BMW iX US Exit Confirmed
In a move that signals a bigger shift in its electric strategy, BMW has confirmed that the BMW iX will be discontinued in the United States after the 2026 model year. The decision, first reported by BMW Blog and later confirmed to Car and Drivermarks the end of the iX’s relatively short run in one of the world’s most competitive EV markets.
Interestingly, this isn’t a global goodbye. The iX will continue to be sold in other regions, suggesting that the move is less about the product itself and more about market-specific strategy.
A Strategic Shift, Not a Sudden Exit
BMW’s official statement makes it clear: this is part of a broader transition. The company emphasized its “flexible powertrain portfolio” and the need to evolve its lineup in response to changing market dynamics.
What this really means is BMW is clearing space. The brand is preparing for its next-generation EVs under the Neue Klasse platform, which promises better efficiency, improved range, and a more cohesive design language.
The iX, despite a recent refresh for 2026, doesn’t quite fit into that future vision for the U.S. market. Rather than stretching its lifecycle, BMW is choosing to move on.
Sales Tell a Mixed Story
On paper, the iX wasn’t a failure. BMW sold over 15,000 units in 2024 and more than 12,500 in 2025 in the U.S. That’s respectable for a premium electric SUV.
But here’s the catch: it was consistently overshadowed by BMW’s own gasoline-powered lineup, especially the BMW X5. In a market still warming up to EVs, traditional powertrains continue to dominate buyer preference.
Even within BMW’s EV portfolio, the iX had a complicated position. While it outsold larger electric sedans like the i5 and i7, it never reached the popularity of the BMW i4which remains the brand’s best-selling EV in the U.S.
What Replaces the iX?
BMW isn’t leaving a gap for long. The expectation is that an all-electric version of the next-generation X5 will step in to fill the void. While not officially revealed yet, this upcoming model is likely to align more closely with what American buyers want: familiar design, practical proportions, and improved EV tech.
At the same time, BMW is also preparing to introduce models inspired by the Neue Klasse concept, potentially including successors to both the iX and the i4. In fact, the BMW i3 (in its new-gen avatar) is expected to replace the i4 in the U.S. lineup.
The Bigger Picture
The iX’s exit isn’t just about one car. It’s about timing.
BMW launched the iX in 2022 as a bold, futuristic statement. It delivered on many fronts—quiet cabin, impressive range, and a distinctive design that turned heads (and sometimes divided opinions). But the EV landscape has evolved quickly since then.
Now, BMW is recalibrating. Instead of iterating on early-generation EVs, it’s betting big on a clean-sheet approach with Neue Klasse.
And in that context, the iX’s departure from the U.S. feels less like an ending—and more like a reset.
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