2026 BMW 550e First Test: The Most Fun 5 Series?
Don’t sleep on the plug-in hybrid model of BMW’s midsize luxury sedan lineup.
Pros
- Surprisingly quick
- Great handling
- Hybrid efficiency
Cons
- Needs grippier tires
- Performance depends on a charged battery
- Plug-ins are on the way out
For more than 50 years, the BMW 5 Series has been the brand’s midsize luxury sedan benchmark, though its greatness has come in waves. At its peak, particularly the beloved E39 generation, the 5 Series nailed the balance between sharp steering, supple ride, and everyday usability, a combination that helped define the modern sport luxury sedan. While subsequent generations have often leaned harder into styling experimentation, added size and weight, or prioritized technology over tactility, through it all, the 5 Series has served as BMW’s barometer of sorts, balancing engaging driving dynamics with contemporary luxury.
As for the latest generation, mild hybrid gasoline models like the 530i and 540i offer smooth power delivery, sophisticated interiors, and composed manners that echo the brand’s heritage, even as ride and handling skew more toward comfort.
Then there’s the 2026 BMW 550e, a plug-in hybrid interpretation of the 5 Series that aims to marry efficiency with enhanced electrified performance—a formula that, on paper at least, promises the best of both worlds. We grabbed a 550e to find out how that formula plays out in the real world.
Torquey and Quick
The 550e’s 3.0-liter turbo I-6, paired with an electric motor, produces 483 hp and 516 lb‑ft of torque all in, making it the most powerful non-M gas-powered 5 Series. In our testing, it sprinted to 60 mph in 3.8 seconds, beating BMW’s estimate by three ticks, placing it firmly in high-performance luxury territory without veering into supercar extremes.
By comparison, the 2025 M5 Touring wagon, with its 717-hp V‑8 PHEV powertrain, hits 60 mph in 3.2 seconds, while the 536-hp 2026 Porsche Panamera 4S E-Hybrid manages 3.3 seconds. The 550e weighs 4,932 pounds—chunky but still lighter than the Panamera (5,199) and M5 (5,456).
Its electric torque helps it launch in a brisk and seamless manner, with no hiccups when the gas engine joins the party. The eight-speed automatic transmission is smooth but responsive, and the inline-six provides a satisfying growl under hard acceleration. The 550e doesn’t just look fast on paper. It feels fast on the road.




