Bmw 5 series touring luxurious estate arrives first in electric form, with plug-in hybrid versions following on sale june price from £69,040

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BMW 5 Series Touring Luxurious estate arrives first in electric form, with plug-in hybrid versions following On sale June Price from £69,040

Darren Moss darren.moss@haymarket.com

LOOKING BACK Driver assistance tech available includes an automatic lane change system that can be triggered simply by looking in the door mirror.

WHETHER YOUR allegiance lies with Dior, Gucci or Jimmy Choo, the sheer range of premium-branded handbags available reveals a global appetite for accessories that combine functionality with luxury. Similarly, the new BMW 5 Series Touring is designed for those who want to experience the finer things in life while still having all the stuff-toting space they need.

And like those designer handbags, the new 5 Series Touring places a big emphasis on sustainability – primarily by being available only in fully electric or plug-in hybrid forms.

We’ve seen pictures of only the electric i5 Touring so far, but as you might expect, it mirrors its i5 saloon sibling, with the same light-up grille and aggressive front bumper, as well as deep side skirts in contrasting gloss black.

While the 5 Series saloon offers a 520-litre boot, the Touring’s bulkier derrière takes luggage capacity up to 570 litres. That’s more than you got with the outgoing model, and we managed to fit 10 carry-on suitcases below that car’s tonneau cover. You can also drop the rear seats, increasing capacity to a van-like 1700 litres, and they split and fold in a handy 40/20/40 arrangement.

Most i5 Touring buyers will opt for the entry-level eDrive40 model, which has 309bhp from a single electric motor that drives the rear wheels. This version’s official range of up to 348 miles is longer than any version of the Porsche Taycan Cross Turismo can manage, and it can reach 62mph in a nippy 6.1sec.

Want more pep? The range-topping i5 M60 xDrive gets a second motor to drive the front wheels, giving it four-wheel drive and a total of 593bhp. That extra power drops the 0-62mph sprint time to 3.9sec but also brings the official range down to 314 miles.

The i5 Touring’s 81.2kWh battery can be charged at rates of up to 205kW, so a 10-80% top-up should take just half an hour if you use a suitably powerful charging point. The Taycan can take the same charge in just 20 minutes, thanks to its faster charging rate of 270kW.

The plug-in hybrid 530e Touring, due later this year, combines a 2.0-litre petrol engine with an electric motor for a combined output of 295bhp. With up to 60 miles

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