BMW fifth-generation X5, officially unveiled on June 30, 2026, codenamed G65. And the more you look at it, the more you realise this is not just an update. This is a reset. The biggest reset in the X5’s 27-year history.
A Quick Note on Naming
Before we dive in, a small but important clarification that often confuses people: the car being revealed right now is officially designated as a 2027 model year vehicle in markets like the USA. However, it was revealed in 2026, production begins in August 2026 at BMW’s Spartanburg plant in South Carolina, and petrol and diesel variants go on sale globally from late November 2026.
So when people say “2026 BMW X5 fifth generation,” they are talking about the same G65 revealed this week. Think of it as the new fifth-gen X5, arriving in showrooms before the year is out. That is the car this post covers.
Quick Specs at a Glance
| Specification | 2026 BMW X5 (G65) |
|---|---|
| Generation | Fifth / G65 |
| Reveal Date | June 30, 2026 |
| Production Start | August 2026 (Spartanburg, USA) |
| On Sale (Petrol/Diesel) | Late November 2026 |
| On Sale (PHEV / iX5) | 5 (Petrol, Diesel, 2x PHEV, EV + Hydrogen in 2028) |
| Top Power (M60e) | 612hp / 800Nm |
| iX5 Battery | 141 kWh (EU) / 144 kWh (USA) |
| iX5 Range (EPA est.) | 435 miles |
| iX5 Max Charge Speed | 460 kW |
| Main Screen | 17.9-inch touchscreen |
| Third Row | Discontinued on G65 |
| Starting Price (USA) | $69,800 |
| Starting Price (Germany) | €94,800 |
| Starting Price (India) | ₹1.00 Crore |
Design
The fifth iteration of BMW’s original X model introduces sweeping changes that make it look as if it skipped a generation. The new X5 fully embraces the Neue Klasse aesthetic we first saw on the iX3, but with a few twists. The most striking element up front is the new double-X headlight signature. The double-X headlight graphic pays homage to the original 1999 E53 and can be switched off from the iDrive menu. So if you find it too flashy for your taste, one tap in the menu and it becomes a cleaner, more classic look. That kind of option is thoughtful design.
At the back, a piece of X5 history disappears. The incoming X5 is expected to do away with its Range Rover-inspired split tailgate when it enters its fifth generation, ending a tradition that dates back to the first generation. In its place is a single-piece tailgate with wide, full-width tail lights that give the rear a much cleaner, more premium look.
The Winglet Door Handles
This is the detail that has everyone talking. The G65 X5 replaces its door handles entirely with B-pillar-mounted Winglets that open three different ways, including a full mechanical fallback. Instead of pulling a handle on the door itself, you press a slim gloss-black tab mounted into the pillar. It looks futuristic in person, and the fact that there is a mechanical fallback means you are never stuck outside your car if the electronics fail.

Interior
Step inside the G65 and the change from the outgoing X5 is immediately apparent. BMW has not just updated the dashboard they have completely replaced it. The 2026 BMW X5’s cabin gets a new dashboard layout with fewer physical controls, built around BMW’s Panoramic iDrive display that spans the base of the windscreen, a 17.9-inch central touchscreen, a 3D head-up display and an optional passenger display.
That 17.9-inch central screen is one of the largest fitted to any BMW road car to date. It runs BMW’s new Operating System X, the brand’s next-generation interface designed to be faster, more intuitive, and easier to use than previous versions. New trim options include optional slate and glass accents with extended ambient lighting. Other highlights include a standard panoramic glass roof, sports seats, optional ventilated and massaging front seats, soft-close electric doors, wireless charging, over-the-air updates and a Bowers & Wilkins sound system with Dolby Atmos.
A Bowers & Wilkins system with Dolby Atmos in an SUV cabin is genuinely impressive. Rear passengers also get their own climate touchscreen, and four-zone climate control is available for the first time on the X5. One particularly interesting material choice: BMW’s first genuine slate trim and passenger touchscreen debut on the X5. Real slate the same kind of stone used on rooftops and flooring as a trim option inside a car. That is something you simply do not find at this price point.
Two Rows Only — No Third Row
This is the one change that will disappoint some buyers. The G65 X5 drops the optional third row entirely. Dropping the third row will frustrate big families. If you need seven seats, BMW’s answer is the X7. The X5 is now a strict five-seater, which gives rear passengers significantly more knee and head room than before.
The Five Powertrains
This is the part of the story that really makes the G65 X5 stand out from every other luxury SUV on the market right now. The 2026 BMW X5 becomes the first BMW model offered with five distinct drive systems: petrol, diesel, plug-in hybrid, battery-electric and, later, hydrogen fuel-cell.
Five powertrains. Under one name. On one body. That has never been done before by BMW on a single production model.
X5 40 xDrive – Petrol
The X5 40 xDrive uses a 3.0-litre turbo-petrol six-cylinder with 48V mild-hybrid assistance, making 400hp and 580Nm. This will be the most popular variant for most buyers a smooth, powerful straight-six that covers everyday driving with ease and confidence.
X5 40d xDrive – Diesel
The X5 40d xDrive diesel makes 313hp and 670Nm. The diesel will not be offered in the USA but will be available in Europe and other markets. Diesel buyers get exceptional low-end pulling power and strong long-distance fuel economy, making it ideal for motorway miles.
X5 50e xDrive – Plug-in Hybrid
The X5 50e xDrive PHEV combines a 3.0-litre petrol engine with an electric motor for 489hp and 700Nm, while both PHEVs offer an electric-only WLTP range of up to 102km and support up to 11kW AC charging. Over 60 miles of electric-only range means most daily commutes can be done without using a drop of petrol.
X5 M60e xDrive – Performance Plug-in Hybrid
The range-topping M60e xDrive makes 612hp and 800Nm. 612hp in a family SUV. For context, many dedicated sports cars do not reach that figure. The M60e is the performance flagship of the lineup for now, until the full X5 M arrives later.
iX5 60 xDrive – Fully Electric
This is the headline act of the entire reveal. It features the largest battery of any electric BMW to date, with a usable energy capacity of 141 kWh in Europe and 144 kWh in the United States. The iX5 60 xDrive targets up to 525 miles (845 km) of range under the WLTP cycle. In EPA testing, it is expected to deliver around 435 miles (700 km) before depletion.
435 miles of EPA-estimated range on a full charge. That is class-leading by a significant margin, and more than enough for most people to go a full week of driving without needing to charge at all. The iX5 also uses an 800-volt charging architecture, which means it can accept up to 460 kW of DC fast charging. In practical terms, that means adding roughly 300 km of range in around ten minutes at a compatible fast charger.
Hydrogen – Coming Later
A hydrogen fuel-cell version BMW says it’s targeting for 2028 production. This one is further off, but it shows how seriously BMW is thinking about the long-term future of the X5. A car that covers petrol, diesel, plug-in hybrid, battery-electric, and hydrogen in one generation is genuinely unprecedented in the industry.
Price & Variants
| Variant | Tech | USA Price | India Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| X5 40 xDrive (Petrol) | 3.0L Turbo 6-cylinder engine with 48V tech. Generates 400 hp and 580 Nm. | $69,800 | ₹1.05 Crore – ₹1.15 Crore |
| X5 40d xDrive (Diesel) | Upgraded 3.0L straight-six diesel with 48V tech. Generates 313 hp and 670 Nm. | Not available | ₹1.08 Crore – ₹1.18 Crore |
| X5 50e xDrive (PHEV) | Pairs a 3.0L petrol engine with an electric motor. Generates 489 hp, with a 102 km pure electric range. | $77,500 | ₹1.25 Crore – ₹1.35 Crore |
| iX5 60 xDrive (Electric) | First-ever pure electric X5. Packs a massive 141 kWh battery with a claimed range of up to 845 km. | $79,800 | ₹1.40 Crore – ₹1.55 Crore |
| X5 M60e xDrive (Performance PHEV) | High-performance M-tuned hybrid. Belts out a massive 612 hp and 800 Nm of torque. | TBC | ₹1.60 Crore+ |
Safety and Driver Assistance
The SUV gets BMW’s latest Level 2 driver assistance suite, including adaptive cruise control, lane keeping assist, highway and urban driving assist, parking assist and automatic emergency braking, alongside multiple airbags and electronic stability control.
For the first time on an X5, automatic doors are also offered. You can approach the car and the doors will open for you. A small thing, but a genuinely useful one with your arms full of shopping or luggage.
How Does It Compare to Rivals?
| Car | Power (Top) | EV Range | Starting Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| BMW X5 G65 iX5 60 | 570hp | 435 miles (EPA est.) | $79,800 |
| Mercedes GLE 450e PHEV | 381hp | 62 miles EV | $78,000 |
| Audi Q7 PHEV | 449hp | 38 miles EV | $74,000 |
| Volvo XC90 Recharge | 455hp | 35 miles EV | $67,000 |
| Land Rover Range Rover PHEV | 434hp | 70 miles EV | $109,000 |
Frequently Asked Questions
Final Thoughts
Anyone in the market for a midsize luxury SUV in late 2026 or early 2027 who wants the most technologically advanced, powertrains complete, and genuinely exciting version of one of the world’s best-selling luxury SUVs now completely rebuilt from the ground up.
