Compare every BMW X1 variant sold new in Australia. 3 variants, from $61,800 to $92,300 RRP. Side-by-side specs, ANCAP safety, fuel economy, towing capacity, warranty and running costs, pricing sourced from the BMW Australian website and updated weekly.
3 variants of the BMW X1 are on sale in Australia. Compare them side-by-side in the table below, or tap any variant to jump to it and expand its full specs.
| Variant | RRP | Power / Torque | Fuel / Range | Drive | Seats |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| sDrive18i2026 | $61,800 | 115kW / 230Nm | 6.5L/100km | FWD | 5 |
| xDrive20i2026 | $72,800 | 150kW / 300Nm | 7.4L/100km | AWD | 5 |
| M35i xDrive2026 | $92,300 | 233kW / 400Nm | 8.3L/100km | AWD | 5 |
The 2026 BMW X1 sDrive18i is a practical small SUV designed for budget-conscious buyers seeking premium badge appeal, offering five seats, 410 litres of boot space, and a respectable 1500kg towing capacity. Its standout strength is exceptional fuel efficiency at 6.5L/100km combined with a modest $1731 annual running cost, making it genuinely economical despite its petrol 1.5-litre turbocharged engine producing 115kW and 230Nm. One thing to consider: you're paying for the BMW name on what is fundamentally a front-wheel-drive, 1575kg compact SUV, so weigh whether the prestige justifies the premium over equally capable non-German rivals.
Configure the sDrive18iThe 2026 BMW X1 xDrive20i is a compact premium SUV that appeals to buyers wanting German engineering and all-weather capability, with its standard AWD system and 150kW petrol engine delivering competent rather than thrilling performance. Its standout strength is fuel efficiency at 7.4L/100km combined with a 5-star ANCAP safety rating and 5-year warranty, making it a relatively affordable entry into BMW ownership. One thing to consider: the 410-litre boot is modest for its class, so you'll want to verify it suits your cargo needs before committing.
Configure the xDrive20iThe 2026 BMW X1 M35i xDrive is a compact premium SUV that delivers genuine performance credentials with its turbocharged 2.0-litre petrol engine producing 233kW and 400Nm, making it ideal for Australian drivers who want sporty handling without sacrificing everyday practicality or five-seat comfort. Its standout strength is the responsive AWD system paired with that potent output, allowing you to tackle both city driving and weekend roads with genuine engagement whilst achieving a reasonable 8.3L/100km fuel consumption. One thing to consider is the claimed $1731 annual running costs-whilst competitive for the class-factor in potential tyre wear from the M35i's sportier setup, as premium replacement tyres for this segment typically add $100–150 more per tyre than standard options.
Configure the M35i xDriveRelated reading
News, buying guides and owner reviews relevant to this model.

The BMW iX3 is the first vehicle assessed under ANCAP's tougher new Stages of Safety protocols and walked out with five stars. Pillar scores: 71% Safe Driving, 83% Crash Avoidance, 86% Crash Protection, 95% Post-Crash. Rating covers both the incoming $89,900 iX3 40 and the $109,900 iX3 50 xDrive, and is valid through December 2034. Lane departure system flagged by ANCAP as a standout. What the new framework changes, where the iX3 aced it and where it left points on the table, and why this is the first fresh-protocol five-star result on the FBT-friendly premium EV shortlist under the fuel-efficient LCT cap.

ANCAP hands maximum ratings to four family SUVs in a single sweep under its outgoing 2023-25 protocols. The all-new Mazda CX-5 posts a 93 per cent vulnerable road user score, the highest of any car tested in the entire 2023-25 protocol era. The MG S6 EV tops the batch for adult occupant protection at 92 per cent. The updated Cupra Formentor five-star result covers cars built from December 2025 onwards but excludes both the five-cylinder VZ5 and any four-cylinder ordered with the Extreme Package (the Sabelt bucket seats stop the centre airbag from fitting). BMW X3 (petrol G45) also confirmed at five stars, ratings apply to the current on-sale shape. Everything here sits under the older protocols, the tougher 2026 rules kicked in earlier this month and the BMW iX3 has become the first car to clear them.

BMW Australia opens the Neue Klasse iX3 range with the rear-drive iX3 40 at $89,900 before on-road costs, roughly $20,000 under the iX3 50 xDrive at $109,900 and, critically, beneath the fuel-efficient LCT cap so the novated-lease FBT exemption stays in play. Single rear motor: 235kW/500Nm, 0-100 in 5.9 seconds, top speed 200km/h. Same 82.6kWh usable pack as the 50, WLTP up to 635km, 800V architecture, DC charging peaks at 300kW with 10 to 80 per cent in 21 minutes and up to 300km added in a 10-minute stop. Standard kit matches the 50 xDrive: BMW Panoramic iDrive with Operating System X, panoramic glass roof, Harman Kardon audio, 20-inch wheels, comfort access, wireless charging, heated Veganza front seats with memory, Driving Assistant Plus and Parking Assistant Plus. 4,782mm long, 520L boot to 1,750L folded, 58L frunk. 5-year unlimited-km warranty, 8-year/160,000km battery. ANCAP not yet rated. Order books open now, first Australian customer deliveries Q4 2026.
Buying guides
A shortlist with prices, specs and the trade-offs to know.
A shortlist with prices, specs and the trade-offs to know.
A shortlist with prices, specs and the trade-offs to know.
Stack two models side-by-side. Price, range, towing, ANCAP and ownership cost in one view.