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    2024 Rivian R1S Range Test: Real‑World Results vs EPA Ratings
    Battery & Range·11 min read·By Recharged Editorial

    2024 Rivian R1S Range Test: Real‑World Results vs EPA Ratings

    rivian-r1s2024-model-yearbattery-and-rangereal-world-testinghighway-rangeev-road-tripused-ev-shoppingfast-charginglarge-packmax-pack

    Table of Contents

    • 2024 Rivian R1S range overview
    • EPA ratings vs real‑world range tests
    • How much range do you really get in a 2024 R1S?
    • Highway 75‑mph range testing: methodology
    • Real‑world range by battery pack and wheels
    • 7 factors that kill (or boost) R1S range
    • Planning road trips in a Rivian R1S
    • Buying a used Rivian R1S: what range to expect
    • Checklist: getting the best range from your R1S
    • 2024 Rivian R1S range test FAQ
    • Key takeaways for 2024 Rivian R1S range

    If you’re looking at a 2024 Rivian R1S, you’ve probably seen the headline numbers: up to 400 miles of EPA range with the Dual‑Motor Max pack, or 352 miles with the Large pack on 21‑inch wheels. On paper that’s impressive, but what most shoppers really care about is this: how far will a 2024 Rivian R1S actually go in real‑world range tests, especially at 70–75 mph on the highway?

    Why range tests matter

    EPA ratings are useful for comparing EVs, but they’re not a promise. Independent 70–75 mph range tests typically return 15–30% less highway range than the EPA label for big, boxy SUVs like the Rivian R1S.

    2024 Rivian R1S range overview

    For 2024, Rivian offered the R1S with several battery packs and motor configurations. The most common combinations you’ll see in the wild are Dual‑Motor (DM) and Performance Dual‑Motor with Standard, Standard+, Large, or Max packs. With default 21‑inch road tires, EPA combined range spans roughly 270 to 400 miles, depending on configuration.

    2024 Rivian R1S EPA range at a glance (21" wheels)

    270 mi
    Standard pack
    Entry Dual‑Motor battery, EPA combined rating on 21" wheels.
    315 mi
    Standard+ pack
    Mid‑size pack, Dual or Performance Dual‑Motor.
    352 mi
    Large pack
    Dual‑Motor R1S on 21" wheels; slightly less on 22" or AT tires.
    400 mi
    Max pack
    Dual‑Motor R1S on 21" wheels, the longest‑range configuration.

    Wheel choice matters

    Swapping from 21‑inch road tires to 22‑inch or 20‑inch all‑terrain (AT) tires can knock 5–13% off your EPA range. On an R1S Max pack, that’s a 20–45 mile hit per charge.

    EPA ratings vs real‑world range tests

    Independent testing has shown a consistent pattern with the R1S: it’s more efficient in mixed city driving than at steady high speeds. Car and Driver, for example, recorded only about 230 miles from a Quad‑Motor Large‑pack R1S in a 75‑mph highway test, versus an EPA combined rating in the low 300s for that configuration. That’s roughly a 25–30% gap between the label and real highway range.

    What EPA range actually measures

    • Mix of city and highway driving cycles
    • Moderate speeds, gentle acceleration
    • Controlled temperatures and loads
    • Great for comparing EVs on a level playing field

    What highway range tests measure

    • Usually a steady 70–75 mph cruise
    • Higher aero drag on tall SUVs like the R1S
    • Often includes some elevation and wind
    • Great for road‑trip reality checks

    Use EPA as a ceiling, not a promise

    For highway‑heavy driving in a 2024 Rivian R1S, a good planning rule is to assume 70–80% of EPA range at 70–75 mph, in mild weather, from 100% down to near 0%.

    How much range do you really get in a 2024 R1S?

    Exact numbers depend on wind, temperature, grade, tires, and how you drive. But by triangulating Rivian’s own data, EPA labels, and independent 70–75 mph tests on similar configurations, we can outline realistic expectations for a 2024 R1S on 21‑inch road tires in decent conditions (50–75°F, light wind, relatively flat).

    Realistic Rivian R1S range bands (highway‑heavy driving)

    Approximate 70–75 mph range estimates for 2024 models in mild weather

    Standard & Standard+ packs

    • Standard (270 EPA): ~185–210 miles usable at 70–75 mph
    • Standard+ (315 EPA): ~220–250 miles highway
    • Best for: commutes & regional trips with dense fast‑charging

    Large & Max packs

    • Large (352 EPA): ~245–280 miles highway
    • Max (400 EPA): ~280–320 miles highway
    • Best for: frequent road‑trippers, mountain or winter driving

    Quad‑Motor & Tri‑Motor caveat

    Earlier Quad‑Motor Large‑pack R1S models post noticeably lower highway range than Dual‑Motor versions, and newer Tri‑Motor performance variants prioritize acceleration over efficiency. If you’re cross‑shopping used R1S trims, don’t assume every 2024+ R1S has the same real‑world range profile.

    Highway 75‑mph range testing: methodology

    When you see a YouTube video or a magazine talk about a “range test” for the Rivian R1S, it’s worth checking how they tested. A well‑designed 75‑mph highway test tends to follow the same playbook so results across different EVs are comparable.

    1. Start near 100% state of charge, then join a freeway loop or point‑to‑point route.
    2. Set cruise control to a true GPS‑verified 70–75 mph.
    3. Use the same drive mode and climate settings across cars, usually All‑Purpose with 70–72°F cabin temp.
    4. Drive until the battery reaches a low but safe state of charge (often 0–5% indicated).
    5. Record miles driven, consumption (mi/kWh or Wh/mi), elevation change, and weather.
    6. Repeat in both directions or on a loop if possible, to average out wind and grade.

    Cold‑weather testing is a different animal

    At freezing temperatures, range loss of 30–40% versus EPA isn’t unusual for short trips, especially with frequent cabin pre‑heating. If a range test was done in winter at 75 mph, treat those numbers as a lower bound, not an everyday expectation.

    Real‑world range by battery pack and wheels

    Let’s pull it together and look at approximate usable highway range for popular 2024 Rivian R1S configurations. These aren’t lab numbers, they’re realistic planning figures for a steady 70–75 mph cruise, mild weather, and a typical 10% buffer (charging from ~90% down to ~10%).

    2024 Rivian R1S: practical highway range estimates

    Approximate 70–75 mph range in mild conditions, assuming 90% to 10% useable charge window.

    Battery & powertrainWheels/tiresEPA combined (mi)Realistic 90–10% highway range (mi)Who it fits best
    Dual‑Motor Standard21" road270180–190Daily drivers and regional commuters with frequent DC fast chargers.
    Dual‑Motor Standard+21" road315215–230Families who road‑trip occasionally but live in dense charging corridors.
    Dual‑Motor Large21" road352245–265Ideal sweet spot for most R1S buyers balancing cost and highway range.
    Dual‑Motor Max21" road400280–300Long‑distance travelers, rural drivers, and heavy cold‑weather users.
    Dual‑Motor Large22" road341235–250Stylish setup; expect a modest but noticeable range penalty vs 21".
    Dual‑Motor Large20" AT307210–225Adventure build; range trade‑off for off‑road grip and stance.
    Quad‑Motor Large (earlier gen)21" road~321200–230Performance‑oriented buyers who value acceleration and traction over range.

    Use these numbers for trip planning, not as guaranteed outcomes. Terrain, temperature, and wind can shift them significantly.

    Max pack isn’t always “required”

    On paper, the Max pack’s 400‑mile EPA rating is eye‑catching, but for many drivers a 2024 R1S Dual‑Motor Large pack already delivers 200+ real highway miles between fast‑charges. If you mostly road‑trip on major corridors with plenty of DC fast charging, Large can be the smarter value, especially on the used market.
    Rivian R1S driver display showing state of charge and projected remaining range while cruising on the highway
    On a highway‑heavy drive, watch your energy graph rather than fixating on the EPA number. Your recent driving and conditions tell a more honest story than the sticker.

    7 factors that kill (or boost) R1S range

    What really moves the needle on R1S range

    Some you control, some you don’t, but all are predictable once you know them.

    1. Speed & aero drag

    Pushing a brick‑shaped SUV through the air at 80 mph is expensive. The R1S sees a dramatic efficiency hit above ~70 mph. Dropping from 78 to 70 mph can be worth tens of miles of range on a long leg.

    2. Temperature & HVAC

    Cold battery chemistry, cabin heat, and seat heaters all cost energy. Short winter trips can look brutal; on long highway days, once the cabin is warm, the penalty shrinks but is still real.

    3. Elevation & grade

    Climbing mountains drains range quickly; coming back down recovers some via regen, but not all. For one‑way mountain trips, plan as if range were 20–30% lower than flat‑ground assumptions.

    4. Tires, wheels & aero bits

    22‑inch wheels, chunkier AT tires, roof racks, and cargo boxes all add drag and rolling resistance. On an R1S, moving from 21" road tires to 20" ATs can cost more than 10% range.

    5. Drive mode & suspension

    Conserve mode and lower ride heights generally help highway efficiency, while aggressive off‑road modes or high ride heights hurt it. For long interstates, use the most efficient mode you’re comfortable with.

    6. Weight & payload

    Passengers, gear, trailers, weight matters more than many people expect. Towing a big camper can cut range in half; even a fully loaded family trip can lop off another 10–15%.

    7. Driving style

    Smooth inputs and looking far ahead let regen do more work and friction brakes do less. While speed is the big lever, jerky driving can still cost you 5–10% in stop‑and‑go or mixed driving.

    Let the energy screen be your coach

    In a 2024 Rivian R1S, the Energy app gives you per‑mile consumption and projected range based on recent driving. On a new‑to‑you route, reset the history at the start of a leg and glance at it every 15–20 minutes to see if your plan needs to change.

    Planning road trips in a Rivian R1S

    Range tests don’t matter unless you turn them into a usable plan. The good news is that the R1S’s combination of big battery options and DC fast‑charging makes road‑tripping straightforward once you calibrate your expectations.

    Onboard trip planning

    • Use Rivian’s built‑in nav or apps like A Better Routeplanner.
    • Assume 70–80% of EPA for highway legs when you set up a route.
    • Target arriving with 10–20% battery, this gives margin for wind or detours.
    • Plan to charge more often, but only to 60–75% for the quickest travel time.

    Charging strategy

    • Take advantage of high‑power DC fast chargers along major corridors.
    • On a Max or Large pack, 150–200‑mile legs are usually the sweet spot.
    • In winter or mountains, shorten legs by 20–30%.
    • Always sanity‑check the nav’s prediction against what you’re seeing in the Energy app.

    How Recharged can help on road‑trip‑ready R1S models

    Shopping used? At Recharged, every R1S listing comes with a Recharged Score battery health report and EV‑specialist guidance, so you know how much real‑world range to expect from day one, and whether a Standard, Large, or Max pack makes the most sense for your driving.

    Buying a used Rivian R1S: what range to expect

    Battery degradation is the wild card for any used EV, especially a large one like the R1S. The encouraging news so far is that Rivian’s packs appear to be holding up relatively well in early fleet data, with many owners reporting only modest capacity loss over the first several years. Still, your real‑world range will be shaped by both how the previous owner treated the pack and the configuration you choose.

    Used 2024 Rivian R1S range expectations by scenario

    How prior use and configuration translate into today’s range.

    Low‑mileage, gently used R1S

    • Mostly home‑charged, few DC fast‑charge sessions.
    • Expect single‑digit % degradation in the first 3–4 years.
    • Practical highway range may be 5–10% below a brand‑new 2024 with the same spec.

    High‑mileage, DC‑fast‑charged R1S

    • Frequent 100% fast‑charges, ride‑hail or heavy fleet use.
    • Degradation could be meaningfully higher.
    • Plan for a noticeable range haircut and verify with a battery health report before you buy.

    Don’t rely on the dash number alone

    A used R1S might show a full‑charge range that’s been skewed by prior driving history or software updates. For a serious purchase decision, look for measured battery health, not just the projected miles in the cluster.

    This is exactly why Recharged built the Recharged Score: an independent, standardized battery and range assessment across used EVs. Instead of guessing how a prior owner’s habits affected a 2024 R1S, you see a transparent health rating, charge history indicators, and range expectations under real‑world conditions.

    Checklist: getting the best range from your R1S

    Range‑maximizing checklist for Rivian R1S owners

    1. Start with the right tire setup

    If you don’t genuinely need all‑terrain rubber, consider the 21‑inch road‑tire setup for better efficiency. Check pressures regularly, under‑inflation quietly eats range.

    2. Dial‑in your drive mode for the route

    Use Conserve or efficient highway‑oriented modes for long interstate stints, and avoid high ride heights unless you need them. Even a small aero gain helps on a tall SUV.

    3. Plan legs with honest assumptions

    When using route planners, plug in 70–80% of EPA range for highway legs and add extra buffer in extreme temperatures or mountains.

    4. Treat 10–20% as your real “empty”

    For comfort and pack longevity, plan your charging stops so you typically arrive with 10–20% remaining instead of pushing to 0%.

    5. Charge for time, not for 100%

    On road trips, stop more often and leave around 60–75% instead of waiting for a full charge. The R1S, and most EVs, charge fastest in the middle of the pack.

    6. Use pre‑conditioning when it counts

    In cold weather, pre‑heat the cabin while plugged in and pre‑condition the battery before DC fast‑charging. You’ll recover much of the energy you’d otherwise burn on the road.

    7. Watch consumption, not just miles

    Keep an eye on Wh/mi and the energy graph. If you see consumption creeping up due to headwinds or hills, shorten your next leg or slow down a bit.

    2024 Rivian R1S range test FAQ

    Frequently asked questions about 2024 Rivian R1S range tests

    Key takeaways for 2024 Rivian R1S range

    The 2024 Rivian R1S earns its reputation as a long‑legged electric SUV, but understanding how it behaves in real‑world range tests is the difference between a relaxed road trip and white‑knuckle hyper‑miling. Highway‑only driving at 70–75 mph will usually land you in the 70–80% of EPA window, with Large and Max packs delivering the most flexibility.

    If you’re shopping new or used, focus less on the biggest number on the spec sheet and more on your actual use case: how far you drive between stops, where you’ll charge, and how often you face cold, hills, or towing. And if you’re considering a used R1S, a verified battery health and range report, like the Recharged Score that comes standard on every Recharged vehicle, turns range anxiety into a straightforward, data‑driven decision.

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