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BMW 525
2005 · Diesel · Manual · Wagon/Estate · Gray
8 photos · 8 specs
€3,450
🇱🇻 Latvija
136 days on the market
Contact the seller →
Opens the original ad on SS.lv
Is this a good deal?
Fair price- Priced 6% below 85 comparable cars on the market
- Seller has cut the price 3 times
- Has been on the market for 136 days
Specifications
Year2005
Mileage398 tūkst.
Engine2.5D
TransmissionManual
FuelDiesel
Body typeWagon/Estate
ColorGray
LocationLatvija
Description
BMW 525 (2005) — diesel engine 2.5D manual transmission with 398,000 km mileage. Body: Wagon. Color: Gray. Location: Latvija. Price: €3,450. View details, price history and similar listings on autopase.lv.
Tools for this car
↓ 6%below market average
Based on 189 listings · €3.653 avg
First seen: 2/13/2026
🎬 Video reviews
BMW 5 Series E60 (2003–2010)
ru🌶️ Подробно и наглядно показываем слабые места "пятёрки" BMW E60.
АвтоСтронг
ruТОП проблем БМВ Е60 | Самые частые неисправности и недостатки BMW E60
ТопАвто
ruЧто НУЖНО знать о BMW E60 при ПОКУПКЕ?
VLASOV
Digest from the reviews
Based on transcripts of 2 reviews
- •Both of the 2 reviewed transcripts call the early M54 sixes (fitted until 2005) the safest petrol pick — one rates them at 350-500k km, near 'millionaire' grade — while the N52 2.5 is named the range's worst oil-burner by both; the workshop review concludes that buying any petrol E60 without deep diagnostics is 'Russian roulette'.
- •Both warn about the direct-injection petrols (N53, 2007+): a fragile HPFP and capricious injectors that can leak fuel into a cylinder overnight and hydrolock the engine; the N62 V8s get a thumbs-down in both reviews — one cites Valvetronic failing ~3x more often and ~1L/1,000 km oil use by age five.
- •The workshop transcript finds the diesels far less troublesome: M47/M57 injectors often run 300-400k km before acting up, while the post-2007 N47 2.0d is the gamble — its rear-mounted timing chain has killed engines, and hairline cracks between cylinders that lose coolant have forced block replacements.
- •Both name iDrive-linked electronics as the E60's money pit: the pre-facelift CCC unit freezes and dies (a solder-joint fault — now repairable; the facelift CIC is fine), and with no dipstick a faulty oil-level sensor can cost you the engine; one review quotes an owner: 'after 100k km I stopped counting' the electronics bills.
- •Both treat the optional active chassis as an expensive risk: the Dynamic Drive actuator and the active steering rack cost serious money (one reviewer: owners often convert to a normal rack — it lives ~3x longer and costs a fraction), though the workshop notes the warning lights are often just the heat-damaged wiring harness next to the rack.
- •Both highlight the all-aluminium front end: it does not rust and the paint holds up, but after a crash few body shops can weld, rivet or glue aluminium properly — repairs are expensive and accident history deserves extra scrutiny.
Opinions belong to the review authors
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