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Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Hotter BMW CS treatment ruled out for SUVs


BMW’s high-performance M division isn’t planning on adding more intense CS versions of its SUVs to its lineup, reserving them for passenger cars instead.

The CS models – meaning ‘Competition Sport’ – are the top models currently offered in BMW’s M division range, sitting above the standard M and hotter Competition variants in terms of price and performance.

CS versions of the BMW M2, BMW M3 Touring and BMW M4 are currently available in Australia, with the newest model – the M2 CS – priced from $172,900 before on-road costs.

The treatment typically brings increased power and torque with less weight for faster acceleration and a higher top speed, combined with lashings of carbon fibre and CS-specific items including unique bodywork and alloy wheel designs.

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It’s currently not offered on any SUV globally, restricted to sedan, coupe and Touring (BMW-speak for wagon) body styles.

SUVs have become mainstream offerings for performance and sports car brands, with the most popular Aston Martin being its DBX SUV, while Ferrari and Lamborghini have SUVs in showrooms in the Purosangue and Urus, respectively.

Despite the most powerful BMW being an SUV – the XM uses a 550kW version of the V8 plug-in hybrid powertrain used in the M5 sedan and wagon – M boss Frank van Meel says the CS name won’t be applied to SUVs.

“Right now, we keep it with the lower cars, because it was the more logical approach, especially looking into our heritage with GTS with CSL,” the BMW boss said on a call with Australian media, including CarExpert.