Hellish Depreciation Makes BMW i3s And i8s Incredible Bargains

With just a few years and not many miles under their wheels, BMW's two i-cars are showing the kind of depreciation that would make a millionaire weep
Hellish Depreciation Makes BMW i3s And i8s Incredible Bargains

Depreciation is a bitch. It looks like it’s hitting the two BMW i-cars pretty hard, too. A quick trip around the classifieds turns up some terrifying numbers for owners of the interesting i3 and enthralling i8 (neither of which BMW is directly replacing, we learned this week).

Anyone who bought a £33,000 electric i3 new will need to sit down before reading that four-year-old ones with nominal mileage are now being sold for less than half that. You can imagine what trade-in values are like…

Hellish Depreciation Makes BMW i3s And i8s Incredible Bargains

This one, for sale in the English North East, even has £4000 of options. For argument’s sake let’s call this a £37,000 BMW with just 14,000 miles, being sold for £15,490. Wowzers. It has fast-charge preparation, rear-parking sensors, automatic windscreen wipers and Bluetooth on its spec sheet, among quite a bit more. It also has ‘BARGAIN’ written all over it.

With 170bhp and a whole lot of torque on demand, it’ll launch to 62mph in a brisk 7.2 seconds, but it feels rapid up to 30-40mph. You’d hope to get about 90 miles per charge in the real world. And with the latest breed of electric cars about £10,000 or more pricier than this barely-used i3, we think it’s a relative steal.

Hellish Depreciation Makes BMW i3s And i8s Incredible Bargains

It looks like i8 values are continuing to crash, too. We covered the £112,000 sports car when prices dropped below £60,000. Just three months later, a relatively leggy (for an i8) example has appeared for £47,995. Comparable examples mileage-wise have still dropped about £1000 every month since we covered it last time.

Our pick has 55,000 miles, so still hardly a lot, even if it has been covered in just two and a half years. The seller claims most of it is motorway mileage. Like the i3 above, this i8 has been treated to options. It apparently has the Pure Impulse Full Equipment Pack. Which is literally every option bundled into one pack.

Hellish Depreciation Makes BMW i3s And i8s Incredible Bargains

That covers the likes of 360-degree cameras, a head-up display and exterior design tweaks. The car has had two owners and has the balance of the BMW warranty. For the same price as a mildly-optioned 430d, why wouldn’t you have this magnificent i8?

Comments

redflamexfire(R32 squad)

How could it be ‘Hellish Depreciation’ for us when it gives us ‘Incredible Bargains’?

01/21/2018 - 10:37 |
68 | 2

It wont give you a ‘Incredible Bargain’ but it will give you a ‘Incredible Marriage’

01/22/2018 - 00:16 |
2 | 0
DL🏁

£60,000 is what the i8 should have cost from factory

01/21/2018 - 10:37 |
184 | 0

true

01/21/2018 - 11:08 |
4 | 2

Maybe not quite that little considering it has M2-like performance and is far more exotic. But definitely less than what it costs now - BMW has shoved it straight into the firing line of the R8, 570S, 911 Turbo/GT3, NSX, Vantage, LC500 and a whole lot of other superior cars.

01/21/2018 - 12:00 |
38 | 2
Roadster / Tail Red

Why am I now looking at second hand i8s got dammit

01/21/2018 - 11:15 |
2 | 0
Jakob

To be honest, I’m not very surprised. The BMW i3 and i8 were pilot projects, which was a blessing and a curse for them at the same time. These cars were bought by people who want the latest, the most modern tech and features. Now, as quickly as the technology advances, you can easily find cars that drive better, have more range and look better (better than the i3 at least) for cheaper. As a result, the thing that made these cars interesting - the modern technology - becomes irrelevant.
Think of it like the same reason as to why flagship smartphones are phased out after a year or two, and the same reason as to why really expensive luxury cars depreciate the way they do. After a couple of years, it’s not the most modern, the best, the greatest anymore and the people who bought it because of these reasons move on to other cars.

01/21/2018 - 11:33 |
50 | 0
HAYABUSA

In reply to by Jakob

Thats probably a prelude to an nearby age where cars become obsolete faster and faster because of the technological arms race that is taking place

01/21/2018 - 12:04 |
8 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Jakob

Wow, someone on a comment section actually understood what the i3 and i8 really are. Makes me sad to see how all the other ignorant slobs bash these like regular “products” made by “leveraging customer value and optimizing costs”.

01/22/2018 - 14:15 |
0 | 0
HAYABUSA

Looks like my gf might be getting her dream i8 after all lol

01/21/2018 - 12:02 |
8 | 0
TheMindGarage

What’s hilarious is that you can lease an i8 for just over £1,000 per month. Lease is supposed to be worse in the long run than buying outright, but in this case it’s still cheaper than the depreciation on a new car!

01/21/2018 - 12:07 |
6 | 0
Benelux Supercars

wow ! here in belgium a 2nd hand i8 still around the 90 k euro’s

01/21/2018 - 12:14 |
0 | 0

They’re around that price here as well ffs

01/21/2018 - 14:13 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Fun fact: the BMW i3’s expected price in India is 1.0 cr equal to 156,635.33 USD

01/21/2018 - 12:15 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Well, i’m still not ready to save the world…. How could you buy those things instead of the awesome petrol M cars? 😂😂😂

01/21/2018 - 12:22 |
6 | 0
Rahul 1

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

[DELETED]

01/21/2018 - 13:59 |
2 | 2
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Because some people understand that there is a market segment called “early adopters of technology”. These people are not out to get an M car. They are out to get the best and newest technology a brand has to offer, which is in i-cars not M cars. Rest assured, most who own an i8 have a petrol BMW laying around.

01/22/2018 - 14:17 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

How well will the batteries be after 4 years? This does not get much coverage in the reviews

01/21/2018 - 12:39 |
0 | 0
Jakob

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

The car is already out for 3.5 years and so far there aren’t any complaints.

01/21/2018 - 13:14 |
2 | 0
Tomislav Celić

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Well, lithium life cycle is 10 years…

01/21/2018 - 15:01 |
0 | 0

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