
Factory character
The factory details buyers are actually trying to keep intact
Factory Equipment
This first-pass equipment guide keeps the factory hardware story visible while the deeper brochure-grade option research is still being built. Use it to separate a correctly configured car from one that only looks close at first glance.

Factory character
The factory details buyers are actually trying to keep intact

Engine focus
The motor that defines the whole equipment story
Wheel options
Wheel design, seat trim, cabin materials, and the right factory details often decide whether a BMW still reads like a coherent original example or just a used car wearing the right badge.

Factory look and stance
BMW M4 (F82) buyers notice wheel style, ride height, brake presentation, and whether the car still carries the visual hardware that belongs with its model and generation.

Cabin correctness
Seats, trim, steering wheel, shifter treatment, and infotainment changes all alter how original the car feels. The strongest examples still look internally consistent instead of updated piecemeal.
Powertrain and layout
Engine
3.0L S55 twin-turbo inline-six sets the tone for the rest of the equipment story. Buyers should compare live cars against the correct engine-family presentation, ancillaries, and supporting hardware instead of looking at power figures alone.
Transmission
6-speed manual or 7-speed DCT materially changes how BMW M4 (F82) is shopped. The right gearbox is part of the spec, not a minor detail once the market starts separating keeper-grade cars from generic inventory.
Chassis format
Rear-drive turbo sports coupe is the factory architecture buyers are actually paying for. Suspension feel, brake setup, wheel choice, and even seat configuration should still support that original character.
What buyers actually check
Competition Package, carbon roof, and seat spec clearly documented
Competition Package, carbon roof, and seat spec clearly documented
Correct wheel and brake package still on the car if it is being sold as stock-spec
Correct wheel and brake package still on the car if it is being sold as stock-spec
Original exhaust, downpipes, and tuning status made explicit
Original exhaust, downpipes, and tuning status made explicit
Tire brand, brake wear, and suspension story coherent with the asking price
Tire brand, brake wear, and suspension story coherent with the asking price
Documentation and red flags
What helps
Clear service history with honest modification disclosure. Stock-hardware retention or thoughtful, reversible modifications. Manual or Competition examples with clean ownership and presentable cosmetics.
What hurts
Aggressive tune or downpipe story with weak service records. Seller calling the car 'fully built' without a coherent maintenance file. Price anchored to rarity language rather than condition, spec, and ownership quality.