerical jokes (see XM review), this is more like an ‘M2.75’ than anything.
M says the inline six from the M3/M4 is carried over largely wholesale, while much of the bespoke chassis tech developed for those cars has also been shoehorned into the smaller M. The spec sheets for the three cars read the same, back to back, in terms of chassis and engine tech: S58 biturbo inline six, M Adaptive Suspension this, rear differential that, kinematics aluminium multi-link pathway to glory. Another clue? The wheels are staggered, just like the M3/M4, rocking 19-inch fronts and 20-inch rears.
The M2 is the most compact M car, as it’s still some 214mm shorter than an M4. But it is the same width (1,887mm) and, disappointingly, the same weight as the M4 (1,725kg sans driver) since it’s now 150kg heavier than before. It’s a factor of crash tests and platforms of course, but it is a little disappointing to see that much mass gain here.
Still, the real driver of the M2’s success was the fact that it was more about driver feel than just reeling up the speedo – so is that still the case?
The short wheelbase and compact dimensions deliver more driver immediacy, and this shines through even with civil motoring on Phoenix’s suburban streets. Much like the M240i, this is a car you can drive everyday because in its most relaxed mode, it doesn’t egg you on, the suspension is relatively comfortable, and you can have a decent conversation with your passengers.
Of course the true joy of the M2 is what the Americans term canyon carving, blasting through windy mountain roads, and that is one place the M2 is very much at home.
There’s much more of the New M feel to the car, lots of grip, a certain tautness to the whole experience, and massive pace if you want it. Like its big brothers though, the new M2 is very, very fast. The 3.0 now carries a significant 90hp more than the first M2, 50hp more than the M2 Comp (460hp up from 410hp) while torque is the same (550Nm) but now delivered in an even wider band.
The torque is everything everywhere at once, and there’s even more top-end than the previous car, so when you give it maximum gas, it really flies and continues to accelerate right up to the 7,200rpm redline. Because of the car’s size, the fantastic inline six noise (and also perhaps because the Germans are lying) the M2 feels much faster than its 0-100km/h time suggests, so much so that we forgot the speedometer was displaying miles-per-hour.
For chassis and ride, the M2 behaves fantastically well in corners, allowing you to do what thou wilt, and there’s less of the ‘you just have to trust the car’ feeling you get with the M3 and M4, since you do feel more plugged in. On the other hand, bumpier sections were tricky because of the stiff springs and small footprint, typical behaviour of a small performance car.
It could be Arizona’s dusty tarmac, but it and there seems to be a little less front end feedback than the outgoing M2 Competition – though we’re also willing to bet M is leaving some room for the current-gen M2 Comp to fill.
We didn’t get to sample the car on track, but circuit-junkies will be happy to know that the new M2 has the same M Traction Control function as the M3 and M4 – it means you can turn DSC Off but still dictate, in ten discrete steps no less, how much slide you want. High-performance motorcycles have been doing this for years, and now M car owners can get in on the fun without resorting to learning how to ride an M 1000 RR.
CarBuyer’s test shows the M3 and M4 as more broad in their abilities, a welcome evolution away from the argy-bargy full-bore madness of the previous car, and the M2 is a shrunken down (very) slightly slower experience with more immediacy. All in, the M2 is faster, and more competent over a wider range than before. You still have that organic driver-machine interface, but the M4-ification does mean a little of that daily-drive-plugged-in feeling is lost.
Give ‘Em the Stick: M2 manual
However there is also an important choice to be made if you want an M2: It will be offered as a manual in Singapore. That’s important because it will be the only current M car you can have with stick shift, since the BMW M3 (and M4) can be had in manual abroad but not in Singapore.
The other kicker is that BMW will sell the manual version here as a Purist Edition with the CF roof (-6kg) and CF bucket seats (-10.8kg), and the manual (1700kg vs 1725kg) so you’d have a sort of semi-superleggera thing going on here, around 40kg lighter than the auto M2, or M4.
The manual immediately breeds more driver engagement, naturally. Having to select and think about gears yourself means you’ll drive a little slower than with the auto of course, but gain more enjoyment in the process. The big, fat torque band means you can still be rather lazy with gear selection of course.
The six-speed feels like the same unit we’ve tested in the previous M3/M4 and previous M2 Competition – it’s not the slickest stick shift around, but it’s competent and reasonably accurate. The clutch is light and easy to feel, while the pedal setup means you can’t really heel-toe unless you’re able to make significant pedal depression.
In any case, there’s rev-matching to make your life easier, and it surely did when we were stuck in an hour-plus of freeway jam. For purists to note, in the manual box’s defense, it also does feel like the E30 M3’s manual gearbox, and we only know because we also drove that in extensive traffic jams.
The manual also highlights an ergonomic quibble of the optional CF seats, which have a central CF accent section that fouls your leg during gas/brake/clutch transitions. It’s a minor irritation, but one that is more obvious in the three-pedal car.
Interior / Features / Space
BMW M dressed up the interior accordingly, there’s more CF if you want it, but plenty of alcantara and leather in the right spots. The full infotainment loadout is present – BMW Widescreen, driver’s display, intact iDrive rotary controller, additional buttons (M buttons on wheel, setup and drive mode buttons near gear shifter) specific to the M2.
Like other M cars, the driving modes have a Road/Sport/Track dichotomy now, but you can also tweak the setup to your heart’s content, everything from the brakes, to the steering, gearshifts, power delivery, and more.
You won’t buy this car to ferry people around, but it does okay as a four-seater since the rear seats are not entirely a crime against humanity – our passenger who survived more than 500km there (with our driving!) can attest. Meanwhile the luggage space of 390-litres is quite practical, although the aperture is small, it’s 10-litres larger than on a VW Golf.
Conclusion and Competition
As with its first-gen, the M2 remains unique in its small performance car niche. There are plenty of small, high-performance machines now – the horde of VW Group performance machines, the remaining hot hatches, and the like. More direct competition is in the form of the Audi RS 3 Sedan, and the Mercedes-AMG CLA 45.
From those all-wheel drive mega machines, arguably the RS 3 comes closest to embodying its parent brand’s DNA and niche appeal. However the M2’s rear-drive, old school spirit is still unique, and arguably more valuable – if you’re in the market for an M2, you would probably look closely at a base Porsche Cayman or maybe even an Alpine A110.
The M2 has gained plenty in the transition to its second-generation: more power, more similarity to its bigger brothers, but also a wider spectrum of ability, and it’s preserved much of what made the first-gen M2 such a success.
2023 BMW M2 auto / manual
Drivetrain type | Petrol engine |
Engine | 2,993cc, inline 6, twin-turbocharged |
Power | 460hp at 6250rpm |
Torque | 550Nm at 2650-5870rpm |
Gearbox | 8-speed automatic / 6-speed manual |
0-100km/h | 4.1 seconds / 4.3 seconds |
Top Speed | 250km/h / 285km/h optional |
Fuel Efficiency | 9.7L/100km / 10.1L/100km |
VES Band | TBC |
Agent | Eurokars Auto Performance Motors Limited |
Price | S$380,000 without COE / TBC |
Availability | Now |
Keyword: 2023 BMW M2 Review: Double Down