2025 BMW 7 Series — Carivo review carivo.co
Sedan

2025 BMW 7 Series

Independent review & score by Carivo

Price Range $99,904–$121,087
Fuel Economy 26 MPG
Seating 5 passengers
Category Sedan
Est. Annual Fuel $2,019/yr

Key Specifications — 2025 BMW 7 Series

Seating Capacity5 passengers
Body StyleSedan
Base Price$99,904–$121,087

Source: EPA FuelEconomy.gov & manufacturer data. Figures reflect base trim; actual specs vary by trim level.

About the 2025 BMW 7 Series

The 2025 BMW 7 Series is a sedan that earns a Carivo score of 7.3/10 — rated Good. Its strongest dimension is Technology at 9.6/10, while Value at 6.1/10 is where it trails the competition most noticeably. It's a capable but unexceptional sedan — stronger alternatives exist if you're willing to shop the segment carefully.

Reliability and safety are the two dimensions that matter most for long-term ownership costs. At 6.3/10 for reliability, this sedan trails its segment. That doesn't rule it out, but go in with eyes open on running costs. On safety, it scores 8.5/10 in our assessment. Always confirm the official crash-test results for your exact trim at nhtsa.gov/ratings.

With 7.0/10 for performance, this is a car tuned for daily driving rather than excitement — perfectly capable on the commute, unremarkable on a back road. On technology it rates 9.6/10: a modern, well-integrated suite that compares favorably with anything at this price point.

Priced from $99,904–$121,087, 26 MPG, seating 5, the BMW 7 Series sits in the luxury tier of the sedan market. The value score of 6.1/10 is a red flag — comparable alternatives offer meaningfully more for the same outlay. Shop the segment before deciding. At 1 year old, it's recent enough that the core feature set holds up well against current competition.

Verdict: The 2025 BMW 7 Series sits in the middle of the field. Until its reliability and value scores improve, stronger options exist at this price. Worth a look if it fits a specific need; otherwise use our compare tool against the segment leaders first.

Carivo scores are our own editorial assessment, informed by NHTSA safety and recall records, EPA fuel-economy figures, and manufacturer-published specifications. Scores are reviewed periodically and updated when new data becomes available. See our full methodology →

How It Ranks Among Sedans

The 2025 BMW 7 Series ranks #802 of 1310 sedans in the Carivo database — better than 39% of the segment. Its 7.3/10 overall score is 0.2 points below the segment average of 7.5/10. Its $99,904 starting price is about 261% above the segment's median of $27,664.

Rankings are recalculated as new vehicles and scores are added. See the full Sedan ranking →

Which 7 Series Year Should You Buy?

Smart-money pick: the 2022 BMW 7 Series scores 7.2/10 — within striking distance of the 2025's 7.3 — and starts roughly $8,500 lower. If you don't need the newest model year, that's money better spent on a higher trim or kept in your pocket.

YearScoreStarting price (MSRP when new)
2025 (this review) 7.3/10$99,904
2024 7.3/10$96,995 Read review →
2023 7.2/10$94,085 Read review →
2022 7.2/10$91,175 Read review →
2021 7.1/10$88,265 Read review →
2020 7.1/10$85,355 Read review →
2019 7.0/10$82,445 Read review →
2018 7.0/10$79,535 Read review →
2017 7.0/10$76,626 Read review →
2016 6.9/10$73,716 Read review →
2015 6.9/10$70,806 Read review →

Pros & Cons — 2025 BMW 7 Series

✓ What it does well

  • Top-tier safety scores across crash tests and driver-assistance tech
  • Best-in-class infotainment, driver assistance, and connectivity features

✗ Where it falls short

  • Below-average reliability data — factor in potential repair and maintenance costs
  • Value-for-money is a weak point; comparable alternatives offer more for the price
  • Driving dynamics are adequate but uninspiring; not the choice for enthusiast drivers
  • Premium price bracket — make sure the score justifies the outlay vs. segment alternatives

More BMW Reviews

Explore the full lineup of BMW models scored by Carivo — ranked by overall score across reliability, safety, value, performance, and technology.