BMW Australia is expanding its high-performance coupe lineup with the introduction of the first-ever all-wheel-drive ‘xDrive’ M2, combining the model’s signature agility with a sophisticated traction upgrade. This follows in the footsteps of its bigger brother, the BMW M4, which is also available with AWD.
Arriving in local showrooms in the fourth quarter of 2026, the M2 Coupe M xDrive provides drivers with enhanced stability, sharper acceleration, and greater point-to-point capability across a broader range of driving environments.

Up front, the familiar S58 3.0-litre twin-turbo inline six-cylinder petrol engine remains the centrepiece, punching out a formidable 353kW and 600Nm. Hooked up exclusively to an eight-speed torque-converter automatic transmission, the addition of front-axle traction drops the 0-100km/h sprint time to a blistering 3.7 seconds.
For those worried that BMW has sanitised its ultimate drift machine, the Munich brand promises the system maintains a heavily rear-biased personality. Under normal driving conditions, an electronically-controlled multi-plate clutch sends 100 per cent of the torque straight to the rear axle, only engaging the front wheels when the rear tyres run completely out of ideas. Working in tandem with the Active M Differential and M-specific traction control, it should provide an absolute weapon of a point-to-point car on greasy Australian backroads.

Beneath the skin, the big engineering news is the debut of ‘BMW M Ignite Technology’. This is a patented pre-chamber ignition system designed to sneak the high-output six-cylinder past impending EU7 emissions regulations without strangling performance.
By using a dedicated pre-chamber with its own spark plug, the system shoots sonic-speed flame jets into the main combustion chamber to ignite the fuel-air mixture at multiple points simultaneously. It increases thermal efficiency, prevents engine knock under severe track abuse, and is supported by a higher compression ratio and variable turbine geometry to effectively banish turbo lag.

Visually, the xDrive variant is distinguished largely by an expanded colour palette, including a wild new BMW Individual Borusan Turkish Blue metallic finish. Standard kit remains predictably fat for the local market, bundling in Adaptive M suspension, carbon interior trim, and high-performance M Compound brakes.
The privilege of all-weather traction will set local buyers back $133,100 before on-road costs. That represents a reasonable $5000 premium over the standard rear-wheel drive model. Production kicks off at BMW’s Mexico facility in August, with the first deliveries in Australia scheduled to touch down just in time for Christmas.









