BMW M2 G87 Kidney Grilles

2023–present|Coupe|3 parts|View all BMW Kidney Grilles
01

BMW Kidney Grilles - Upgrade Your Front End the Right Way

The kidney grille is the most recognizable element of any BMW's face - and swapping it out is one of the fastest ways to transform the front end of your car. Whether you're chasing a blacked-out stealth look, the aggressive M Performance aesthetic, or a gloss finish to match your exterior trim, the aftermarket has you covered. But not all kidney grilles are created equal, and a bad fitment or cheap finish will show immediately on something this visible.

Popular fitments include the F30/F31 3 Series (2012–2018), F10/F11 5 Series (2010–2016), G20 3 Series (2019+), G30 5 Series (2017+), F80 M3 and F82 M4, and the ever-popular E90/E92 3 Series. If you're on an older platform like the E46, options are more limited but popular chrome-delete and Euro-style grilles are still widely available. Always verify your exact chassis code and production year before ordering - BMW frequently updates front-end styling mid-generation, and a grille built for an early G20 LCI won't clip correctly into a post-facelift car.

02

What to Look For - and What to Avoid

Material matters more than most people realize. OEM-style replacements use ABS plastic with UV-stabilized paint or a chrome finish that holds up over time. Cheap units from generic overseas suppliers often use thinner plastic that fades, cracks at the mounting tabs, or shows fitment gaps around the surround. Brands like Grillcraft, M Performance (genuine BMW), and ACS Composite hit different quality tiers, while Kidney Grilles (the specialty retailer) and Turner Motorsport carry vetted aftermarket options with proven fitment. If you're going carbon fiber, look for dry carbon or pre-preg construction - wet-laid carbon grilles often look dull and delaminate at the edges after a season or two.

The "mesh vs. bar" debate is mostly aesthetic, but mesh-style kidney grilles (especially the tighter weave patterns popularized on M cars) can slightly restrict airflow to the front-mounted heat exchangers on heavily modded cars. For street builds it's a non-issue. For track cars running upgraded intercoolers or oil coolers, stick with open bar designs or genuine M grilles that BMW engineered with airflow in mind.

Installation difficulty is low for most snap-in designs - the F30 and F10 replacements are true 20-minute jobs once you've popped the front bumper clips or used a trim removal tool. The G-series cars require a bit more patience since the surround is integrated more tightly into the bumper assembly, but it's still a DIY-friendly job for anyone comfortable with interior trim work. No cutting, no drilling on 99% of direct-fit replacements. Avoid any listing that says "minor modification required" unless you're prepared to deal with fitment gaps or visible hardware.

If you're going the full front-end refresh route, pair your new kidney grilles with matching front bumper upgrades or a front lip or splitter to create a cohesive look. Mismatched gloss levels between a new grille and an oxidized bumper are a common oversight that kills an otherwise clean build.

One last thing: on newer BMWs like the G20 and G80 M3, the kidney grille surround is painted to match the car at the factory. If your replacement grille comes with a raw or primer-finish surround, budget for a color-match spray or wrap before installation - it's a small detail that separates a professional-looking install from one that clearly has aftermarket parts slapped on.