BMW has spent the better part of the last five years telling the world it is all-in on electrification. Neue Klasse concepts. Dedicated EV platforms. Big promises about software-defined vehicles and a clean break from the past.
And yet, when you step back and look at the actual product roadmap taking shape over the next decade, a very different story emerges. One that is far more pragmatic, and arguably far more interesting.
At the center of it all is a platform BMW refuses to let go of.
| Model | Powertrain | Platform | Start of Production | End of Production (Projected) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Series | ICE | UKL | 2026 | 2034 |
| i1* | EV | Neue Klasse | 2028 | 2035 |
| 2 Series Gran Coupe | ICE | UKL | 2026 | 2033 |
| i2 GC* | EV | Neue Klasse | 2029 | 2035 |
| 2 Series Coupe | ICE | CLAR | 2021 | 2029 |
| 3 Series | ICE | CLAR II | 2026 | 2033 |
| i3 | EV | Neue Klasse | 2026 | 2035 |
| 4 Series | ICE | CLAR II | 2026 | 2034 |
| i4 | EV | Neue Klasse | 2027 | 2035 |
| Z4 | ICE | CLAR | 2018 | 2026 |
| 5 Series | ICE | CLAR II | 2026 | 2034 |
| i5 | EV | Neue Klasse | 2026 | 2035 |
| 7 Series | ICE | CLAR II | 2026 | 2034 |
| i7 | EV | Neue Klasse | 2026 | 2035 |
| 8 Series | ICE | CLAR | 2017 | 2026 |
| X1 | ICE | UKL | 2026 | 2034 |
| iX1 | EV | Neue Klasse | 2027 | 2035 |
| X2 | ICE | UKL | 2026 | 2034 |
| iX2 | EV | Neue Klasse | 2028 | 2035 |
| X3 | ICE | CLAR II | 2025 | 2033 |
| iX3 | EV | Neue Klasse | 2026 | 2035 |
| X4 | ICE | CLAR (last gen ends) | 2018 | 2025 |
| iX4 | EV Only | Neue Klasse | 2027 | 2035 |
| X5 | ICE | CLAR II | 2026 | 2035 |
| iX5 | EV | CLAR II | 2026 | 2035 |
| X6 | ICE | CLAR II | 2027 | 2035 |
| iX6 | EV | CLAR II | 2028 | 2035 |
| X7 | ICE | CLAR II | 2027 | 2035 |
| iX7 | EV | CLAR II | 2028 | 2035 |
| XM | ICE (PHEV only) | CLAR | 2022 | 2029 |
As you can see above, BMW’s product roadmap is nothing if not complex. A mixture of EV and ICE almost across the range, the portfolio has become incredibly hard to follow even for the most diehard fan.

CLAR Is Not Going Anywhere
Despite the narrative around Neue Klasse, BMW’s CLAR architecture is proving to be remarkably resilient. Originally conceived as a flexible foundation for combustion engines, CLAR has quietly evolved into one of the most adaptable vehicle platforms in the industry.
Over the next ten years, CLAR will continue to underpin some of BMW’s most important vehicles. That includes the 2 Series, 3 Series, 4 Series, 5 Series, 7 Series, and nearly the entire upper end of the X lineup. Even more telling, CLAR will support both ICE and EV variants simultaneously for many of these models.
This is not accidental.
BMW has been clear internally that combustion engines will remain part of the product mix well into the 2030s, and possibly beyond. Regulatory realities, uneven EV adoption across global markets, infrastructure challenges, and customer demand all point in the same direction. A hard stop on ICE simply does not make business sense yet.
CLAR gives BMW optionality. It allows the company to build petrol, diesel, hybrid, and fully electric vehicles on a single architecture without forcing premature decisions. In a world where market conditions keep shifting, that flexibility is invaluable.

Neue Klasse Is a Bet, Not a Replacement
That does not mean Neue Klasse is window dressing. Far from it.
Neue Klasse will become the backbone of BMW’s next generation of EVs, particularly in high-volume segments. Models like the iX3, i3, i4, i5, and i7 will increasingly migrate to the dedicated NK platform as production scales and costs come down.
But what Neue Klasse is not doing is killing CLAR.
Instead, BMW is running both strategies in parallel. Neue Klasse handles the clean-sheet EV future. CLAR keeps the present, and near future, profitable and adaptable.
This dual-track approach stands in stark contrast to rivals who rushed headlong into single-platform EV strategies, only to find themselves exposed when EV demand softened or incentives shifted.

The X4 Tells You Everything You Need to Know
Perhaps the most revealing example of BMW’s thinking is the X4.
The ICE X4 is effectively done. Production ends with the current generation, and there is no direct combustion successor planned. Instead, the model will live on as the iX4, an EV-only coupe-style SUV built on Neue Klasse.
That decision feels surgical rather than ideological.
Coupe SUVs are image-driven, style-led products with fewer traditional buyers attached to combustion engines. Electrifying that niche first makes sense. Meanwhile, core models like the X5, X6, and X7 remain firmly dual-powertrain on CLAR, reflecting where BMW still sees long-term ICE demand.

The Mid-2030s Question
The most fascinating part of BMW’s strategy is not what happens next year or even in 2028. It is what happens around 2034 or 2035.
By then, CLAR and UKL will be aging architectures the Neue Klasse will be mature and the regulations will be (hopefully) more defined.
At that point, BMW faces a critical decision.
Does it invest in a new generation of combustion-capable platforms? Does it deeply revise CLAR and UKL to extend their life further? Or does it finally draw a hard line and move to EV-only architectures across the board? Given what direction we’re headed in, we’d expect ICE to stick around far beyond 2035.

Either way BMW is clearly keeping its options open. And that may be the smartest move of all.
Rather than betting the company on a single outcome, BMW is building flexibility into its engineering, manufacturing, and product planning. CLAR’s continued life is not a failure to commit to electrification. It is an acknowledgment that the transition will not be clean, linear, or uniform.
If anything, BMW’s strategy suggests the company understands something many others are still learning the hard way: the future is (mostly) electric, but the road to get there is anything but straight.