CS
CarSorted
HomeComparisonsBMW i7 vs Lotus Emeya
Spec Battle Updated 20 April 2026 5 min read

BMW i7 vs Lotus Emeya

Two electric Sedans go head to head. Which EV is the better buy for Australian drivers in 2026?

Specifications and pricing correct at time of publishing. Prices are RRP before on-road costs unless stated otherwise. Always confirm with the manufacturer or dealer before purchasing.

SpecBMWLotus
Price (RRP)$319,900TBC
Fuel typeElectricElectric
Range (WLTP)590km610km
Battery101.7 kWh102 kWh
Power400kW450kW
0-100 km/h4.7s4.2s
Max DC Charge195kW420kW
10-80% Charge Time34 min14 min
Boot Space500L509L
Towing2,000kg
Warranty5yr / Unlimited5yr / Unlimited
ANCAP SafetyNo dataNo data
V2LNoYes

Track the BMW i7 & Lotus Emeya

Get price-drop alerts on these models plus our free weekly new-car rundown. Unsubscribe anytime.

Price Breakdown

Pricing for one or both models is yet to be confirmed for the Australian market. We will update this comparison when official RRPs are announced.

Safety Rundown

ANCAP safety ratings have not been published for both models yet. We will update this section when crash test results are available.

Charging Times

How long each takes to charge — from a household power point to ultra-rapid DC — estimated from battery size and max charge rates.

How long to charge

101.7kWh usable

Public DC

50kW charger · 0–80%

1h 38m

Ultra-rapid DC

up to 195kW · 0–80%

31 min

Estimates from usable battery size and the car's max charge rates (11kW AC, 195kW DC). Real times vary with temperature, starting charge, charger output and the charging curve.

How long to charge

102kWh usable

Public DC

50kW charger · 0–80%

1h 38m

Ultra-rapid DC

up to 420kW · 0–80%

15 min

Estimates from usable battery size and the car's max charge rates (22kW AC, 420kW DC). Real times vary with temperature, starting charge, charger output and the charging curve.

Feature Showdown

The BMW i7 features a 14.9-inch touchscreen paired with a 12.3-inch digital dash, while the Lotus Emeya gets a 15.1-inch display and 12.6-inch instruments. Apple CarPlay and Android Auto are standard across both.

The BMW i7 stands out with wireless Apple CarPlay/Android Auto, wireless charging, heated front seats, ventilated seats, Bowers & Wilkins audio and ambient lighting that you will not find on the Lotus Emeya. The Lotus Emeya counters with Apple CarPlay, V2L and KEF audio. Which feature set matters more depends on your daily routine and priorities.

Interior trim differs: the BMW i7 gets merino leather upholstery while the Lotus Emeya offers leather.

Drivetrain

The BMW i7 uses a Electric producing 400kW and 745Nm of torque, sent through a auto to a AWD layout. It covers the 0-100km/h sprint in 4.7 seconds.

The Lotus Emeya responds with a Electric Motor making 450kW and 710Nm, paired to a automatic driving all four wheels. It gets to 100km/h in 4.2 seconds.

The Lotus Emeya has the clear power advantage at 450kW vs 400kW. In the real-world sprint, the Lotus Emeya is 0.5s quicker. For most buyers, the way each car feels day-to-day matters more than outright acceleration.

Battery: 101.7kWh (BMW i7) vs 102kWh (Lotus Emeya), giving WLTP ranges of 590km and 610km. DC fast charging peaks at 195kW (BMW i7) vs 420kW (Lotus Emeya).

Space & Comfort

The BMW i7 measures 5,391mm long on a 3,215mm wheelbase, 252mm longer than the Lotus Emeya at 5,139mm (3,069mm wheelbase). The longer wheelbase on the BMW i7 generally means more rear legroom.

Boot space is 500L in the BMW i7 and 509L in the Lotus Emeya, giving the Lotus Emeya a 9L advantage.

Turning Circle

Kerb-to-kerb diameter. Smaller turns easier in tight carparks and U-turns.

12.5m diameter

Large

BMW i7 xDrive60 Sedan
12.5m
BMW i7 xDrive60 Sedan
12.5m · Large

Based on 12.5m turning circle:

  • U-turn on standard street (7m+ wide)
  • Standard parking bay
  • Tight carparks
  • Narrow laneways

Turning circle ratings

Under 10m, Excellent
10 to 11m, Good
11 to 12m, Average
Over 12m, Large
Interactive simulator — U-turns, parking & towing

Turning Circle

Kerb-to-kerb diameter. Smaller turns are easier in tight carparks and U-turns.

12.5 m Ø

Large

9.0 m road
BMW i7 Turning circle · Ø 12.5 m Kerb strike
Scrub the turn

Needs a 3-point turn (one reverse)

Needs about 10.8 m to swing round without stopping. Road is 9.0 m.

!

U-turn on a wide street

≥ 10 m — 3-point turn

!

U-turn on a standard street

7 m — 3-point turn

Standard parking bay

1.9 m wide — fits with room

!

Tight carpark aisle

6 m — careful, tight swing

Narrow laneway

3.5 m — no room to turn

Turning circle ratings

Under 10 m · Excellent 10–11 m · Good 11–12 m · Average Over 12 m · Large

Standard widths: AU local streets carry ~5.5–7 m of carriageway; main roads ~9–12 m. AS 2890.1 carpark aisles are ~5.8–6.6 m for 90° bays (2.6 m wide × 5.4 m deep).

Road, aisle, swing and off-tracking figures are indicative estimates from the published turning circle. Verify in person before relying on them.

True Cost to Own

Running cost data is not yet available for both models. We will update when figures are confirmed.

Warranty: 5 years / 999,999km (BMW i7) vs 5 years / 999,999km (Lotus Emeya). Both match on warranty length.

Who Should Buy Which?

Buy the BMW i7 if: You or prefer BMW's approach to design and ownership experience.

Buy the Lotus Emeya if: You prioritise performance, need more boot space, or prefer Lotus's approach to design and ownership experience.

The Verdict

The Lotus Emeya takes 8 of 8 key spec categories. The best pick depends on what you value most. Explore the full specs for each model below.

Common questions

Which is cheapest, BMW i7 and Lotus Emeya?

The BMW i7 is the cheapest at $319,900 before on-road costs.

Which has the longest driving range?

The BMW i7 has the most range at 625km (WLTP).

Which charges fastest?

The Lotus Emeya accepts the highest DC charging at up to 420kW.

What are the ANCAP safety ratings?

None of BMW i7 and Lotus Emeya carry a published ANCAP rating yet — check back as they are tested.

Which has the most boot space?

The Lotus Emeya has the largest boot at 509L.

Which can tow the most?

The BMW i7 has the highest braked towing capacity at 2,000kg.

Which is the most powerful?

The Lotus Emeya makes the most power at 450kW. The Lotus Emeya is quickest to 100km/h in 4.2s.

Track the cars you're comparing

Sign up free for price-drop alerts on the models in this comparison, plus our weekly new-car rundown covering launches, deals and reviews. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.

By subscribing, you agree to receive marketing emails. You can unsubscribe at any time. View our Privacy Policy.

Disclaimer: All information in this comparison was believed to be correct at the time of publishing (20 April 2026). Prices are manufacturer recommended retail prices (RRP) and may vary by state, dealer, and options. Driveaway costs include estimated on-road costs for Victoria. Fuel economy figures are WLTP/ADR combined cycle. Specifications can change without notice. Always verify with the manufacturer before making a purchase decision. CarSorted does not accept payment for recommendations.

Auto-generated from CarSorted's specification data · 20 April 2026

Comments (0)

Sign in to join the conversation

No comments yet. Be the first!

More head-to-heads

Other matchups worth a look

Same segment, similar money. Tap any pair for the full side-by-side spec sheet.

All comparisons

Images are representative. Actual variant trim, colour and equipment may differ.

Browse all cars · All Sedans · Best electric cars