---
title: "Plant Spartanburg Preps for First All-Electric BMW as iX5 Production Nears"
url: https://www.herespartanburg.com/plant-spartanburg-ix5-ev-production-2026/
date: 2026-05-06T10:48:50-04:00
modified: 2026-05-06T10:48:50-04:00
author: "A. Preston Acker"
categories: ["136"]
site: "HERESpartanburg"
attribution: "HERESpartanburg"
---

# Plant Spartanburg Preps for First All-Electric BMW as iX5 Production Nears

> BMW Manufacturing's Spartanburg plant is three months from launching its first all-electric vehicle, the iX5, backed by a $1.7B investment that also built the Woodruff battery plant.

*Source: [HERESpartanburg](https://www.herespartanburg.com/plant-spartanburg-ix5-ev-production-2026/) — May 6, 2026 by A. Preston Acker*

BMW Manufacturing’s Spartanburg plant, the largest BMW production facility in the world, is now fewer than three months from beginning assembly of its first fully electric vehicle, marking the most significant transition in the plant’s three-decade history.

The all-electric iX5, an electric version of the fifth-generation X5, is scheduled to enter production at Plant Spartanburg in August 2026. The launch puts South Carolina at the center of BMW’s global electrification strategy, making the Upstate county one of the few places in the world manufacturing electric luxury SUVs at scale.

The shift has been years in the making. In October 2022, BMW announced a $1.7 billion investment in its U.S. operations — $1 billion to upgrade Plant Spartanburg’s production lines for battery-electric vehicles, and another $700 million to construct Plant Woodruff, a new high-voltage battery assembly facility on 315 acres in nearby Woodruff, South Carolina. Both investments have now reached completion or near-completion. Plant Woodruff, which will produce sixth-generation battery modules for the electric X models, is scheduled to begin full battery assembly operations by late 2026 alongside the iX5 launch.

BMW’s Chief Procurement Officer Nicolai Martin confirmed in January 2026 that there is no risk of a battery cell shortage for the Spartanburg plant after construction at partner supplier AESC’s Florence, South Carolina battery cell factory was temporarily halted. AESC has committed to supplying cells from its global production network on an interim basis, ensuring the August production timeline is not disrupted.

The iX5 will not be a standalone model at Spartanburg. Plant Spartanburg will assemble the iX5 alongside gasoline, plug-in hybrid, and diesel variants of the X5 on the same production lines — a configuration BMW calls multi-drivetrain flexibility. By 2030, BMW plans to have at least six fully electric models rolling off the Spartanburg line, covering the X3, X5, X6, and X7 platform families.

The economic footprint of the electrification push extends well into the Upstate. Plant Spartanburg already employs more than 11,000 people and supports a total of roughly 42,900 jobs statewide through its supplier network, according to an economic impact study commissioned by BMW. More than 500 South Carolina suppliers serve the plant, with roughly 90 percent located in the Upstate region. The Woodruff battery facility, once fully ramped, is expected to create more than 300 additional jobs onsite.

South Carolina’s position as a manufacturing hub for electric vehicles puts the state in favorable alignment with federal incentive structures for domestically assembled EVs, a factor analysts have noted as a long-term advantage for BMW’s U.S. export strategy. In 2025, Plant Spartanburg exported nearly 200,000 BMW X models with a total export value of $9 billion, maintaining its distinction as the largest automotive exporter by value in the United States for more than a decade, according to U.S. Department of Commerce data released in March 2026.

The BMW Group’s 2025 annual report, released at the company’s March 12 conference in Munich, confirmed Plant Spartanburg’s seven millionth U.S.-assembled BMW as a milestone reached in April 2025. That vehicle, a BMW ALPINA XB7 painted ALPINA Green Metallic, now resides in BMW’s historic collection at the Spartanburg plant. The next milestone on the horizon is the iX5 itself — a vehicle that will mark the beginning of a new era for the plant and for South Carolina’s automotive workforce.
