BMW 330i
Modular four-cylinder turbo, the workhorse of the current model range. Very broad power spectrum from 135 to 306 hp. Reliable; watch oil consumption and turbocharger at high mileage.
Reliable and Agile
Reliable four-cylinder with rear-wheel drive — good handling in the F30.
Engine Weaknesses 6
Timing chain guide rail can break; chain jump and engine damage follows. More common on early production years and with spirited driving.
Symptoms: Rattling, clattering from the engine, sudden power loss, engine damage
Oil filter housing with integrated oil/water heat exchanger leaks. Coolant loss and overheating risk from about 60,000 km.
Symptoms: Coolant level warning, oil puddle under engine, overheating
A plastic bleed line between the cylinder head and expansion tank becomes porous and breaks. Coolant loss follows; the mounting location is difficult to access, so labour costs dominate.
Symptoms: Dropping coolant level; coolant warning on the instrument cluster; faint sweet smell; no visible puddle under the car
The wastegate linkage on the B48 turbocharger has too much play by design and rattles, especially on cold start and at low revs. BMW offers a repair kit (e-actuator 11655A7A286) as a goodwill measure.
Symptoms: Metallic rattling or clattering from the turbo area on cold start and at idle; disappears at higher revs
As a direct-injection engine the B48 does not wash the intake valves with fuel. Oil vapour from crankcase ventilation and EGR gases form deposits that reduce flow and cause misfires.
Symptoms: Stumbling on cold start; power loss at high revs; rough idle; increased fuel consumption
The crankcase ventilation (PCV) integrated into the valve cover wears out and allows oil into the intake tract. Because PCV and valve cover are a single unit on the B48, the entire cover must be replaced.
Symptoms: Increased oil consumption (>0.5 L/1,000 km); blue smoke on cold start; oil in the intake line; rough idle
Vehicle Weaknesses 13
The electromechanical power steering (EPS) fails intermittently or sticks. The rack has reportedly received numerous revisions without a complete solution being found. Only full replacement helps.
The N20B20 engine (320i, 328i) is known for premature timing chain stretch. Chain can elongate from 30,000 km and cause total engine failure if it snaps. Repair cost 1,500–3,300 €.
Recall 18V713000: the connection between the propshaft and flange can fail — sudden loss of drive possible. Approximately 2,661 vehicles affected.
BMW uses only a single rubber bushing to attach the differential to the subframe. Under torque fluctuations the bushing tears from around 60,000 km, especially with track use.
EDC dampers leak or lose their adjustability. OEM replacement is very expensive. Bilstein Damptronic and Evolve dampers are cheaper alternatives with identical mode compatibility.
Factory clear coat on the CFRP carbon roof delaminates after 3–5 years of UV exposure. BMW regularly refuses warranty coverage. Particularly common in sunny climates.
Rear subframe and brake line brackets corrode prematurely. Vehicles exposed to road salt can show significant underbody rust even under 100,000 km.
Water ingress through leaking rear door liners and blocked drain tubes is a known issue. Affects E90 and F30 generations equally. Early detection prevents secondary damage.
Various minor electronics issues: erratic wipers, fuel flap faults, display failures, automatically opening windows. Usually resolved by software updates.
Water enters the boot through faulty tailgate or side window seals and blocked drain openings. Moisture damages electronics in the spare wheel well area.
The valve cover gasket goes brittle through heat cycling and loses its seal. An oil film on the exhaust manifold cover is a typical early sign. Fire risk if not addressed.
The blue trim stripe on the Alcantara steering wheel fades from sunlight and hand contact as early as 15,000–20,000 km. No effective factory protection.
Metallic clicking from front left over one-sided bumps. BMW changed the top mount design from 3 to 5 bolts in late 2014. Steering rack is the prime suspect on later production cars.