BMW 3 F31

Best Exhaust Tips for BMW 3 F31

2012–2019|Wagon|4 parts

When it comes to exhaust upgrades on the BMW F31 touring, the options are genuinely worthwhile, particularly if you're running the N20, N26, or N55 engine variants. The stock exhaust is deliberately muffled to suit a broad market, so there's real performance and acoustic gains to be had. Popular choices among F31 owners include the Milltek Sport cat-back system, which offers a notably cleaner exhaust note without becoming obnoxious on a daily driver, and the Remus sport exhaust, favoured for its build quality and that characteristic European growl. For those on the N55, a downpipe upgrade from suppliers like VRSF or Dinan paired with an ECU remap genuinely unlocks the engine's breathing potential. Akrapovič also produces titanium options if budget isn't a concern, though these are more commonly specified on the M-Sport derivatives. On a practical note, always pair any exhaust modification with a professional remap or at minimum an oxygen sensor check, because running a high-flow system without addressing fuelling can trigger persistent fault codes and, over time, run the engine leaner than you'd want.

01

BMW Exhaust Tips - Fitment, Finish, and What Actually Matters

An exhaust tip won't add horsepower, but it will define the rear end of your BMW - and on a well-maintained E46 M3 or a clean F80 M3, a mismatched or flimsy tip sticks out immediately. Done right, upgrading your exhaust tip is one of the cheapest, highest-visibility modifications you can make. Done wrong, you've got a rattling chrome sleeve that falls off on the highway.

The first thing to get right is fitment. BMW exhaust outlet diameters vary significantly across chassis generations. Most E-chassis cars (E46, E90/E92, E60) run single or dual 2.5-inch to 3-inch outlets. F-chassis models (F30, F80, F10, F82) often step up to 3-inch or larger, especially on M and M Performance variants. G-chassis cars like the G80 M3 and G82 M4 use even larger quad-tip setups from the factory, so if you're replacing those, you're typically looking for 90mm-plus diameter clamp-on or weld-on units. Always measure your pipe OD before ordering - "universal fit" means nothing if you're 10mm off.

For slip-on tips, look for a clamp-on design with a set screw or two rather than a friction-fit-only unit. Friction-fit tips vibrate loose. On performance exhausts from brands like Akrapovič, Eisenmann, and Remus, the tips are often proprietary and sold separately - make sure you're buying the correct tip series for your specific exhaust system if you're replacing a worn or damaged one. Aftermarket universal tips from Borla and MBRP offer solid quality for builds where you just want a clean look on a stock or mid-tier cat-back.

Material and finish choice comes down to your use case. 304 stainless is the baseline - it resists corrosion and handles heat well. 316 stainless is overkill for most street cars but shows up on higher-end units. Polished tips look great at purchase but require regular attention to stay that way, especially through a salty winter. Brushed or matte finishes hide water spots and light scratches far better, and they tend to age more gracefully on daily drivers. Black chrome and ceramic-coated tips are popular on M cars right now, but cheap versions start peeling within a year - stick to tips with a proper PVD coating or quality ceramic if you go that route.

02

Install Difficulty and What to Watch For

Slip-on exhaust tips are genuinely beginner-friendly - 15 to 30 minutes, no lift required in most cases. You'll need basic hand tools and possibly a rubber mallet for stubborn fitments. The trickier situation is replacing tips on a cat-back system where the tips are welded to the rear section. In that case, you're either cutting and re-welding (shop job) or buying a replacement rear section entirely. Check how your specific exhaust system is constructed before assuming it's a simple swap.

On M Performance and aftermarket cat-backs for cars like the F82 M4, G80 M3, or E92 M3, the quad-tip configuration is often part of a single rear muffler assembly. Mixing tip styles across a quad setup looks terrible, so if you're replacing one, plan on replacing all four for a consistent look.

If you're building out a full exhaust system from scratch, start with our cat-back exhaust systems section to pair the right rear section with your tip choice from the start. Or if you're chasing real performance gains, check the downpipes category - that's where the power actually lives on turbo-equipped N55 and S55 cars.

Bottom line: buy stainless, confirm your pipe diameter, avoid friction-fit-only designs, and match the finish to how much maintenance you're willing to do. A quality tip from a reputable brand will outlast the car if you get the fitment right the first time.