The BMW M2 has finally gained all-wheel drive, and the reason is refreshingly simple. Buyers asked for it. For years, the smallest M car stayed strictly rear-driven while the M3 saloon and M4 coupé embraced xDrive. Now the M2 xDrive joins the ranks, and it lands with real pace.

M boss, Frank van Meel, spelt out the logic. Drivers across the American Northeast and Midwest tend to run all-season tyres right through spring and summer. On rubber like that, a purely rear-driven M2 simply could not deliver. Demand from those regions ran hot. Switzerland leaned in too, as its heavy snowfall makes a four-wheel-drive sports coupé an easy sell.
This is not the first time American buyers have shaped an M car. The manual gearbox in the E60 and F10 M5 was a North American request. The new M3 CS Handschalter is another market exclusive. The M2 xDrive follows that lineage, built for the drivers who kept asking.

The traction upgrade brings a sharp turn of speed. BMW quotes 0 to 60 mph in 3.6 seconds, or 3.3 seconds with a one-foot rollout. The rear-driven automatic managed 3.9 seconds, so the gap matters. Those numbers look conservative, and the real car may edge nearer three seconds flat. The xDrive replaces the automatic rear-driven version, while purists can still order a manual M2 that channels drive to the rear axle alone.
Under the bonnet, the important bits carry over. Both cars keep the 3.0-litre twin-turbocharged S58 straight-six, good for 473 horsepower and 443 lb-ft of torque. For 2027, BMW has reworked the engine to meet Euro 7 rules, adding M-Ignite pre-chamber ignition, though US cars go without it. The exhaust note sharpens a touch, and economy nudges upward. Modest gains, but the M2 has never felt more rounded.
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