BMW F82 M4 Resale Value: Will It Appreciate?

BMW F82 M4 Resale Value: Will It Appreciate?

Historical M Coupe Depreciation Data Predicts the Answer — Standard / Competition / CS / GTS

Last updated: April 2026 | BIMMER+

F82 M4 — Specs and Variant Breakdown

The F82 M4 launched in 2015 as the successor to the E92 M3 Coupe. It was the first generation where BMW split the M3 nameplate — sedan became M3 (F80), coupe became M4 (F82). Under the hood, the S55 3.0L twin-turbocharged inline-six replaced the S65 V8, marking BMW M's shift from naturally aspirated to forced induction. A standard CFRP carbon fiber roof and aluminum hood reduced weight by approximately 175 lbs compared to the outgoing E92 M3.

Variant Engine Power Torque 0–60 mph US MSRP Production
M4 Standard S55B30 (3.0L I6 TT) 425 hp 406 lb-ft 3.9s (DCT) $65,700 2015–2017
M4 Competition S55B30 (high-output) 444 hp 406 lb-ft 3.8s (DCT) $73,700 2016–2020
M4 CS S55B30 (460 hp tune) 454 hp 443 lb-ft 3.7s (DCT) $104,000 2018 (3,000 global)
M4 GTS S55B30 (water injection, 493 hp) 493 hp 443 lb-ft 3.6s (DCT) $134,200 2016 (700 global)

Transmission options: 6-speed manual or 7-speed M DCT. The manual was available on Standard and Competition models; the CS and GTS were DCT only. In the US, manual take rates were relatively low — making 6MT cars significantly rarer and increasingly desirable on the used market.

Current US Market Prices (2026 Data)

Pricing based on Bring a Trailer completed sales, Cars & Bids, CarGurus, and Classic.com data as of early 2026.

Variant Price Range Volume Zone MT vs DCT
M4 Standard (pre-LCI) $30,000–$48,000 $35,000–$42,000 MT commands +$3,000–$8,000
M4 Competition (incl. LCI) $42,000–$65,000 $48,000–$58,000 MT commands +$5,000–$10,000
M4 CS (3,000 global) $80,000–$105,000 $85,000–$98,000 DCT only
M4 GTS (700 global) $130,000–$200,000+ ~$150,000 DCT only

The most striking data point: a standard M4 can now be purchased for under $35,000 — roughly half of its original MSRP. That puts 425 hp, a twin-turbo inline-six, carbon fiber roof, and M Division engineering at a price point that competes with a new Camaro SS. Meanwhile, the M4 GTS has held remarkably close to its original $134,200 MSRP, with the rarest examples trading above it — 700 units of global production creating a hard floor under prices.

Depreciation Math — How Far Have Prices Fallen?

Variant Original MSRP 2026 Median Depreciation Years Elapsed
M4 Standard $65,700 $38,000 -42% 9–11 years
M4 Competition $73,700 $53,000 -28% 6–10 years
M4 CS $104,000 $92,000 -12% ~8 years
M4 GTS $134,200 $150,000 +12% ~10 years

Classic.com tracks the F82 M4 at an average transaction price of $53,187 with a 5-year depreciation rate of 44.1%. The GTS has already crossed into positive territory — appreciating above MSRP. The CS is holding remarkably well at just -12% after 8 years. Standard and Competition models still have room to slide, but the rate of decline is slowing as the floor approaches.

Historical M Coupe Curves — E46 M3 / E92 M3 / 1M Coupe

Model Prod. End Floor Reached Floor Price 2026 Value Status
E46 M3 Coupe 2006 2014–2016 ~$18,000 $42,000 (6MT ZCP) 2× from floor
E46 M3 CSL 2004 2012–2014 ~$50,000 $109,000–$325,000 3×+ from floor
E92 M3 Coupe 2013 2019–2021 ~$25,000 $38,000–$55,000 Past floor, rising gently
1M Coupe 2012 Never bottomed $62,500–$200,000 MSRP +33% baseline

The pattern is consistent: "6–10 years after production end = floor; year 10+ = reversal." E46 M3: ended 2006 → floor 2015 → surged post-2020. E92 M3: ended 2013 → floor 2020 → gently rising now. F82 M4: ended 2020 → predicted floor 2026–2030, reversal ~2030.

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Limited editions break the rules: The E46 CSL (1,383 units) appreciated 3×+. The 1M (6,342 units) never depreciated at all. The M4 GTS (700 units) and CS (3,000 units) are following the same playbook — scarcity overrides the normal depreciation curve.

5 Structural Reasons the F82 M4 Holds Value

1. Direct Successor to the M3 Coupe Lineage

The F82 M4 is the direct continuation of the E30 → E36 → E46 → E92 M3 Coupe bloodline — the generation where BMW split M3 (sedan) from M4 (coupe). It inherits four decades of M3 Coupe brand equity.

2. S55 Twin-Turbo Inline-Six — A Modern Classic

The S55 combined twin-turbo forced induction with a 7,600 rpm redline — an unusually high-revving character for a turbo engine. It bridges the gap between the old NA M3 experience and the modern turbo era, and that "best of both worlds" quality gives it lasting appeal.

3. Carbon Fiber Roof + Lightweight Construction

CFRP roof, carbon strut tower brace (Competition onward), aluminum hood — the F82 used production-car-unusual levels of lightweight engineering. At 3,300 lbs (Standard, 6MT), it's exceptionally light for a 425 hp turbo coupe.

4. Manual Transmission Availability

A 6-speed manual in a 2020-era high-performance coupe is inherently rare. Manual F82 M4s are a minority of production and command a widening price premium on the used market — a trend that will only accelerate as the manual transmission disappears from new cars entirely.

5. The G82 M4 Made the F82 Look Better

The successor G82 M4 grew by 4.8 inches in length and gained over 350 lbs. Its large kidney grille design remains divisive. By contrast, the F82's compact, taut proportions are being actively reappraised — a pattern that historically precedes appreciation.

M4 CS and M4 GTS — Limited Editions in a Class of Their Own

M4 GTS (700 Units Global)

Water injection system, 493 hp, roll-cage-ready body, fixed rear wing, dedicated suspension. US MSRP was $134,200. In 2026, values sit at $130,000–$200,000+ — effectively at or above MSRP. The E92 M3 GTS sold for approximately $355,000 at auction; the F82 GTS is on a similar long-term trajectory.

M4 CS (3,000 Units Global)

454 hp, lightweight package, Alcantara interior. More livable than the GTS while retaining the limited-edition cachet. US MSRP was $104,000 → current values around $80,000–$105,000, a depreciation rate of just ~12% after 8 years. That's half the depreciation rate of the standard M4. Following the trajectory of the E46 CSL and M2 CS, the M4 CS is positioned for future appreciation.

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Special editions like the DTM Champion Edition (~200 units) and other low-volume variants also exist. The fewer units produced, the stronger the long-term price floor — this is one of the most consistent patterns in M car history.

The S55 Crank Hub Problem and Its Impact on Resale

The F82 M4's biggest risk factor is the S55 crank hub slip issue. The crank hub is secured by a single bolt and a diamond-sintered friction washer — no keyway, no pin. Under high RPM or aggressive shifting, the bolt can loosen, causing timing misalignment and, in the worst case, total engine destruction.

The failure rate on stock cars is under 1%. On ECU-tuned cars with elevated boost, specialist estimates suggest the rate climbs to approximately 10%. The preventive fix — a capture plate or pin kit that mechanically locks the hub — costs $3,000–$5,000. Cars with the fix completed carry a clear resale advantage, and "crank hub fixed vs unfixed" is becoming a binary price differentiator in the used market.

Other S55 items to monitor: plastic charge pipe cracking (especially on tuned cars — aftermarket aluminum pipe is ~$200), DCT fluid leaks, and cooling system plastic component degradation. All are well-understood, with established aftermarket solutions.

F82 vs G82 M4 — What Changed and Why It Matters

Category F82 M4 Competition G82 M4 Competition
Engine S55 3.0L I6 TT — 444 hp S58 3.0L I6 TT — 503 hp
Curb weight ~3,395 lbs ~3,745 lbs
Length 183.9" 188.7" (+4.8")
Width 73.6" 74.3"
Drivetrain RWD only RWD / xDrive (AWD)
Manual 6MT (all trims) 6MT (select trims)
Design reception Generally well-received Large grille polarizing
US MSRP $73,700 $82,900+

The G82 is objectively faster in every measurable way. But 350+ lbs of weight gain and nearly 5 inches of added length fundamentally change the character of the car. The F82 feels like a compact, focused driver's tool; the G82 feels like a larger, more refined grand tourer. For buyers who value the former quality, the F82's tighter proportions and lower weight represent something the G82 cannot replicate — and that distinction becomes more valuable over time.

Owner Strategies to Protect Resale Value

Priority Strategy Impact
Critical Complete dealer service history (DSH) Documented cars command +15–20% at resale.
Critical Crank hub preventive fix ($3,000–$5,000) The single largest differentiator in the used market.
Critical Mileage management (2,000–4,000 mi/year) Under 30,000 miles is the clear premium zone.
Recommended Keep it stock (no ECU tune, store OEM exhaust) Tuned cars take a -10–30% hit at resale.
Recommended Indoor garage storage + regular detailing Exterior condition directly affects valuation.
Recommended PPF (paint protection film) on front end Preserves paint condition for long-term value.
At sale time Sell via BaT / specialist buyer / private sale Enthusiast marketplaces consistently yield higher prices than dealer trade-in.

Stock condition is the resale-optimal strategy. The exceptions: BMW M Performance factory aero and Akrapovič exhaust (with OEM exhaust retained) are the only modifications with neutral or positive resale impact. Accident history is devastating — -30–40% at minimum — and the penalty is amplified on limited-production variants.

Price Forecast — 2026 to 2031

Variant 2026 (Current) 2028 (Projected) 2031 (Projected) Scenario
M4 Standard $35,000–$42,000 $30,000–$38,000 (floor) $38,000–$48,000 Floor ~2028. Gentle recovery follows.
M4 Competition $48,000–$58,000 $42,000–$52,000 (floor) $50,000–$65,000 Floor 2027–2029. Mirrors E92 M3 pattern.
M4 CS $85,000–$98,000 $80,000–$95,000 $100,000–$130,000 Sideways → appreciation post-2029.
M4 GTS $130,000–$200,000 $140,000–$210,000 $180,000–$280,000 Already appreciating. E92 GTS trajectory.

Five factors underpin these projections. 1) The "6–10 year floor" pattern places the F82 (ended 2020) in the 2026–2030 floor zone right now. 2) The EV transition is structurally reducing the future supply of gasoline × RWD × manual sports cars. 3) G82's size increase and design controversy are accelerating F82 reappraisal. 4) Crank hub fix status will create a two-tier market. 5) Limited models (CS/GTS) are following the CSL/1M "depreciation immunity" playbook.

Verdict: Is the F82 M4 a Buy Right Now?

For the standard M4 and Competition: 2026–2029 is the optimal buying window. You're in or near the floor zone, where $35,000–$60,000 buys you a twin-turbo inline-six M coupe with a carbon roof, 425–444 hp, and a 6-speed manual option. Based on every historical M coupe precedent, buying now and holding for five years should result in near-zero net depreciation — and potentially positive returns.

The ideal purchase spec: 1) Crank hub fix completed 2) Full dealer service records 3) Under 30,000 miles 4) Clean title, no accidents 5) Desirable color (Alpine White, Yas Marina Blue, Austin Yellow). If you find a Competition × 6MT that checks all five boxes — buy it. The F82 M4 carries four decades of M3 Coupe heritage, and as the last compact, lightweight, RWD-only M coupe, its place in the collector conversation is assured.

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Enhance the F82 experience: BIMMER+ carries F-chassis-compatible OEM+ Steering Wheels (Suede & Red Line / M-Style), VALVETECH™ Valve-Controlled Exhaust, and DRIVEUI™ Digital Cluster — all reversible upgrades that enhance the car without compromising resale value.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will the BMW F82 M4 go up in value?

Historical data strongly suggests yes — particularly for manual Competition models and all CS/GTS variants. Every M coupe generation has appreciated after reaching its depreciation floor, and the F82 is entering that floor zone now (2026–2030). The GTS is already trading above its original MSRP.

Is the F82 M4 manual or DCT worth more?

Manual. 6MT cars currently command a $3,000–$10,000 premium over DCT equivalents, and that gap is widening. The pattern from E46 M3, E92 M3, and F87 M2 is consistent: manual premiums expand as time passes and manual transmissions become extinct in new cars.

What is the BMW S55 crank hub problem?

The S55's crank hub is secured by a single bolt and friction washer with no mechanical lock (no keyway or pin). Under stress, the bolt can loosen, misaligning engine timing and potentially destroying the engine. Failure rate is under 1% on stock cars but significantly higher on tuned cars. A preventive capture plate fix costs $3,000–$5,000 and is the most important maintenance item on any S55 car.

How much does it cost to own an F82 M4 per year?

Approximately $4,000–$7,000 per year including insurance, premium fuel, oil changes, routine maintenance, and a repair reserve. The S55 is more affordable to maintain than the S65 V8 or S85 V10, and most common issues (charge pipe, cooling components) have inexpensive aftermarket solutions.

Is the F82 M4 more reliable than the E92 M3?

The S55 (F82) is generally considered less maintenance-intensive than the S65 (E92) at stock power levels. The S65's rod bearing issue is more severe and more expensive to address than the S55's crank hub concern. However, tuned S55s face elevated crank hub risk that stock S55s largely avoid — keeping the car stock or addressing the crank hub preventively eliminates the primary reliability concern.

Should I buy an M4 CS or a low-mileage Competition?

They serve different purposes. The CS (3,000 units, ~$90,000) is the stronger investment piece with lower depreciation and higher future appreciation potential. A Competition 6MT ($48,000–$58,000) is the better driver's car value — more engaging to drive, less stressful to put miles on, and with strong appreciation potential of its own. If you're buying to drive regularly, the Competition is the better choice. If you're buying to hold, the CS has the stronger case.

Upgrade Your F82 M4 — BIMMER+

BIMMER+ carries F-chassis-compatible steering wheels, exhaust systems, digital clusters, and LED lighting — reversible upgrades that enhance the ownership experience without compromising resale value.

OEM+ Steering (F80/F82) VALVETECH™ Exhaust DRIVEUI™ Digital Cluster LED Headlights / Taillights
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