BMW 4 G22 TPMS Sensors

2021–present|Coupe|2 parts|View all BMW TPMS Sensors

When it comes to wheels and tires on the BMW G22 4 Series, the factory setup is competent but leaves real performance on the table. Most enthusiasts running a G22 coupe are stepping up to 19-inch or 20-inch forged wheels from reputable manufacturers like BBS, Vossen, or HRE - the HRE FlowForm FF15 and BBS CI-R are particularly popular choices for this chassis due to their weight savings and proper fitment profiles. On the tire side, Michelin Pilot Sport 4S remains the gold standard for a street-focused build, while the Continental ExtremeContact Sport 02 offers a solid value alternative without sacrificing grip. For track days, a dedicated set of Yokohama ADVAN A052s on a second wheel set is worth every penny. One practical note: before committing to a fitment, verify your specific G22 variant's offset requirements carefully - the M440i and standard 430i share similar subframes but brake caliper clearance can vary, especially if you've upgraded to M Performance brakes. Always cross-reference with a G22-specific fitment guide or pull measurements directly from your existing wheels before ordering.

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BMW TPMS Sensors - What You Need Before You Buy

BMW has used Tire Pressure Monitoring Systems since the early 2000s, but the technology - and the compatibility headaches - have evolved considerably across chassis generations. Whether you're running a set of winter wheels on your F30 3 Series, swapping to aftermarket rollers on an E70 X5, or replacing a dead sensor on your G20, getting the right TPMS sensor matters more than most people expect. Buy the wrong one and you'll be staring at a dashboard warning light that won't clear, no matter how many times you run the reset procedure.

BMW uses two main sensor frequencies depending on the market and model year: 433 MHz (common on European-spec vehicles) and 315 MHz (North American market, primarily pre-2014 models). F-chassis vehicles (F10, F30, F32, F15, F16 and similar) largely moved to 433 MHz across all markets, while older E-chassis cars like the E90, E92, E60, and E70 frequently use 315 MHz in North America. Mixing these up is the single most common TPMS mistake - always confirm your frequency before ordering.

For OEM-quality replacements, Schrader and Continental/VDO are the two brands you'll see most often inside a genuine BMW box, and both offer direct-fit aftermarket sensors that work without any additional programming in most cases. Autel makes a well-regarded universal TPMS sensor (the MX-Sensor) that requires programming via a TPMS tool but covers virtually every BMW application from the E46 era forward - a solid pick if you're a shop or a DIYer managing multiple vehicles. Huf/Beru is another OEM supplier worth knowing, particularly for older E-series applications where clone sensors can be unreliable.

If you're building a dedicated winter wheel set - which is the right move if you're in the Snow Belt and running a car like the G05 X5, G20 330i, or F82 M4 - cloneable or programmable sensors are the practical choice. You'll program them to your car's existing TPMS module using a scan tool or a dedicated TPMS programmer, and BMW's iDrive will recognize them as a second set. No hunting for sensors every November. Be sure to also check out our Wheels category if you're putting together a complete winter setup - fitment specs, offsets, and hub bore all matter on BMWs.

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Installation Difficulty and What to Watch For

Swapping TPMS sensors is straightforward if you're already dismounting a tire - any tire shop can handle it. The sensors thread or clip into the valve stem hole and torque specs are critical: don't overtighten. BMW specifies 8 Nm for most sensor nuts, and aluminum valve stems are easy to crack if you go past that. Use a new grommet and valve core every time you install a sensor; these are cheap and a corroded seal is how you get slow leaks that eat your sensor battery faster.

After installation, most F and G-chassis BMWs require a relearn procedure. On many models this is a straightforward manual relearn through the iDrive menu (Settings → Vehicle → Tire Pressure Monitor → Reset). Others require a dealer-level scan tool or a Autel TS601/TS608-class programmer to transmit sensor IDs to the car's FEM or TPMS control unit. If you're on an older E-series like an E90 or E60, plan on needing a tool - manual relearns are limited on those chassis.

Avoid no-name sensors from unknown importers. The sensor housing, antenna, and battery life on cheap clones vary wildly, and a dead sensor at 18 months is a false economy. Stick with Schrader, Continental/VDO, Autel, or Huf and you'll get the 5–7 year battery life these systems are designed around.

If you're replacing all four sensors at once - which makes sense if one has failed and the car has high mileage - browse our Tires section as well. It's a logical time to evaluate tread depth and schedule a full rotation and balance while the wheels are already off the car.