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Is the BMW i8 a Future Classic?
For the past 60 years, when someone has gone out shopping for a usable high-performance sports car, they’ve more often than not returned with a Chevy Corvette or Porsche 911. There are plenty of reasons for this and you probably know them all already, so we won’t digress any further along this point.
It must be a tough job coming up with alternatives to such storied and consistently brilliant vehicles, but if there’s one thing every potential competitor has up its sleeve, it’s that it’s not a Corvette or 911. Simply by virtue of not being one of these tried and true performance icons, anything you might consider instead is automatically a little more interesting.
Some alternatives have been more interesting than others, though. Think the Acura NSX of the 1990s, the Audi R8 of the 2000s—and the BMW i8 of the 2010s.
For all its sporting pedigree, BMW has a funny history with actual purpose-built sports cars. Since the BMW Z1 arrived in 1989 it’s offered a string of “Z”-badged models at various levels in the market—the most accessible being the original Z3 in 1995, the most exotic 1998’s V-8–powered and retro-styled Z8—but it’s mostly steered clear of treading on the toes of the 911 and Corvette.
BMW of the 2010s must have been feeling a little more bold, because while the execution ended up being wildly different, on price and intent the 2014 BMW i8 was every bit a competitor.
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BMW had previewed the i8 twice, first with 2009’s futuristic Vision EfficientDynamics, then again with 2011’s more overt i8 Concept, shown at that year’s Frankfurt motor show. The latter was more or less the production car with the extra styling flourish of partly transparent doors, and it was shown alongside a BMW i3 Concept that closely resembled the production version of that car, too.
The i8 Concept, and 2014’s eventual production car, really looked unlike anything else. Its low, sharky nose gently evoked the M1 supercar of the 1970s, and the slightly raised tail proportions did too, but otherwise the exterior styling was a kind of organized chaos of metal and plastic, shaped as much by the wind tunnel as a stylist’s pen, and packed with intriguing details wherever you laid your eyes.
The area around the rear wheels was, and still is probably most distinctive, the bodywork feeding air either side of the rear tire, while the rear wing stands proud to form a nearly enclosed tunnel with the rear pillar.
Then there were butterfly doors, a deep hood vent, and the fact that you could see the car’s carbon-fiber-reinforced plastic (CFRP) structure whenever you opened the doors or trunk lid. Less successful was the direct rear aspect, which some commentators reckoned looked like it was … err, birthing a contemporary 911, though the effect is more apparent in some colors than others.

Inside you got a 2+2 layout, like a 911 (though the later i8 Roadster ditched the rear seats for a large but not entirely usable luggage cubby), and a low-slung driving position with a beautifully built but relatively unremarkable dashboard design. The act of transferring between inside and out, or outside and in, is best accomplished if you’re young and limber, though, thanks to the wide door sills and low seating position.
More interesting than any of that, however, and more mechanically intriguing than a flat-six slung behind the rear wheels, was BMW’s choice of powertrain. It paired the brand’s TwinPower turbocharged 1.5-liter three-cylinder with a battery pack and front and rear electric motors. The front motor could work independently in full EV mode for a modest electric range (23 miles initially, 34 miles later on), while the motor at the rear assisted the engine and did all the usual hybrid stuff.
With everything in sync, you got up to 369 hp depending on model year, 0–60mph in 3.8 seconds, and a 155-mph limited top speed, or 75 mph in pure EV mode. Plus a quite intriguing noise, thanks to that three-pot and the whirr of the motors deploying and regenerating energy.
Slim tires and the unusual nature of the powertrain gave the i8 a dynamic character quite unlike that of its rivals. One that might not especially impress those used to more traditional performance cars, but one that did deliver rewards if you were prepared to work with what you had and get under the car’s skin a bit. Driving the i8 quickly means hanging back a bit from the car’s maximum pace, working with the natural mid-engined balance and modest grip, and deploying steering, acceleration, and brakes with smooth, measured inputs; get it right, and it’s almost like flying, rather than driving.

Few ever got that far, though. A starting price around $136,000 didn’t seem bad for the styling, performance, and technology, but while the i8 achieved high sales figures by plug-in sports car standards, the 20,465 units it moved worldwide (16,581 coupes, 3884 roadsters) between 2014 and 2020 probably didn’t do much for BMW’s bottom line. In the U.S. sales amounted to just under 7000.
However, scarcity has always been a key driver of classic status, so those low sales figures just make the i8 all the more intriguing as the years pass by. As does the i8 being well ahead of the curve on offering a plug; Corvette debuted the E-Ray last year, and the 911 has only just adopted regular hybrid tech, let alone being a plug-in hybrid like the i8, and we doubt it can return figures of 50 mpg or so on a gentle motorway run, as your author has achieved in an i8.
Forward-thinking though the drivetrain was, it’s not that which will make the i8 appealing well into the future. Just like the NSX and the R8, the i8 is one of those rare cars that did something a little different from the same-old same-old choice, and wrapped it up in a shape that BMW has yet to better in the decade since. With used prices dipping into the $60K range, maybe now is the time to try something a little different.
The expense and lack of parts will probably kill this car. I don’t see BMW keeping much on this cars due to so few around.
Also electric cars will age much like an old Cell Phone. People on new EV want the newest tech and fastest charging and longest range. Old EV models will lack this.
We already see resale on EV models go down 50% in many cases after a year.
Besides these were not all that in demand new.
Someone will want to collect it. It has a unique look and feel to it. It’s not BMW’s best but that doesn’t matter to some. It’s a pseudo-exotic so someone will want it for the looks.
I think 10- to 20-year battery life and the highly customized configuration of these batteries will put a serious strain on EV and hybrid collectability.
All bark, no bite. Horsepower figures aren’t nearly good enough, and the reliability is so-so. Look up “i8 AC compressor issue” – older models have a ticking time bomb in them with the compressor. Buyer beware!
No electric will ever become a classic, unless you consider monitor-top refrigerators to be “classics”
I have seen one of these, ever, that I recall. They do look impressive in person.
I own an i8 in Japan.
It’s an all-purpose car for Japanese road conditions.
It’s slower than the Nissan GT-R or Honda NSX, but it’s plenty fast and safe.
As rare as they are I can imagine someone spending the time and considerable expense to do a battery upgrade in the future. When it comes to vehicles for every why there’s a because why not?
Well said. When the time comes and the batteries are done so is the car. It then becomes yard art. There is then the comment “ Plus a quite intriguing noise, thanks to that three-pot and the whirr of the motors deploying and regenerating energy.”Not exactly what gearheads equate with performance.
Just saw one of these cruising around town the other day. I had to remind myself what it was. Looked awesome.
I started wondering how well one of these might be suited for my daily 60 mile round trip commute.
Short answer would be no. Could a few be around in 40 years? Possibly. Will they have to parts needed to keep them running? No. Pretty much true for ever car that would have 2024 before it and so on.