BMW F20 1 Series Common Problems  Engine-by-Engine, Year-by-Year Reliability Guide — 2012–2019 Models

BMW F20 1 Series Common Problems

Engine-by-Engine, Year-by-Year Reliability Guide — 2012–2019 Models

Last updated: February 2026 | BIMMER+

"Is the BMW 1 Series reliable?" "Are F20s expensive to maintain?" These are the first questions anyone asks when browsing used listings for a BMW F20. The honest answer is that it depends almost entirely on which engine is under the hood and what model year the car was built.

A 2012 116i or 118i powered by the N13 engine carries a timing chain failure risk so severe that UK warranty companies have blacklisted the engine by name. A 2017 M140i powered by the B58, on the other hand, is widely considered one of the most bulletproof inline-six engines BMW has ever produced. Same chassis, same body, radically different ownership experiences.

This guide breaks down every known F20 problem by engine family, model year, and mileage bracket — drawing on BMW recall data, independent specialist workshop reports, and owner forums across the US, UK, and Europe (including BimmerFest, BabyBMW, PistonHeads, and 1Addicts). Whether you are shopping for a used F20 or already own one, the goal is to give you a complete picture of what can go wrong, what it costs, and how to prevent it.

F20 Engine Lineup and Reliability Overview

The "BMW 1 Series is unreliable" narrative is misleading — the reality is that pre-LCI N-series engines are where the problems concentrate. LCI B-series engines represent a dramatic improvement. What Car?'s survey found that 92% of F20 owners reported zero faults over a 24-month period, and J.D. Power rates the model 4.5 out of 5.

Model Engine Displacement Years Reliability
116i (pre-LCI) N13B16A 1.6L turbo 4-cyl 2011–2015 ★☆☆☆☆ High risk
118i (pre-LCI) N13B16A 1.6L turbo 4-cyl 2011–2015 ★☆☆☆☆ High risk
120i (pre-LCI) N20B20A 2.0L turbo 4-cyl 2011–2015 ★★☆☆☆
M135i (pre-LCI) N55B30A 3.0L turbo I6 2012–2015 ★★★★☆
118i (LCI) B38B15A 1.5L turbo 3-cyl 2015–2019 ★★★★☆
120i (LCI) B48B20A 2.0L turbo 4-cyl 2015–2019 ★★★★☆
M140i (LCI) B58B30A 3.0L turbo I6 2016–2019 ★★★★★
118d (pre-LCI) * N47D20C 2.0L turbo diesel 2012–2015 ★★☆☆☆
118d (LCI) * B47D20A 2.0L turbo diesel 2015–2019 ★★★★☆

* Diesel models were available in European markets but not sold new in the US. They appear in the North American used market as private imports.

i
When shopping for a used F20, prioritize the engine code over the model year. A 2013 118i (N13) and a 2016 118i (B38) wear the same badge but carry fundamentally different reliability profiles.

N13 Engine (Pre-LCI 116i / 118i) — The Most Problematic F20 Engine

"What is the most unreliable F20?" The answer is unambiguous: the 2011–2015 116i and 118i with the N13 engine. Co-developed with PSA (Peugeot), the 1.6-liter turbocharged four-cylinder is the most failure-prone engine in the F20 lineup — to the point where UK extended-warranty providers have explicitly excluded it from coverage by name.

Timing Chain Stretch and Failure — The N13's Defining Weakness

The N13's most critical failure is timing chain elongation and eventual breakage, caused by insufficiently durable plastic chain guides. Chain stretch has been documented starting as early as 40,000 miles (65,000 km), with UK specialist workshops reporting that they perform N13 chain replacements at a rate of roughly one per week. The earliest symptom is a metallic rattling or diesel-like clatter at cold startup. If ignored, valve timing slips — leading to loss of power, engine stalling, and in the worst case, catastrophic valve-to-piston contact that destroys the engine.

!
2012 and 2013 BMW 116i / 118i models carry the highest N13 timing chain failure risk. If you are evaluating a used car with this engine, verifying the chain replacement history is the single most important pre-purchase check.

Other Common N13 Failures

The oil filter housing gasket (OFHG) is a frequent leaker — and on the N13, the housing sits behind the catalytic converter, meaning the cat must be removed to access it, which significantly increases labor costs. Oil pan gasket leaks require partial removal of the engine subframe. Ignition coil failures are common (Bosch-brand replacements strongly recommended over Delphi). Valvetronic system faults and ECU failures (sometimes triggered by short-circuiting coils) are also reported. The N13 runs oil temperatures in the 225–250°F (108–121°C) range — abnormally high, accelerating degradation of all oil-wetted components.

N20 Engine (Pre-LCI 120i / 228i / 328i) — US Class-Action Lawsuit Territory

The N20 2.0-liter turbo four-cylinder powered the pre-LCI 120i globally and was widely used across the F30 328i and F22 228i in North America. Its primary failure — plastic timing chain guide disintegration — became so widespread that it led to a class-action lawsuit in the United States.

The N20's plastic guides deteriorate through thermal cycling, progressing through a visible color change: white (new) → yellow (degraded) → red/brown (imminent failure). What makes the N20 particularly dangerous is a secondary chain driving the oil pump. If this chain breaks, oil pressure drops to zero instantly — and without immediate engine shutdown (within 30–60 seconds), the result is catastrophic bearing seizure. 2015+ production units received revised guides with improved heat resistance, significantly reducing failure rates.

!
Any N20-equipped vehicle with over 50,000 miles should be considered a candidate for preventive timing chain and guide replacement. This applies to the 120i as well as the F30 328i and F22 228i.

N47 Diesel (Pre-LCI 118d / 120d) — BBC Watchdog Investigation

The N47 2.0-liter diesel carries a fundamental design problem: its timing chain is mounted at the rear of the engine, between the block and the transmission. Inspection or replacement requires separating the engine from the gearbox — a 12-to-20-hour labor job. If the chain breaks, valve contact destroys the engine. The issue was investigated by BBC Watchdog in the UK in 2013.

Additional N47 problems include DPF regeneration failures, EGR cooler cracks that can leak coolant into the intake manifold (a fire risk that prompted recalls), and swirl flap disintegration where broken plastic fragments are ingested into the combustion chamber, scoring the cylinder walls.

N55 Engine (Pre-LCI M135i) — The Best Pre-LCI Engine, With Caveats

The 3.0-liter twin-scroll turbo inline-six in the pre-LCI M135i is widely regarded as the most reliable engine in the pre-LCI F20 range. It does not share the catastrophic timing chain issues of the N13 or N20. However, it has known weaknesses that drive common search queries like "M135i problems."

The most frequently reported N55 failure is the plastic charge pipe (intercooler pipe) cracking under boost pressure. When it fails, the result is immediate power loss and limp mode. Replacing the factory plastic pipe with an aftermarket aluminum unit is considered a mandatory upgrade in the M135i community. Wastegate rattle (chattering noise at low RPM) is another common complaint — the dealer fix involves turbo replacement at a cost exceeding $4,000. Oil leaks from the valve cover gasket and oil filter housing gasket appear between 60,000 and 100,000 miles.

B-Series Engines (LCI) — "F20s Are Unreliable" Ends Here

B38 (LCI 118i) — The N13 Redeemed

"Is the 2016 or 2017 118i reliable?" For B38-equipped cars, the answer is overwhelmingly yes. BMW's modular three-cylinder turbo engine resolved the N13's critical weaknesses. Timing chain durability is dramatically improved, with reports of trouble-free operation well beyond 100,000 miles (160,000 km). Engine mount degradation around 30,000–45,000 miles (50,000–70,000 km) is the only notable issue — a trait shared with the MINI F55/F56, which uses the same engine.

B48 (LCI 120i) — Improved, With One New Weakness

The B48 resolved the N20's timing chain problem, but introduced a new failure point: the plastic oil filter housing (OFH). The polycarbonate housing warps under thermal stress and can crack suddenly around 60,000–70,000 miles, causing rapid coolant loss and overheating. A US class-action lawsuit was filed over this defect in February 2026. The definitive fix is replacing the factory OFH with an aftermarket aluminum unit.

B47 Diesel (LCI 118d / 120d) — The N47 Redeemed

BMW moved the timing chain from the rear of the engine to the front on the B47, solving the N47's fundamental design flaw in one stroke. With proper maintenance, the B47 is considered one of BMW's most reliable diesel engines.

B58 (M140i) — Arguably BMW's Best Modern Inline-Six

"Is the M140i reliable?" — "The most reliable engine in the entire F20 lineup." Later adopted by the Toyota GR Supra, the B58 has no known timing chain issues and regularly exceeds 200,000 miles (320,000 km) on routine maintenance alone. Used M140i prices are higher, but factoring in the near-absence of major repair costs, the total cost of ownership often works out lower over time.

Which F20 Model Years Are Most and Least Reliable?

"Which BMW 1 Series year should I buy?" "Is a 2012 or 2016 safer?" The table below is the single most useful reference when shopping for a used F20.

Year Primary Engines Risk Key Concern
2011–2012 N13 (116i / 118i) ● High Early-production N13. Highest chain failure rate.
2013 N13 / N20 (120i)
N55 (M135i)
● High
(M135i: Mid)
N13 chain + N20 guide: dual risk year.
2014 N13 / N20 ● High–Mid Minor N13 revisions but core issue not resolved.
2015 LCI transition
(both families)
● Verify engine N-series and B-series coexist. Check build month.
2016 B38 (118i)
B48 (120i)
● Low B-series engines. Major reliability improvement.
2017 B38 / B48
B58 (M140i)
● Low LCI2. Best-equipped model year.
2018–2019 B38 / B48 / B58 ● Lowest Most refined final production years.
i
Bottom line: 2011–2014 N13 and N20-equipped cars earned the "unreliable 1 Series" reputation. 2016 onward with B-series engines is the recommended buying window. 2015 is a transition year — always confirm the engine code before purchasing.

Problems That Affect All F20s Regardless of Engine

Cooling System — The #1 Issue Across All Years

Cooling system failures are the single most frequently reported category on the F20, affecting every engine variant. The electric water pump (fitted to N55, B48, B58) can fail without warning between 60,000 and 100,000 miles. In 2024, BMW recalled over 720,000 vehicles globally for pump short-circuit risk. When the pump stops, overheating begins immediately and can warp the cylinder head within minutes. Preventive replacement at 70,000–80,000 miles is strongly recommended.

The coolant expansion tank (reservoir) is another universal weak point. The plastic becomes brittle with age and can crack suddenly — even on low-mileage cars that are simply old. A 2012-build car with only 12,000 miles is still running a 13-year-old plastic tank that can split without warning.

Oil Leaks — BMW's Perennial Trait

Leak Location Typical Mileage Independent Dealer Notes
Oil filter housing gasket 30,000–50,000 mi $350–$500 $600–$1,000 Most common. N13 requires cat removal.
Valve cover gasket 40,000–60,000 mi $250–$400 $400–$650 PCV failure accelerates degradation.
Oil pan gasket 50,000–75,000 mi $800–$1,000 $1,200–$1,600 Requires subframe lowering.
Rear main seal 100,000+ mi $1,200–$1,500 $1,600+ Transmission removal. Most expensive.

Electrical — FRM, Head Unit, Taillights

The Footwell Module (FRM) controls lighting, power windows, mirrors, and adaptive headlights. It is sensitive to voltage spikes — a dead battery or careless jump-start can destroy it (BMW warranty extension: 10 years / 156,000 mi). Replacement with coding runs $700–$1,200. LED taillight dimming is a pre-LCI staple. Head unit sudden death takes navigation, backup camera, and audio offline with no warning — repair exceeds $1,500. Headlight leveling rod breakage costs a full assembly at the dealer, but a $25 aftermarket rod solves it.

Steering and Suspension

Electric power steering (EPS) rack failures have been reported where the motor control unit bolt shears, causing sudden and complete loss of power assist — a safety-critical failure. Remanufactured racks run $1,000–$2,000 installed. Front control arm bushings wear between 40,000 and 80,000 miles, producing a "clunk" over bumps and vague steering feel.

Pre-LCI vs LCI — What Improved, What Didn't

What the LCI Fixed

The complete engine changeover (N13→B38, N20→B48, N55→B58) eliminated the timing chain catastrophe risk that plagued the pre-LCI range. B-series engines routinely achieve 200,000+ miles before major internal work. The 2017 LCI2 brought touchscreen iDrive, an oil temperature readout, and optional autonomous emergency braking.

What the LCI Did Not Fix

Cooling system fragility persists across B-series engines. Oil leak frequency decreased but was not eliminated. FRM voltage sensitivity, EPS rack failure risk, and power window regulator issues carry over regardless of model year.

Mileage-Based Risk Map — What Breaks When

Under 20,000 mi: Don't Assume "Low Mileage" Means "No Risk"

Age-related deterioration of rubber and plastic components happens regardless of mileage. A 2012 car at 12,000 miles still has 13-year-old coolant hoses, expansion tanks, and gaskets that can fail without warning.

20,000–30,000 mi: Consumables Begin

Stabilizer link boots, brake pads, and discs (M Sport brakes wear faster) are the main items. Light oil seepage begins at gasket surfaces.

30,000–50,000 mi: The First Major Trouble Window

This is where F20 ownership gets serious. Water pump failure risk rises, OFHG leak becomes likely, A/C compressor bearing noise may start, and N13/N20 timing chain tensioners should be inspected.

50,000–65,000+ mi: Budget for Major Repairs

This is where the most expensive single repairs cluster: water pump, A/C compressor seizure ($2,000–$3,000), oil pan gasket ($800–$1,500), timing chain service on N13/N20 ($1,500–$3,000), turbo replacement on N55 ($4,000+). Any used F20 purchased at this mileage should come with $2,000–$3,000 in reserve for near-term repairs.

Repair Cost Reference — Dealer vs Independent BMW Specialist

Repair Dealer Independent Notes
Timing chain + guides + tensioner $2,500–$4,500 $1,500–$2,500 N13/N20. Includes sprockets.
Electric water pump + thermostat $1,500–$2,000 $800–$1,200 Simultaneous replacement recommended.
A/C compressor $2,500–$3,500 $1,500–$2,500 System flush required if seized.
Turbocharger $4,500+ $2,500–$3,500 Remanufactured units reduce cost.
OFHG oil leak $600–$1,000 $350–$500 N13 requires cat removal — add labor.
Oil pan gasket $1,200–$1,600 $800–$1,000 Subframe must be lowered.
EPS steering rack $1,000–$2,000 Remanufactured recommended.
FRM module $1,200–$1,600 $700–$1,200 Coding/programming mandatory.
Annual routine maintenance $1,800–$3,000 $1,000–$1,800 Inspection year adds cost.

Owner-Reported Top 10 F20 Failures

# Issue Notes
1 Timing chain failure N13, N47, N20. Most severe and most expensive.
2 Coolant leak / overheating Expansion tank crack, water pump. All engines.
3 Engine oil leaks OFHG, VCG, oil pan.
4 Ignition coil failure Especially N13. Bosch replacements recommended.
5 A/C compressor seizure Workshop inquiries spike spring–summer.
6 LED taillight dimming Pre-LCI. Used replacements increasingly scarce.
7 Head unit sudden death No warning. Nav, camera, audio all offline.
8 Clutch judder (manual) Dual-mass flywheel (DMF) deterioration.
9 Electric power steering failure Intermittent → sudden complete loss of assist.
10 FRM module failure Battery / jump-start issues are the trigger.

Context matters: What Car? data shows 92% of F20 owners experienced zero issues over two years. Most F20s run without incident — but when a problem does occur, the repair cost is dramatically higher than on a comparable non-premium car. That gap between "usually fine" and "expensive when not" is the defining characteristic of F20 ownership.

Preventive Maintenance Schedule for F20 Longevity

Item Interval Why
Engine oil change Every 5,000–7,500 mi BMW's factory 10,000–15,000 mi is too long for turbo engines.
Coolant level & color check Monthly Early detection of expansion tank cracks and leaks.
Water pump preventive replacement 70,000–80,000 mi The single most important preventive measure on the F20.
Transmission fluid (ZF 8HP) ~30,000 mi BMW says "lifetime fill" — ZF itself does not agree.
Intake valve cleaning (walnut blasting) Every 40,000–60,000 mi Direct-injection carbon buildup. All F20 gasoline engines.
Cold-start noise check Every start Rattling at startup is the earliest sign of chain stretch.
i
Pre-purchase checklist: ① Check underside of oil filler cap for sludge (indicates poor oil change history). ② Listen for abnormal noise during a cold start. ③ Review full service history for oil change intervals. ④ Have an independent BMW shop run an ISTA diagnostic scan for stored fault codes.

The Verdict: The F20 Is Reliable — If You Choose the Right One

"Is the BMW F20 1 Series reliable?" This guide's conclusion is clear: the engine generation you choose determines everything.

2011–2014 N13 and N20-equipped models are the cars that earned the "BMW 1 Series breaks down all the time" reputation — and that reputation is deserved for those specific engines. The 2016+ LCI cars with B-series powertrains are a fundamentally different ownership proposition, where routine maintenance and a reasonable repair budget are all that stand between you and years of reliable driving.

Recommended buying strategy: target 2016 or later with a B-series engine, maintain an annual service budget of $1,500–$2,500, and keep $2,000–$3,000 in reserve for unexpected repairs. The F20 was the last rear-wheel-drive BMW 1 Series — a layout that delivers a driving experience no front-wheel-drive compact can replicate. Chosen wisely, it is one of the best values in the used BMW market today.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the BMW F20 1 Series reliable?

It depends on the engine. Pre-LCI models (2011–2015) with the N13 or N20 have significant timing chain risks. LCI models (2015–2019) with B-series engines are substantially more reliable — J.D. Power rates the F20 4.5/5 and What Car? found 92% of owners reported no faults over two years.

Which BMW F20 years should I avoid?

2011–2014 models with N13 (116i/118i) or N20 (120i) engines carry the highest risk. 2015 is a transition year — always verify the engine code. 2016 and later with B-series engines are the safest choices.

What is the most common BMW F20 problem?

Timing chain failure on N13 and N20 engines is the most severe. Cooling system issues (water pump, expansion tank) are the most common across all engine types and model years.

How much does it cost to maintain a BMW F20?

Routine annual maintenance at an independent BMW specialist runs $1,500–$2,500. Major unplanned repairs (timing chain, water pump, A/C compressor) can add $1,500–$4,500 per incident.

Is the BMW M140i reliable?

Yes. The B58 engine is the most reliable in the F20 range and one of the best inline-six engines BMW has ever built. With routine maintenance, 200,000+ mile lifespans are regularly reported.

Should I buy a high-mileage BMW F20?

A high-mileage B-series (2016+) F20 with complete service records is generally safer than a low-mileage N13-equipped car with unknown history. Engine generation matters more than odometer reading. For any F20 over 50,000 miles, keep $2,000–$3,000 in reserve.

Upgrade Your F20 — BIMMER+

Once you've sorted the reliability fundamentals, the F20 is a deeply rewarding platform to upgrade. BIMMER+ carries F20-compatible parts designed to elevate the ownership experience while preserving factory-grade reliability.

DRIVELINK™ Display DRIVEUI™ Digital Cluster OEM+ Steering Wheels VALVETECH™ Exhaust
Browse bimmer.plus →