BMW M2 F87 Exhaust Tips

2016–2021|Coupe|1 parts|View all BMW Exhaust Tips

When it comes to exhaust upgrades on the BMW F87 M2, you have a fantastic platform to work with, whether you're running the S55-powered Competition or the N55 base car. For a full system, Akrapovič makes arguably the best bolt-on solution with their Evolution or Slip-On Line kits, offering titanium construction and a genuinely aggressive tone without crossing into obnoxious territory. Remus and Milltek are also strong contenders at a lower price point, with Milltek's resonated options being particularly popular for daily-driven cars that still need to pass a morning noise check. If you want maximum drama without the full system cost, a catback swap is the most practical starting point - Turner Motorsport and Active Autowerke both offer solid options specifically tuned for the F87 chassis. On the Competition's S55, an aftermarket downpipe makes a real difference in throttle response and power delivery, but be prepared to address CEL codes with an appropriate tune from a shop like BM3 or MHD. Always pair any significant exhaust work with a supporting tune to keep fueling and ignition timing properly calibrated.

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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.

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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.