Are you looking to buy new or used?. I ask because, certainly with the Zoe, there are different purchase options including buying the car but leasing the battery. This obviously costs less up front, but will mean a monthly payment for the battery. And be aware if buying a used Zoe, this can be the case here too, so make sure you know exactly what you are paying for!.
Also, regardless of whether buying new or used, i trust you have looked into where you will be charging the car?. If you have a driveway, no problems, just install the neccessary charger. But if you are relying on local charging points, consider how popular they are, will you be able to get in when convenient for you. With your mileage, you'd probably only need to charge up once per week, but it is still going to be a pain if there are always others using it when you want to.
If you are buying used, battery degredation is something you would need to take into account, even with your mileage. I remember not too long ago someone starting a thread after buying a used Zoe because after a full charge, the range was showing something like 45 miles. But on the other hand, there was another thread a little more recently discussing the drawbacks of electric cars in general and to illustrate a point, a link (drive-green.co.uk/2018/11/01/nissan-leaf-high-mile.../) was provided to an electric car website which had bought a Nissan Leaf with more than 120k miles. As you can see, they checked the battery and found it in rude health proving 88% of what it would new, which is pretty impressive!. With the BMW, you can of course go for the 'range extender' model, which has a motorbike engine under the boot to charge up the battery while driving. I can't remember how much range this adds, but i think it is less than 100 miles (very small fuel tank).
As for the cars themselves, the Nissan is the roomiest being on a par with a Focus size wise, whereas the BMW and Renault are closer to a Fiesta.From what i have read, both the Renault and Nissan are set up more for comfort with a soft ride, whereas the BMW (natch'!) is a bit sharper to drive, also quite a bit more powerful (170bhp if memory serves) than the other two (should that matter) though as is the case with all electric cars, they are very sharp off the line anyway through having maximum torque at 0 revs.
Unlike many on the forum, i am quite 'pro-electric', but unfortunately my circumstances mean that at the moment, electric isn't practical or viable for me. We don't have a driveway, my wife gets a Motability car (which limits our choices), there aren't many charging points locally at the moment. I do use a small van for my work, but i'd need a range of at least 100 miles and my budget would only stetch to an older electric Renault Kangoo which, through having a fairly small battery along with the degredation, would probably be managing no more than 50 miles per charge.
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