
Has BMW built the ultimate estate car?
This is the BMW M3 CS Touring: a car which shows that M division isn't shy in sparing its more practically minded customers the chance to access the CS experience.
And if the past CS models are anything to go by, they're in for a treat. From the previous generations of the M2 and M5, plus the current M3 saloon and M4 coupé, those two letters have come to represent the sweet spot in their respective M car ranges; more performance, more ability, but not really at the expense of comfort.
Not that the styling would have you believe that – the CS takes an already intimidating looking M3 and turns up the menace to a level that makes Hannibal Lecter look a bit meek. That huge front grille has been opened up further with fewer elements inside, and is bordered with a narrow red pinstripe. The same goes for the intakes either side, which are flanked by an enlarged front splitter, which, like the deeply sculpted bonnet, is made from carbon fibre. Skip advert Advertisement - Article continues below View M3 View M3 View M3 View M3
Staggered alloy wheels (19 inches in diameter at the front, 20 inches at the back) save 1kg per corner over a standard M3's rims and are wrapped in Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 tyres. At the back, the changes are rounded off by a carbon fibre diffuser, CS badging plus a subtle red stripe on the trailing edge of the boot spoiler. Advertisement - Article continues below
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Inside, there are more changes to trim weight. The centre console is all new; the carbon fibre unit loses a little storage compared to the standard car's, while the carbon fibre bucket seats – usually an option on other M3 cars – are standard on the CS.
Those seats are still something of a bone of contention. They certainly look dramatic, but a hump in the seat base between the thighs can get in the way, especially for those who left-foot brake – something that isn't beyond the imagination of the driver of a car that, as we'll soon see, is more than capable of holding its own on a track. Combined with a high dashboard line relative to the seating position, plus an Alcantara-trimmed steering wheel that some drivers will find doesn't quite adjust low enough, and the driving position feeling a little compromised. Skip advert Advertisement - Article continues below
The criticisms of the CS pretty much end there, though, because when it comes to the mechanical changes, BMW has judged things brilliantly. Advertisement - Article continues below
M division hasn't done anything wild here, but a series of subtle upgrades all start to add up. Those weight-reduction measures, for example, save just 15kg – pretty much impossible to notice in the context of a 1,925kg car – but they're a step in the right direction nonetheless.
Likewise, individual chassis upgrades are very subtle. The suspension gains springs that are slightly stiffer than those of the M3 Competition, the dampers are tuned to complement them, while the antiroll bar droplinks are rose jointed. Strut braces help to add just a touch more body rigidity at the front, stiffer engine mounts aim to improve body control, while the software for the braking system has been adjusted. Our test car was equipped with carbon ceramic discs – a hefty £8,800 option.
The M3 has never been short of power, but some minor changes to the 3.0-litre twin-turbo straight six, including engine management tweaks and a titanium exhaust back box, have liberated an extra 20bhp, taking the total to 542bhp. Torque stands at 650Nm, with drive, much like the Competition, going to all four wheels.
We had the opportunity to drive the CS on the road and then track, with BMW providing us with a M3 Competition Touring on-road for a back-to-back comparison. While the changes between the two are minor, almost all of the differences swing in favour of the CS. Advertisement - Article continues below Skip advert Advertisement - Article continues below
Some of those changes are unexpected, too. The first thing you notice is that the standard Competition fidgets a little over low-speed bumps, but this is much more suppressed in the CS. Over larger bumps, there's a touch less side-to-side movement, too. So while people might not expect to turn to a more hardcore model for more comfort, the CS is slightly more compliant than the standard car.
Appreciating the difference of those extra 20 horses and 15 fewer kilos isn't something that'll present itself during on-road driving every day, but the extra grip of the more sticky tyres also weighs in, and the result is a car that delivers staggering point-to-point pace on dry roads. The grip is one thing, but the CS also has the poise, balance and composure to make the most of it. Point it into a corner and it simply sticks.
Jump on the accelerator pedal, and all 542bhp slingshots you out of the corner and onto the next straight with phenomenal traction. Officially, 0-62mph takes 3.5 seconds, and we don't have the slightest reason to dispute that. The noise of that titanium exhaust lends the M3 some extra rasp that adds a touch more excitement to an already angry yet tuneful engine note. Advertisement - Article continues below Skip advert Advertisement - Article continues below
This is a car, then, that's so quick over almost any ground that you'll need a track to make the most of it. Thruxton, where we drove it, proves to be a huge challenge for any road car; it's hugely fast, yet there's hardly a straight bit of tarmac anywhere. This makes braking tricky; getting slowed down for the first complex starts as the car is loaded up in the previous left-hander, requiring a deft feeling on the left pedal – plus body control that isn't going to cause any nasty surprises.
It's in these situations that you'd never believe that you're pushing an estate car around so quickly, until you glance over your shoulder and see the spacious cabin behind. While there's a lot of mass at play, the response from the brakes, allied to a chassis that feels neatly balanced front to rear, means that you can trust the car implicitly.
That stability enables the brakes to be eased off through the turn – one way of trying to mitigate a touch of understeer that appears as you really lean hard on the front axle. We'd like a little more feedback through the wheel to really feel when that limit is arriving, though. Of course, the other way to deal with overloaded front tyres is to use that huge power to push the car around from the rear. The engine has so much effortless grunt from low down that there's always power to play with, and the torque arrives so progressively that the throttle can be metered out really precisely.
Coming from the right of Campbell into the left at Cobb, the direction change is superb, with a pointy front end helping the CS switch like a car that feels much lighter. Emerging onto the faster sections of track, it delivers incredible grip, and while that steering still lacks a little information, it loads up nicely as the speed builds.
Tackle the staggeringly fast Church corner and the M3's poise once again comes to the fore, with the speed building towards the final chicane, while the carbon brakes deliver relentless stopping power and show no signs of fade.
And all of this in an estate car. At £120,600, it may not be cheap, but it would be a very fun way to embarrass some much more exotic machinery at a track day. Above all else, it's still got a boot large enough to bring a set of spare wheels and tyres for the journey home, too. Model: BMW M3 CS Touring Price from: £120,600 Powertrain: 3.0-litre twin-turbo 6cyl Power/torque: 542bhp/650Nm Transmission: Eight-speed auto, four-wheel drive 0-62mph: 3.5 seconds Top speed: 186mph Economy: 26.9mpg CO2: 240g/km Size (L/W/H): 4,796/1,447/1,918/mm On sale: Now Share this on Twitter Share this on Facebook Email Hyundai reduces prices across its entire EV range
Hyundai reduces prices across its entire EV range
Korean brand acts swiftly to cut prices on all its electric cars, amid confusion over Government's grant scheme Congestion Charge EV exemption removal to generate over £75million per year
Congestion Charge EV exemption removal to generate over £75million per year
TfL is planning to raise the Congestion Charge to £18, and EV drivers will have to pay too Dacia's baby EV due in 12 months with a tiny £15k price tag
Dacia's baby EV due in 12 months with a tiny £15k price tag
Dacia's new model will be developed in double-quick time, and it'll be built in Europe to avoid China tariffs

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Top Gear
3 hours ago
- Top Gear
BMW M3 Touring Review 2025
The first ever BMW M3 Touring: the really fast version of BMW's class-leading 3 Series, now with an estate bodyshell. To give it its full name, it's the BMW M3 Touring Competition xDrive: in English that means the estate is only available with BMW's superb all-wheel drive system. 'Competition' is just a trim level, and all M3s in the UK of any shape are Comps. It means you get over 500bhp and an automatic gearbox as standard. On top of that there's the newly arrived hardcore CS version – if you want to spend an extra £35k-odd. Advertisement - Page continues below Why has this car created such a fuss? There's a coolness about fast estate cars. Even though they are at heart a bit of an odd concoction: if you've got a dog or a lawnmower or bags of garden waste in the big 500-litre boot, you tend not to drive very quickly. And if it's empty and the road looks inviting, you're in an estate car, which is naturally heavier and less stiff than a coupe. Like, say, a BMW M4. 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At the front, the M3's 3.0-litre twin-turbo straight six delivers just over 500 horsepower to all four wheels via an eight-speed automatic gearbox. At the back, you get a smidge over 500 litres of boot space. That's it. That's the recipe. Party at the front and in the rear. And what about the CS? More power again? The CS pushes power up to 542bhp, dropping a couple of tenths from the 0-62mph time (claimed at 3.5s, likely not much over 3.0s flat in reality), and the 174mph limiter is raised to 186mph. The CS recipe has already been applied to the saloon and coupe, and is largely repeated here, although it does without the carbon fibre roof panel the shorter-roofed cars get. It's not a limited edition model, but it is more specialised, gaining a carbon fibre bonnet, titanium exhaust, plus retuned electronics for the gearbox, 4WD system and stability control. There's a load more carbon around the place, forged wheels, and an aluminium strut brace and more robust engine mounts as part of extra chassis strengthening measures. You still don't get carbon ceramic brakes as standard though. Come on then, how much is all this? Ah yes. Price. It's not cheap to own more car than anyone could ever possibly want or need. M3 Tourings start at £91,865 (they've gone up six grand since they first arrived two years ago) and it's terrifyingly easy to propel that beyond six figures if you lob some carbon fibre-laced option packs at yours. And if you do that, well, you're hardly likely to be filling it with unsheared sheep or bags of cement. Meanwhile the CS Touring weighs in at a whopping £126,275. An extra £35,000 give or take, and about £10k more than a hybrid 717bhp M5 Touring. Not saying that would be our choice, just pointing out the potential profit margin BMW enjoys with its CS cars. So is the M3 Touring a pointless endeavour that merely panders to the fantasies of those who have no intention – or means – of buying one? Or is it in fact one of the coolest cars made by BMW today? There is of course the possibility that the M3 Touring is in fact both of those things simultaneously, and still a pretty glorious bit of kit. Does the driving live up to the hype? Yes. The CS has remarkable precision and genuinely spectacular body control, the only drawbacks being extra road noise and more exhaust drone. To be honest, unless your hound particularly loves track days (this is a joke, not a suggestion), the regular M3 Touring is probably the better all-rounder. More on all this in the next tab. Our choice from the range BMW M3 xDrive Comp M 5dr Step Auto [Ultimate/M Pro Pk] £105,760 See prices and specs What's the verdict? ' The bottom line is this: the M3 Touring is eye-wateringly, cheek-pufflingly good to drive fast ' Folks who've yearned for BMW to build an M3 Touring for years – to be all the car they could ever want – might be dismayed to learn the result isn't in fact perfect. It's flawed. The fuel tank is on the small side. The gearbox still has moments in which it behaves like it's a regular automatic transmission that accidentally stowed away in an M car. And there's no getting away from the fact that if you can afford to buy one, you are certainly not in the position where you need one car to cover all bases. You probably have a couple of sporty toys for the weekend already, and a more humdrum shopping car. But don't get hung up on the semantics. The bottom line is this: the M3 Touring is eye-wateringly, cheek-pufflingly good to drive fast, and because it shares a body with the excellent 3 Series Touring, it's also an incredibly competent, well-made family car. No, it's not going to cause an overnight collapse in BMW X3 or Audi Q5 sales. It isn't supposed to. You get the feeling BMW will be happy with a few steady sales, while basking in the reflected glow of appreciation for having built a small fast estate at last. Ok, not small exactly, but definitely a more versatile size then the cruise liner than is the M5 Touring. It doesn't dilute the M3 lineage and it does bring something new and fresh to this little niche of the car world. Life for the next Audi RS4 Avant and the hybrid-powered AMG C63 is tricky right now. We'd have this over either of them any day of the week.