BMW G80 M3 Front & Rear Brake Pads
An M3 eats brakes — so this is a job you'll do often, and a satisfying DIY that saves a lot over the dealer. The fronts are a straightforward big-brake swap; the rears carry the electronic parking brake, so they need service mode first. And if your car has carbon-ceramics, read the warning before you start.
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The G80's brakes are big and they wear fast — especially if you track the car — so doing pads and rotors yourself pays off quickly. Mechanically it's a standard caliper-off swap, with one modern catch on the rear: the parking brake is an electric motor on each rear caliper, and it must be put into service mode before you retract the rear pistons. The fronts have no such system. And the optional carbon-ceramic setup is a different, far costlier animal — more on that below.
Parts & Tools You'll Need
Pads and rotors per axle for your exact brake setup, plus the wear sensors.
Carbon-ceramics? Different rules
If your G80 has the carbon-ceramic (CCB) option, the discs are extremely expensive and must be handled and cleaned differently — no aggressive cleaners, specific pads only, and great care not to chip or crack them. They also wear far less than steel. This guide covers the standard steel brakes; if you have ceramics, follow the ceramic-specific procedure and pad spec exactly.
Step-by-Step (Steel Brakes)
Loosen, Raise & Remove the Wheels
Crack the wheel bolts, raise the car and support it securely on stands, then take the wheels off. Work one axle at a time so you always have a reference.
Put the Rear EPB Into Service Mode
Before touching the rear calipers, connect the scan tool and activate the electronic parking brake service/retract function. This backs off the motors so you can safely retract the pistons. Do this first — it's the whole trick to the rears.
Front: Remove the Caliper & Retract the Piston
Undo the caliper bolts, lift the caliper off and support it (don't hang it by the hose). Push the front piston(s) back into the bore with a clamp or spreader — no service mode needed up front.
Front: Swap Pads, Rotor & Sensor
Remove the carrier if replacing the rotor, fit the new rotor, then the pads (grease the contact points), and the new front wear sensor. Reassemble and torque the caliper and carrier to spec.
Rear: Remove the Caliper & Retract the Piston
With the EPB in service mode, undo the rear caliper and retract the piston as the caliper requires. Support the caliper as before. Forcing it without service mode risks the EPB motor.
Rear: Swap Pads, Rotor & Sensor
Fit the new rear rotor, pads and the rear wear sensor, grease the contact points, then reassemble and torque to spec. Repeat front and rear on the other side.
Reactivate the EPB & Pump the Pedal
Use the scan tool to take the parking brake out of service mode and reactivate/calibrate it. Then pump the brake pedal until it's firm so the pads seat against the rotors — never drive until the pedal is solid.
Reset Service, Bed In & Test
Reset the brake item in the iDrive Condition Based Service menu, refit the wheels and torque the bolts. Then bed in the new brakes with a series of moderate stops from speed, and confirm the parking brake holds.
Rear EPB must be in service mode first
The rear parking brake is an electric motor on the caliper, not a cable. Retracting the rear pistons without first putting the EPB into service mode can damage the actuator — an expensive mistake. Always set service mode before the rears, reactivate it after, and pump the pedal firm before driving.
Quick Specs
General guidance — verify for your exact car and brake setup.
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Front | Big M brakes — piston pushes straight in, no service mode |
| Rear | Electronic parking brake — service mode required before retracting |
| Wear sensors | Front and rear — replace with pads |
| Carbon-ceramic | Different parts and procedure — handle with care |
| After | Reactivate EPB, pump pedal, reset CBS, bed in |
FAQ
Do I need a scan tool for the rear brakes?
Effectively yes. The rear electronic parking brake must be put into service mode to retract the pistons safely, which needs a scan tool with the EPB function. The fronts don't need one.
Can I do just the fronts without the tool?
Yes — the front brakes have no electronic parking brake, so you can replace front pads and rotors with just a piston clamp. You only need the EPB service function for the rears. The fronts are also the faster-wearing end, so they often come up first.
What if my car has carbon-ceramic brakes?
Treat them differently — CCB discs are very expensive, need specific pads and gentle cleaning, and must not be chipped or cracked. This guide covers steel brakes; for ceramics, follow the ceramic-specific procedure and pad spec exactly, and consider a specialist if unsure.
Should I use track pads?
Only if you track the car. Track pads bite hard and resist fade at high temperatures but can be noisy and dusty cold; street pads are better for daily driving. Many owners keep a set of each and swap for track days.
How do I bed in the new brakes?
After pumping the pedal firm, do a series of moderate stops from moderate speed, letting them cool between, to lay an even layer of pad material on the rotors. Avoid hard stops or sitting on the pedal while everything's fresh.
You're Done
Fresh brakes all round on your M3 — the big front brakes done straight, the rears done right with the EPB in service mode, wear sensors replaced, the parking brake reactivated and everything bedded in. Remember the two rules: never retract the rear pistons without service mode, and treat carbon-ceramics differently. Keep up the rest with the oil change and head back to the G80 hub.