Revenue of BMW Group from 2007 to 2026
BMW Group is one of the world's most profitable and prestigious automotive companies. Its portfolio covers three of the most recognizable names in luxury transport: BMW (the core brand), MINI, and Rolls-Royce. The group also operates BMW Motorrad, the world's largest premium motorcycle brand.
From 2007 to 2023, BMW Group revenue grew without interruption except for two brief dips, during the 2008-2009 global financial crisis and the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic. Revenue peaked at a record €155.5 billion in 2023.
Since 2023, BMW has faced a more challenging environment. Revenue declined to €142.4 billion in 2024 and further to €133.45 billion in 2025. The primary cause is clear: China. BMW's most important single market has become its biggest problem, as domestic Chinese EV brands have taken significant market share from premium European manufacturers.
Despite this, BMW remains solidly profitable, with pre-tax earnings above €10 billion in 2025. The global company valuations context is in our world's most valuable companies analysis.
- 2007: €56.0B — Pre-crisis peak. BMW selling 1.5M vehicles. Strong global luxury demand.
- 2009: €50.7B — Financial crisis low. Revenue fell 9.5% over two years. No government bailout needed.
- 2010: €60.5B — Fastest post-crisis recovery of any major European automaker.
- 2019: €104.2B — First time BMW Group crossed €100 billion in annual revenue.
- 2023: €155.5B — All-time revenue record. Pre-tax profit also record at €17.1B.
- 2025: €133.5B — Revenue declined 14% from 2023 peak. China -12.5%. Europe +7.3%. Americas +5.6%.
- 2026E: ~€137-140B — BusinessStats Research forecast. Neue Klasse launch and new product cycle expected to stabilize revenue.
BMW Group Revenue — Complete Data Table 2007 to 2026
The table below shows BMW Group's confirmed annual revenue from 2007 to 2025, plus the 2026 forecast. Click any column to sort. The data shows two clear downturns, 2008-2009 (financial crisis) and 2024-2025 (China slowdown), and one extraordinary expansion phase from 2020 to 2023 when post-COVID demand and premium pricing power pushed revenue to unprecedented levels. The broader financial context for global corporate revenues is in our global investment banking analysis.
| Year | Revenue (€B) | YoY Change | Pre-Tax Profit | Key Context |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | €56.0B | — | ~€3.9B | Pre-crisis strong year · 1.5M vehicles · strong luxury demand |
| 2008 | €53.2B | -5.0% | ~€2.0B | Global financial crisis begins · credit crunch hits auto sales |
| 2009 | €50.7B | -4.7% | ~€0.4B | Crisis trough · 1.28M vehicles · no government bailout |
| 2010 | €60.5B | +19.3% | ~€4.8B | Fastest recovery in European auto · China demand surge |
| 2011 | €68.8B | +13.7% | ~€7.4B | Record deliveries at the time · emerging market expansion |
| 2012 | €76.8B | +11.6% | ~€8.0B | 1.84M vehicles · BMW world's largest premium car brand |
| 2013 | €76.1B | -0.9% | ~€7.9B | Slight dip · currency headwinds from EM · still strong |
| 2014 | €80.4B | +5.6% | ~€8.7B | 2.11M vehicles · SUV expansion (X series) drives growth |
| 2015 | €92.2B | +14.7% | ~€9.2B | Big jump · financial services growth · China boom peak |
| 2016 | €94.2B | +2.2% | ~€9.4B | Steady growth · 2.34M vehicles · competitive pressure builds |
| 2017 | €98.7B | +4.8% | ~€10.7B | Approaching €100B milestone · trade war fears emerge |
| 2018 | €97.5B | -1.2% | ~€9.6B | Trade war headwinds · diesel scandal impacts · EU tariff disputes |
| 2019 | €104.2B | +6.9% | ~€7.1B | First €100B year in history · milestone achievement |
| 2020 | €98.9B | -5.1% | ~€5.2B | COVID-19 · production shutdowns · 2.32M vehicles (-8%) |
| 2021 | €111.2B | +12.4% | ~€13.4B | Post-COVID surge · chip shortage raised prices · record margins |
| 2022 | €142.6B | +28.2% | ~€23.5B | Extraordinary year · premium pricing · supply normalising |
| 2023 | €155.5B | +9.1% | €17.1B | ALL-TIME PEAK REVENUE · record deliveries at 2.55M vehicles |
| 2024 | €142.4B | -8.5% | ~€10.9B | China weakness begins · brake recall · deliveries -4% |
| 2025 | €133.5B | -6.3% | €10.2B | China -12.5% · Europe +7.3% · BEV +3.6% · EBT margin 7.7% |
| 2026E | ~€137-140B | ~+3-4% | Slight increase | BusinessStats Research forecast · Neue Klasse launch · 40 new models by 2027 |
How BMW Survived the 2008-2009 Financial Crisis Faster Than Any Rival
The 2008 global financial crisis was the first major test of BMW's resilience. Revenue fell from €56.0 billion in 2007 to €50.7 billion in 2009, a total decline of 9.5% over two years. However, what made BMW remarkable was the speed and completeness of its recovery. By 2010, revenue had already surpassed the pre-crisis level at €60.5 billion, a 19.3% jump in a single year. No other major European automaker recovered this quickly.
BMW's advantage during the crisis was its customer base. Premium luxury buyers are less reliant on consumer credit than mass-market car buyers, and many maintained their purchasing power through the downturn. BMW also avoided the costly government bailouts that burdened rivals, it weathered the crisis entirely on its own financial strength. The banking and financial markets context that drove the 2008 crisis is analyzed in our global investment banking analysis.
- Crisis impact modest vs peers: BMW fell 9.5% over two years (2007-2009). General Motors and Chrysler both filed for bankruptcy in 2009. Fiat-Chrysler required government rescue. BMW required none.
- Recovery fastest in class: Back above pre-crisis revenue by 2010 — just one year after the trough. This set the template for how BMW handles downturns: cost discipline, no panic, steady product cadence.
- China the key accelerant: The 2010 recovery was powered largely by exploding Chinese demand for premium cars. BMW had established its Shenyang joint venture plant in 2004, positioning it perfectly for the China boom.
- Pre-tax profit near zero in 2009: ~€0.4B EBT — the lowest in modern BMW history. Yet the company maintained its investment programme, setting up the 2010-2023 growth decade.
The €60B to €155B Journey — BMW's Extraordinary 13-Year Growth Run
From 2010 to 2023, BMW Group achieved one of the most sustained revenue growth runs in European corporate history. Starting from €60.5 billion in 2010, revenue grew to €155.5 billion in 2023, an increase of €95 billion in 13 years.
This growth was driven by three forces: a booming Chinese market that became BMW's largest single country for sales, a successful SUV strategy (the X-series), and, most dramatically, the post-COVID pricing boom of 2021-2023 when semiconductor shortages reduced supply while demand surged.
The 2021-2022 period was particularly extraordinary. Revenue jumped from €98.9 billion in 2020 to €142.6 billion in 2022, an increase of €43.7 billion in just two years. This was not primarily from selling more cars; it was from selling cars at significantly higher prices.
The chip shortage meant BMW could not make as many cars as customers wanted, giving dealers the pricing power to charge full list price or above for the first time in years. Pre-tax profit in 2022 reached approximately €23.5 billion, extraordinary margins for an automotive manufacturer.
BMW Group's €155.498 billion in 2023 was not just a revenue record, it came with a pre-tax profit of €17.1 billion, making it the most profitable year in the company's 110-year history. The combination of record deliveries (2.55 million vehicles), premium pricing still elevated from the chip-shortage era, and strong financial services growth created a perfect financial storm, in BMW's favour. Whether this record will be surpassed in the near term depends heavily on China's recovery and the success of the Neue Klasse product launch. The global economic context driving corporate profitability is in our world GDP analysis.
BMW Group Revenue by Business Segment — Automotive, Financial Services, Motorcycles
BMW Group reports revenue across three segments. The Automotive segment (BMW, MINI, Rolls-Royce cars) is by far the largest, typically accounting for approximately 75-80% of group revenue. The Financial Services segment, which provides vehicle leasing, financing, and insurance to BMW customers, is the second-largest at approximately 20-22% of revenue.
This segment is more than just a support function: it actively contributes to vehicle sales by making BMW ownership more accessible. The Motorcycles segment (BMW Motorrad) is small but profitable, generating approximately €2.5-3 billion annually. The investment flows serving the automotive industry are tracked in our investment banking revenue analysis.
- Automotive segment: Cars and SUVs — BMW, MINI, Rolls-Royce. EBIT margin fell from ~9.8% in 2022-2023 to 5.3% in 2025. 2026 guidance: 5-7% EBIT margin. The segment bears the brunt of China weakness and tariff costs.
- Financial Services segment: Leasing, loans, insurance, credit cards for BMW customers. More stable than automotive. Return on Equity guided at 13-16% in 2026. Crucial for making BMW ownership accessible across income levels.
- Motorcycles segment: BMW Motorrad — premium motorcycles. EBIT margin guided 5.5-7.5% in 2026. Small in revenue (~€2.5B) but one of the world's most profitable motorcycle businesses. High brand loyalty, growing adventure touring category.
BMW Group 2025 — €133.5B Revenue, €10.2B Profit, 442K Electric Vehicles
BMW Group's 2025 annual results, presented at the Annual Conference on March 12, 2026, showed a company under genuine revenue pressure but maintaining impressive profitability. Total group revenue of €133.453 billion was down 6.3% from 2024. However, pre-tax profit held above €10 billion at €10.236 billion, a 7.7% EBT margin, demonstrating BMW's ability to protect earnings even as revenue falls. Net profit was €7.451 billion, down only 3% despite the significant revenue decline.
CEO Oliver Zipse's message at the Annual Conference was clear: "We grew in 2025, selling more vehicles than the previous year." Despite lower revenue, BMW delivered 2,463,681 vehicles, 0.5% more than in 2024. The lower revenue despite higher volumes reflects pricing pressure in China, where BMW has been forced to cut prices to compete with local EV brands. The global financial markets context is in our U.S. financial markets analysis.
BMW Group 2025 — Europe Grows 7%, Americas Grows 6%, China Falls 12.5%
The biggest story in BMW's 2025 results is the dramatic split between its regional markets. Europe grew 7.3% and the Americas grew 5.6%, delivering strong momentum. The US Spartanburg plant, BMW's largest single plant globally, increased output by 4.2% to 412,799 vehicles, reflecting strong American demand.
But Asia delivered a devastating -18.5% decline, driven almost entirely by China's -12.5% fall in deliveries. China, which was BMW's largest single market just a few years ago, is now the company's most urgent strategic challenge.
The German luxury car segment as a whole lost approximately 260,000 combined vehicle sales in China in 2025 across BMW, Mercedes-Benz, and Audi. BMW's China Dadong plant saw output fall 40.2%, a stark illustration of how rapidly Chinese consumer preference has shifted toward domestic EV brands like BYD, Li Auto, and Huawei-backed Aito models. The global GDP and economic output context explaining China's growth trajectory is in our world GDP analysis.
- Europe +7.3% (1.02M units delivered): Strong rebound across Germany, UK, France, Italy. European governments' EV incentive programmes supported BMW EV sales. BMW's wide model range including both combustion and electric options helps in Europe's mixed regulatory environment.
- Americas +5.6%: USA led growth. BMW brand US sales continued a multi-year trend of record performance. The Spartanburg plant — which makes X-series SUVs — boosted output 4.2% to serve surging American SUV demand.
- China -12.5%: The most pressing strategic challenge. Domestic EV brands (BYD, Li Auto, Huawei Aito) have dramatically improved quality while undercutting German brands on price. BMW has responded by cutting prices, which protects volume but compresses margins. Dadong plant output fell 40.2%.
- Asia ex-China: Japan and South Korea remained stable but unable to offset China's decline. BMW is investing in local partnerships and model localisation across Asia to rebuild the regional growth story.
BMW vs Mercedes-Benz vs Audi — Premium Automotive Revenue Comparison 2024
BMW Group competes directly with Mercedes-Benz Group and Audi (part of Volkswagen Group) in the global premium automotive segment. Among the three German luxury giants, BMW and Mercedes-Benz are closest in size and strategy, both generating revenue in the €130-155 billion range depending on the year.
In 2025, BMW actually demonstrated stronger earnings resilience than its peers: Mercedes-Benz saw net profit nearly halve, Stellantis posted a massive €22.3 billion net loss, and BMW maintained net profit above €7 billion for the second consecutive year. The competitive positioning of the world's largest companies is analyzed in our world's most valuable companies analysis.
BMW Group — Key Revenue Statistics and Facts 2007-2026
BMW Group 2026 Outlook — Neue Klasse Launch, Revenue Recovery Expected
BMW has designated 2026 its "Year of the New Generation" and a "Big Year for Products." The centrepiece is the launch of the new BMW iX3, the first vehicle built on the Neue Klasse platform, BMW's next-generation electric vehicle architecture. Early order numbers have significantly exceeded expectations in Europe.
CEO Oliver Zipse described the response as "extremely positive." Between now and 2027, BMW plans to bring 40 new and updated models to market, covering all segments and all drivetrain types. The AI and technology investment context for the automotive industry is in our AI in finance analysis.
BMW's official 2026 guidance includes: Automotive EBIT margin of 5-7%, Group pre-tax profit slightly above 2025's €10.24B, and automotive free cash flow exceeding €4.5 billion.
BusinessStats Research forecasts 2026 group revenue of approximately €137-140 billion, a modest recovery from €133.5B in 2025, based on new product launches, gradual China stabilization, and continued European and American strength. The key risk: US tariff escalation could add over €1 billion in annual cost headwinds if rates increase further.
The global investment context is in our BlackRock global investment analysis.
- BMW iX3 Neue Klasse (2026): The most important product launch in BMW's recent history. Neue Klasse is a completely new EV architecture — better range, faster charging, more software integration. European order intake already "significantly exceeds expectations" per CEO Zipse.
- 40 new models by 2027: BMW is flooding the market with new and updated products across all segments and all drivetrain types (combustion, hybrid, electric). This breadth-of-choice strategy deliberately avoids betting everything on pure EVs — a key differentiator from Tesla.
- China stabilisation target: BMW is investing in local partnerships, price competitiveness, and faster Chinese-market product cycles to stabilise its China volume. Recovery will be gradual — the competitive landscape from local EV brands is permanent, not cyclical.
- US tariff risk: BMW exports approximately 225,000 vehicles annually to the US (primarily from its German plants). Tariff escalation beyond current levels could add €1B+ in annual cost headwinds — the single biggest 2026 uncertainty.
- Electric vehicle target: BMW aims for 50% of deliveries to be fully electric by 2030, up from 17.9% in 2025. This requires roughly tripling BEV volumes over five years — aggressive but achievable with the full Neue Klasse model lineup rolling out from 2026-2028.
Frequently Asked Questions — BMW Group Revenue 2007-2026
BMW Group's total revenue in 2025 was €133.453 billion, a decline of 6.3% from €142.4 billion in 2024. Pre-tax profit was €10.236 billion (EBT margin: 7.7%). Net profit was €7.451 billion (-3.0%). The decline was driven primarily by a 12.5% fall in China deliveries. Source: BMW Group Annual Conference, March 12, 2026.
BMW Group's peak revenue was €155.498 billion in 2023, also the most profitable year in the company's history, with pre-tax profit of €17.1 billion. Revenue has since declined to €142.4B in 2024 and €133.45B in 2025 due to China weakness and market normalization. Source: BMW Annual Reports 2023, 2024, 2025.
BMW Group revenue grew from €56 billion in 2007 to a peak of €155.5 billion in 2023, a 178% increase. Key moments: dropped to €50.7B in 2009 (crisis), recovered to €60.5B in 2010, first crossed €100B in 2019, peaked at €155.5B in 2023, declined to €133.45B by 2025. 2026 forecast: ~€137-140B. Source: BMW Annual Reports, Statista.
Three main factors: (1) China sales collapsed, down 12.5% in 2025 as domestic EV brands (BYD, Li Auto, Huawei Aito) took market share. (2) Premium pricing normalised, the exceptional pricing power of the 2021-2023 chip-shortage era faded. (3) A brake system recall in 2024 disrupted deliveries. Source: BMW Annual Conference March 2026, ChinaEVHome March 2026.
BMW Group delivered 2,463,681 premium vehicles (BMW, MINI, Rolls-Royce) in 2025, up 0.5% vs 2024. Of these, 442,056 were fully electric (BEV), up 3.6%. Electrified vehicles (BEV + PHEV) represented 26.1% of total deliveries. One in every six BMW Group vehicles sold in 2025 was fully electric. Source: BMW Annual Conference, March 12, 2026.
BMW official guidance: Automotive EBIT margin 5-7%, Group EBT slightly above 2025's €10.24B, and automotive free cash flow exceeding €4.5 billion. BusinessStats Research forecasts 2026 group revenue of approximately €137-140 billion, a modest recovery driven by the Neue Klasse BMW iX3 launch, European growth, and continued Americas strength. Source: BMW Annual Conference 2026, BMW press releases.
BMW Group reports three segments: Automotive (BMW, MINI, Rolls-Royce cars, ~78% of revenue, EBIT margin 5.3% in 2025); Financial Services (leasing, financing, insurance, ~21% of revenue, ROE guided 13-16%); and Motorcycles (BMW Motorrad, ~1.5% of revenue, EBIT margin guided 5.5-7.5%). Source: BMW Annual Reports, BMW Annual Conference 2026.
Revenue fell from €56B in 2007 to €50.7B in 2009, a 9.5% decline, but BMW recovered by 2010 to a new record of €60.5B. BMW required no government bailout (unlike GM, Chrysler, or Fiat-Chrysler). BMW's premium customer base was less credit-constrained than mass-market buyers. China demand accelerated the recovery, BMW's Shenyang plant opened in 2004, perfectly positioned for the post-crisis China boom. Source: BMW Annual Reports 2007-2010.
BMW Group revenue fell from €104.2 billion in 2019 to €98.99 billion in 2020, a 5% decline as COVID-19 caused production shutdowns and showroom closures globally. However, BMW rebounded strongly in 2021 (+12.4% to €111.2B) as pent-up demand returned and chip-shortage-driven pricing power boosted revenue even with lower unit volumes. Source: BMW Annual Reports 2019-2021.
BMW Group China deliveries fell 12.5% in 2025. The China Dadong plant output fell 40.2%. All three German luxury brands (BMW, Mercedes, Audi) collectively sold approximately 260,000 fewer vehicles in China. The cause: domestic EV brands, BYD, Li Auto, Huawei Aito, improved quality and undercut German pricing significantly. BMW has responded with price cuts but this compresses margins. Source: BMW Annual Conference 2026, ChinaEVHome March 2026.
BMW sold 442,056 fully electric vehicles in 2025 (+3.6%), representing 17.9% of total deliveries. The target is 50% fully electric by 2030. BMW uses a "technology-neutral" strategy, offering combustion, hybrid, and electric models simultaneously rather than going all-electric immediately. The 2026 BMW iX3 on the new Neue Klasse platform is the key next-generation EV product. Source: BMW Annual Conference 2026.
BMW Group's closest revenue competitor is Mercedes-Benz Group (~€153B in 2024). Audi operates under Volkswagen Group (~€324B total). BMW and Mercedes-Benz compete directly for the world's premium vehicle volume title. In 2025, BMW demonstrated stronger earnings resilience than peers, Mercedes-Benz net profit nearly halved while BMW maintained >€7B net profit. Source: Company Annual Reports 2024-2025.
BMW Group employed 154,540 people worldwide at year-end 2025, down from 159,104 in 2024. The group operates 32 production locations across 15 countries. Total procurement spending: €79.5 billion. Germany accounts for 31.3% of the supply base. The Spartanburg (USA) plant is BMW's largest globally by output, producing 412,799 vehicles in 2025. Source: BMW Annual Conference March 2026.