BMW 4 F36 All-Season Tires

2015–2020|Gran Coupe|7 parts|View all BMW All-Season Tires

When it comes to wheels and tires for the BMW F36 Gran Coupé, getting the fitment right makes an enormous difference in both aesthetics and performance. The factory 18-inch and 19-inch staggered setups are decent, but many enthusiasts step up to 19x8.5 front and 19x9.5 rear configurations, or push to 20-inch fitments for a more aggressive stance. BBS CH-R and Rays Volk Racing TE37 wheels are perennial favorites on this chassis due to their lightweight construction and forged strength - critical when you're running a heavier four-door platform like the F36. HRE and Apex Arc-8 wheels also enjoy strong popularity and offer excellent value for the performance gain. For tires, Michelin Pilot Sport 4S remains the go-to recommendation for street driving, delivering strong wet and dry grip without destroying your daily comfort. Bridgestone Potenza Sport is another strong option worth considering. Always verify your offset carefully - the F36 typically runs ET40-ET45 front and ET30-ET35 rear - to avoid rubbing issues, especially if you've lowered the car on coilovers. Run a proper alignment after any wheel change.

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All-Season Tires for BMW - What Actually Works on Your Chassis

BMW's staggered fitments, run-flat requirements, and low-profile sizing make tire shopping more complicated than it needs to be - unless you know what you're looking for. Most all-season tires are engineered for front-wheel-drive economy cars. BMWs demand something better. Whether you're running a 225/45R17 on an E90 328i, a 245/40R18 on an F30 335i, or the aggressive staggered 245/35R19 rear setup on an F10 550i, fitment precision and load rating matter as much as the compound itself.

The good news: the all-season category has matured significantly. Brands like Michelin (CrossClimate 2), Continental (DWS06+), Bridgestone (Turanza All Season 6), and Pirelli (Cinturato All Season SF2) all produce tires purpose-built for performance sedans and sport coupes - the exact segment BMWs occupy. These aren't your uncle's all-season tires. They use silica-reinforced compounds and directional or asymmetric tread patterns that hold up to BMW's rear-biased torque delivery without turning into shopping cart handles in November.

If your car originally came with run-flat tires - common on E60, E90, F10, F30, and G30 chassis - you have a decision to make before buying. BMW's factory run-flat (RFT) spec restricts you to tires marked with the MOExtended or ROF (Run-On-Flat) designation. Switching to standard tires is absolutely fine, but you'll need to add a tire pressure monitoring sensor kit and, ideally, a compact spare. Many owners actually prefer the switch - ride quality improves noticeably, especially on the F30 and G20 which are already stiff on stock suspension.

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What to Look For - and What to Skip

Speed rating matters. BMW E and F-series cars require at minimum a V-rated (149 mph) tire, and anything with a tune, sport package, or M-Sport suspension should be running W (168 mph) or Y (186 mph) rated rubber. Don't cheap out here - a speed rating also reflects the tire's structural integrity at load, not just top-end capability.

Load index is equally critical on heavier platforms. The G05 X5, G06 X6, and G07 X7 all need tires with load ratings appropriate for a 5,000+ lb SUV. An all-season rated for a mid-size sedan will wear unevenly and could fail under hard cornering loads on a heavier chassis.

Avoid budget all-season brands on any BMW with active suspension, adaptive dampers, or M Sport brakes. The braking distances on cheaper compounds degrade significantly in wet conditions, and BMWs with short wheelbases (E46, E90, 1 Series F20/F21) are already rotation-happy under trail braking. This is where the Continental DWS06+ earns its reputation - consistent wet grip and honest treadwear at a realistic price point.

For M cars or anything running aftermarket wheels with aggressive offsets, verify UTQG ratings and sidewall load capacity carefully. A 255/35R19 on an F82 M4 isn't forgiving of a mismatch. If you've already upgraded to a wider wheel setup, check out our performance wheels fitment guide to cross-reference compatible sizing before purchasing tires.

Installation difficulty is low if you're going same-size replacement - any qualified shop can mount and balance. TPMS resets are straightforward on most chassis using the iDrive menu or a basic TPMS reset tool. If you're changing tire diameter by more than 2–3%, you'll need a speedometer recalibration, which is a 15-minute job with a cable like the BimmerCode or NCS Expert. Staggered fitments (different front/rear widths) can't be rotated, so budget for more frequent rear replacements - particularly on xDrive models that carry more rear load.

Before finalizing your purchase, double-check your wheel specs in our wheel spacers and adapters section if you're running any offset changes - clearance issues with all-season tires, which often have slightly taller sidewalls than summer performance fitments, can catch people off guard.

Bottom line: spend the money on a proven brand, match the speed and load rating to your chassis, and confirm run-flat vs. standard before you order. Get that right and you'll have a BMW that handles properly 12 months a year.