BMW is about to roll out its take on the future of electric vehicles (EVs), but cars like the i4 Gran Coupe still exist to remind us how far it’s already come.

Touted as BMW’s answer to the ever-popular Tesla Model 3, the i4 arrived in Australia in 2021 and has since been a relatively strong seller in the local premium sedan segment. It’s performed particularly well against other similarly priced EVs, but the model range has been pruned for 2026.

Gone are all variants bar the entry-level model variant on test here: the 2026 BMW i4 eDrive35. The reasoning was that the base trim accounted for the vast majority (75 per cent) of all i4 sales since it joined the range in 2023, leaving it to fly the flag alone as BMW Australia awaits fresh stock of the updated mid-size electric liftback.

Those updates include minor exterior design tweaks, the addition of the previously unavailable M Sport Package, interior tweaks, and an 18km increase in driving range to a total of (drum roll, please) 448km. It’s still rear-wheel drive as standard, but the upgrades come with a slight price hike.

What does all that mean for the i4, and has it done enough to keep it relevant amid BMW’s imminent ‘Neue Klasse’ EV onslaught?