BMW Group has built its two-millionth all-electric vehicle, with the milestone car being a BMW i5 M60 xDrive sedan finished in Tansanit Blue.
The car was assembled at BMW’s Dingolfing plant in Lower Bavaria and would be delivered to a customer in Spain.
It is a useful marker for BMW’s EV push, especially as Dingolfing has become the group’s busiest electric-vehicle production site.
The plant started building all-electric models in 2021 with the BMW iX. Today, it produces the iX, i5 sedan and Touring, and i7. Since 2021, Dingolfing has built more than 320,000 all-electric vehicles, which means roughly one in six BMW Group EVs has come from that site.
The shift is now visible in daily production. In 2025, more than a quarter of vehicles built at Dingolfing were all-electric.
BMW said its iFactory strategy keeps production flexible, with different powertrains built on the same line. That allows the group to adjust between combustion, hybrid and electric demand without locking each plant into only one drivetrain type.
The company also said at least one all-electric model now rolls off the line at every German BMW Group plant.
















