BMW 1 Series Coupe

£19,730 - £30,400

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BMW 1-Series Coupe 8/20

The best-looking of any 1-Series - the longer tail seems to smooth out the frumpy shape of the hatch. The 135i has well over 300bhp, and you will not fear hot hatches

Our verdict

The best of the ‘baby’ Beemer range, though at prices that suggest you might also mistake the most serious competition coming from BMW’s own 3-Series. The 135i starts at £30k - a 335i SE comes in at £31,660. Erp.

Comfort

Run-flat tyres are the bugbear of many already fairly taut BMWs, and the 1-Series Coupe is no different. Unfortunately, not being blessed with Germanic levels of road repair, British buyers feel every pothole right in the colon. Can be a touch stiff for serious long distance cruising, though you do get used to it fairly quickly. What my father used to call a ‘young man’s arrangement’. 

11 out of 20

Performance

You can tell where BMW wants the Coupe One, mainly because it comes with just three engine choices (two diesels and one petrol) from a huge range. The perfectly rapid 120d comes with a 2.0-litre mill, 177bhp, 142mph and hits 62mph in a very respectable 7.6 seconds. The same motor also comes with a pair of turbos (confusingly called the 123d) to give 204bhp, six more miles-per-hour and a seven second 0-62mph time. All Golf GTI owners just winced at that one. And if you don’t want to just beat hot hatches but humiliate them, there’s the 135i. Three litres and two sequential turbos that spell 306bhp, a limited 155mph top end and 0-62mph in 5.3 seconds. Quick, and discreet with it. 

15 out of 20

Cool

It's a coupe, which automatically makes it a little bit cooler than the hatch and the convertible, but it's still an expensive small car with all the inherent uncoolness that comes from buying a car because of the badge on the nose.

8 out of 20

Quality

It’s basically the same layout as the boggo 1-Series from the driver’s seat, so it’s fine, if not the best that BMW have on offer. All the materials feel of decent quality and there’s nothing iffy about the build, but it’s simple rather than striking, solid rather than showy. 

12 out of 20

Handling

For 75 per cent of the time the 1-Series Coupe is pure BMW: nice steering, proper rear-wheel drive feel and a proper antidote to FWD hot hatchery. But start to really push and the lack of a locking rear diff can start to show (as per many BMWs) as the inside wheel spins away the power. Mind you, the traction and stability systems still get a relatively light workout - this is a nicely balanced, well-sorted car. 

10 out of 20

Practicality

You bought this for the boot then? Well 370-litres is okay (ish), but the hatch is way more practical. There’s plenty of room for the front seat passengers, rear travellers fair less well, as in die fast and cruelly. Weirdly, the inch chop on the Coupe compared to the stock 1-Series makes it’s presence felt quickly in space terms. An inch. Who’d have thought it? Certainly not my wife. 

8 out of 20

Running costs

Both the diesels make good sense financially; you’ll get mid-fifties mpg out of the 123d (that’s good) and nearer 60mpg out of the 120d apparently (that’s spectacular). The tax and C02 burden runs to 128g/km and 10-percent on the single turbo, 138g/km and 15 percent on the biturbo diesel. The 135i? It pumps out 220g/km and 32-percent, insurance group 17 (not bad considering the performance), but forget the claimed 30.7mpg unless you drive like a nancy of the highest order. 

10 out of 20

TG Tips

The 123d is genuinely pretty cool if you want a smaller BMW. But when you start talking about the 135i the price is too close to the bigger, better 335i. So go diesel, or go home

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