BMW's sport sedan flagship has split into two distinct eras: the beloved and the bloated. The E39 remains the gold standard, timeless design, balanced performance, and a driving character that still feels modern decades later. The G30 (2017-2023) carried that legacy forward with handsome proportions, a brilliant B58 engine in the 540i, and the kind of daily-driver refinement that makes long commutes feel effortless. Then the 2024 G60 arrived, swollen to 7 Series dimensions with cost-cut interior plastics and awkward styling that owners say looks front-wheel-drive. Experts praise its tech and smoothness; enthusiasts mourn the loss of athletic soul. The smart play? A used G30 540i combines steep depreciation with genuine excellence, just budget for BMW maintenance costs that don't depreciate with the sticker price. Skip the current generation unless you prioritize tech over driving character and can stomach the design.
America's last sub-$20k new car delivers exactly what the price tag promises: basic transportation with no pretense. The 2020+ redesign brought a more comfortable ride, better materials, and standard safety tech that testers consistently praise, but the real story is the transmission lottery. Pre-2020 CVT models fail with grim predictability around 100k miles unless you're fanatical about 30k-mile fluid changes, a maintenance burden that turns budget ownership into a second job. Manual transmission Versas, meanwhile, run forever on basic care. The current CVT is redesigned and early signs look better, but you're betting on unproven longevity. If you need the cheapest new car and can stomach 122 horsepower and acres of hard plastic, it's defensible. If you're buying used, hunt for a manual or budget $4k-5k for an eventual CVT replacement.