Reference model
BMW i3
- Range
- 715 km*
- Battery
- 108.7 kWh
- DC charging
- 230 kW
EV switching guide
Change carsComing from a BMW i3?
A practical answer based on range, charging, compatible stations, running costs and the features you use every day.
Reference model
Reference model
If your battery still covers your daily loop comfortably, keeping the i3 is rational. Switch when charging or range starts deciding where you can go.
Quick answer
Think carefullyThe Mini Cooper SE may suit you for specific reasons, but the data shows important trade-offs. Check that you are comfortable with what becomes worse before replacing the BMW i3.
Range per charge
Current · i3
715 km
New · Cooper SE
330 km
385 km less range
10–80% charging
Current · i3
91 min
New · Cooper SE
28 min
63 min less waiting
Charging stops on a 600 km day
Current · i3
1 stop
New · Cooper SE
2 stops
More charging breaks
Your result
Start with what improves, then check the trade-offs and what will still feel familiar.
Nothing significant — the two cars match here.
Side by side
Your i3
Cooper SE
*Estimated mixed-condition real-world range. Missing database values are omitted or marked unavailable.
For you, the owner
A specification only matters when it changes your routine. Here is how moving from your BMW i3 to the Mini Cooper SE translates into ordinary weeks, longer journeys and the habits you already have.
Your normal week
This is not a range upgrade: the Cooper SE is estimated to travel about 385 km less per charge. You would be choosing it for other benefits, so make sure its 330 km estimate still covers your normal week. Estimated home-charging cost is effectively unchanged, so energy savings should not drive the decision.
Beyond the daily commute
On a 600 km day, expect about 2 charging stops instead of 1. Faster charging may recover some time, but you will stop more often. For a 10–80% top-up, the estimates move from roughly 91 minutes in the i3 to 28 minutes in the Cooper SE under the stated charging assumptions. Compatible-station coverage is unchanged, so every charging location counted for your current plug remains represented.
Living with the car
Both cars have a heat pump, so efficient winter cabin heating remains familiar. Passenger capacity changes from 5 to 4 seats, which is worth checking against how you actually use the car.
The honest decision
Switch only if the Mini Cooper SE offers a feature or ownership experience that matters to you beyond the measured specifications.
Keep the BMW i3 if it still covers your routine comfortably and its charging stops do not shape your journeys. You also avoid giving up real-world range and ac charging. Some BMW i3s are now around 12 years old, but age alone is not a reason to replace a healthy battery.
Charging
Compatible-location counts come from PlugSphere’s charging-station database and each reference car’s stored plug standard.
Check a route with the Cooper SE →Today
144,123
compatible charging locations
After switching
144,123
compatible charging locations
DC fast locations are matched at 50 kW or more. Counts change as the station database is refreshed.
Your BMW i3 today
The oldest BMW i3s are now ~12 years old. Fleet telemetry puts typical degradation at 1.5–2% per year — the bands below apply that to each version's original range.
*PlugSphere estimates; actual battery health varies with climate and charging habits. We never estimate used-car prices.
Money
Running-cost estimates use the same €0.30/kWh home tariff for both cars. Purchase prices appear only where a current market record exists.
Home energy · 10,000 km
i3
€456
Cooper SE
€447
Current Cooper SE prices
Answers computed from both cars' data.
If range or charging speed limits you, the data shows estimated real-world range falls by 385 km and a 10–80% stop of about 28 minutes. If your i3 still covers your daily loop comfortably, keeping it is a rational choice.
— while giving up real-world range.
Real-world range (715 km → 330 km (-385 km)); AC charging (22 kW → 11 kW onboard charger); Vehicle-to-load (V2L) (Your i3 has it; the Cooper SE does not.); Towbar (Your i3 has it; the Cooper SE does not.); Cargo space (451 L → 200 L); 0–100 km/h (4.7 s → 6.7 s).
The oldest BMW i3s are now about 12 years old and have typically lost 1.5–2% of range per year. The case for switching starts when you charge to 100% daily just to feel safe, or when fast-charging stops dictate your routes.
Next steps
Use the route you actually drive, then inspect the full reference-car record. That will tell you more than another generic best-EV list.