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BMW 3 Series vs Kia Forte

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
Kia Forte comes out ahead overall (5.6 vs 5.0), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 BMW 3 SeriesKia Forte
Reliability & Durability 3.3 4.0
User Sentiment 3.1 5.6
Complaint Severity 8.0 6.7
Consensus Strength 2.0 2.1
Value for Money 3.3 4.9
Owner Advocacy 6.5 5.6
BMW 3 Series

BMW still builds the sport sedan everyone else chases, the steering feel, the balance, the way it shrinks around you on a back road, but the company is actively dismantling what made people pay the premium. The 2023-and-later models strip out physical climate buttons, delete cargo nets and glove boxes, cheapen the materials, and slap an oversized touchscreen onto a dashboard that used to feel like a cockpit, all while raising prices. If you want the 3 Series people actually love, hunt a 2019-2022 G20 before they're gone; if you're shopping new, understand you're paying luxury money for an increasingly unluxurious experience wrapped around an admittedly brilliant chassis.

Kia Forte

The Forte splits into two extremes: one owner hit 750,000 miles on a 2018 model with obsessive oil changes every 10-15k, while others watched their engines grenade under 100k following the manual's 5,000-mile intervals. The 2.0L and 2.4L Theta II engines carry documented rod bearing and oil dilution issues covered by class-action lawsuits, Kia replaces engines under warranty, but you're betting on whether yours lasts 30k or 700k. Ignition coils on 2016+ models arc to the block instead of firing, causing misfires until you swap in upgraded parts. Pre-2022 models face theft risk and insurance headaches despite 2022+ having immobilizers. Buy it if you're the type who keeps service records in a binder and changes oil early; skip it if you treat maintenance as optional.