I have been driving this old beat up truck for like ten years now and finally got a big promotion at work so I really want to treat myself to my dream car which has always been the BMW M3. I really like the sedan version because I have kids and honestly need the back doors for car seats and school drop offs but I am totally lost on where people actually buy these things. I looked on the normal sites like Craigslist and Facebook Marketplace but everything I see has like 100,000 miles on it and I really want something that is basically new or at least has very low miles because I dont want to deal with it breaking down immediately since I dont know the first thing about fixing cars. Im in the Austin area and my budget is around $70,000 but I could go a bit higher if the car was like perfect. Sorry if this is a super basic question but is there a secret website for these? Or do I just go to a regular dealership and hope they have one? I keep hearing people talk about enthusiast sites but I have no idea what that means or where to even start looking. Where can I find a low mileage BMW M3 sedan that isnt totally trashed?
Austin dealers are honestly such a disappointment for finding clean cars, usually just overpriced high-mileage junk. I had a terrible time searching for a BMW M3 F80 S55 around here ngl. Skip the local lots and check out Bimmerpost forums instead. Their member classifieds are where the real gems are. For 70k you can definitely find a mint BMW M3 F80 Competition Package with low miles from an owner who actually cared.
Coming back to this with some technical bits because $70k is a tricky spot right now for the M3 market. You are basically right on the line between a perfect late-model BMW M3 F80 LCI 3.0L S55 and a higher-mileage early BMW M3 G80 Sedan S58. If you want low miles and zero stress, you gotta look at national aggregators like AutoTempest Car Search or even the BMW USA Inventory Search tool which covers dealers nationwide. Since you mentioned kids and school runs, the technical health of the car is way more important than just the odometer reading. Here is how I would approach the search: