Home » Can You Spot All The Differences Between BMW’s New And Old Badge?
- ByChris Tsui
- September 13, 2025
- 1:19 pm
- 19 Comments

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BMW recently unveiled its first of its new-wave Neue Klasse cars, the iX3, and on top of a whole new design brief and an estimated 400 miles of range, the car also brings with it a new BMW logo—and yes, we are also just now noticing it.
To be clear, this is not referring to the much more notable, “flat” BMW logo that came out in 2020, and was optimized for and really only seen on screens, although this one shares similarities. This one actually shows up on the iX3’s sheetmetal and will eventually come to future BMWs as well, but the differences between it and the old badge are subtle to say the least.


In fact, let’s make a game out of it. Below is the new badge as it appears on the iX3, and below that is the old one. Can you spot every difference?


And here are a pair of more straight-on shots of the two as they exist on the steering wheels of the iX3 and iX, respectively.
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OK, let’s check your answers.
- The ring of chrome that separates the inner blue-and-white circle from the outer black one has been removed.
- Similarly, the chrome bars that separate the blue and white sections within the inner circle have also been deleted.
- The “BMW” font is ever so slightly slimmer—the two “holes” within the B are noticeably longer now.
- On the inside, at least, the old badge’s glossy finish is now matte.
Did you get everything?
According to BMWBlog, the company is also ditching the additional blue outer ring that came with the roundel on its electrified cars going forward. Hence, why the electric iX3 does not have this.
[Ed Note: Here’s that blue ring, since I bought a spare badge for my BMW i3 for some reason:
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-DT]
Still, the differences, especially on hoods, trunk lids, and center caps, will be hard to spot for most people. The one on the steering wheel, however, which is now satin and almost looks printed on now will likely get the most attention from repeat BMW customers.
And, frankly, I don’t hate it! It makes it look vintage—like a car from BMW’s first Neue Klasse from the ’60s.
Now, if only BMW applied this “less is more” philosophy to the designs of the cars themselves.
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Topshot: BMW
- badge, BMW, iX3
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Banana Stand Money
27 minutes ago
I usually dislike badge redesigns, but I actually really like this. Removing the chrome dividers makes it feel cleaner and yet somehow more vintage.. Definitely a better execution than Aston and Nissan’s recent revisions.
Disphenoidal
1 hour ago
Has the blue itself changed too?
Micah Cameron
2 hours ago
This is the only thing BMW has redesigned in the last decade that looks better than the outgoing design.
2
Member
MATTinMKE
13 minutes ago
Reply to Micah Cameron
My first thought was, don’t they have bigger fish to fry? Maybe fix the Ugly first?
Do You Have a Moment To Talk About Renaults?
4 hours ago
I dind’t include the matte finishing because I didn’t consider it a design decision, but maybe it is, who knows. I got everything else; the changes are all subtle but noticeable because they work. They did an excellent job modernising the logo by simply decluttering it visually (I wish we could say the same of their design philosophy when it comes to cars). The font immediately stood out to me, all three characters are visibly different. There’s also a detail in the outside badge that isn’t present in the steering wheel one that I really like, which is how the tips of the blue sections don’t seem to touch. But maybe that’s down to the angle of the photo, because the one in the steering wheel doesn’t seem to have this small gap.
Member
Hugh Crawford
13 hours ago
Neue Klasse? Really?
Cue the new new vs the old new, and how the old stuff is modern
1
Member
Tbird
14 hours ago
This is how you update a brand logo, noticable, yet still subtle.
Overall good job TBH.
Last edited 14 hours ago by Tbird
5
Greg
16 hours ago
I just noticed “night panel” in the top right corner. Thank you whoever made that change!
3
Member
Hugh Crawford
16 hours ago
I built a 3D model of the BMW rondel in AT&T/Crystal TOPAS back in 1988.
With a keyboard and a pair of calipers.
The chrome ring and the crossbars have a very specific radius you forget to mention.
2
Member
Rad Barchetta
16 hours ago
ItsTheSamePicture_TheOffice.gif
Last edited 16 hours ago by Rad Barchetta
3
Member
Ranwhenparked
17 hours ago
Also, they removed Onkel Hershel
2
Pinetorum
17 hours ago
And the center of the M and W don’t extend all the way down/up respectively.
2
Member
Squirrelmaster
12 hours ago
Reply to Pinetorum
I was going to add that as well – I think it is technically a different font now.
1
Member
Harvey's Smokehouse Brisket
9 hours ago
Reply to Squirrelmaster
ACKSHUALLY you mean a different typeface. :p
1
Member
Wordguy
17 hours ago
It’s hard to be sure but the outer silver ring on the older logo appears to wrap around the edge. The newer logo looks to have a black edge.
Also on the typeface, the newer M and W have a middle vertex that doesn’t hit the baseline/cap height.
2
Member
Nlpnt
18 hours ago
I wonder how much cheaper to make it is.
Also, who else is not at all surprised David bought a spare i3 badge?
1
86-GL
17 hours ago
Reply to Nlpnt
Cue the the “Someone stole the badge off my i3, but I can’t bear to put a non-original badge on it, so I think I have to buy an additional i3 and keep this one as a spare” article
6
Member
subsea_EV-VI
10 hours ago
Reply to Nlpnt
I’m really curious what other spare parts David bought- Spare windshield? Spare left stub axle? Spare pistons?
1
Member
Harvey's Smokehouse Brisket
9 hours ago
Reply to subsea_EV-VI
Maybe he “sold” the previous i3 to a lady named Tracy David who lives next door.
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