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    2025 Rivian R1S Range Test: Real‑World Results, EPA Numbers, and What to Expect
    Battery & Range·10 min read·By Recharged Editorial Team

    2025 Rivian R1S Range Test: Real‑World Results, EPA Numbers, and What to Expect

    rivian-r1s2025-model-yearev-range-testingbattery-and-rangemax-packlarge-packroad-tripused-ev-shoppingthree-row-suv

    Table of Contents

    • 2025 Rivian R1S range overview
    • EPA ratings vs. real‑world range tests
    • Battery packs and configurations that change range
    • Highway range test: what you can realistically expect
    • City and mixed-driving range in the R1S
    • The biggest range killers on the R1S
    • Range and charging time: how fast you get miles back
    • Range tips for road trips in a Rivian R1S
    • What range to expect when buying a used R1S
    • 2025 Rivian R1S range test FAQ
    • Bottom line: how far the 2025 R1S really goes

    If you’re looking at a three‑row electric SUV, range is everything. The 2025 Rivian R1S promises up to 410 miles of EPA range on paper, but real‑world range tests tell a more nuanced story. This guide pulls together the latest data on 2025 Rivian R1S range tests, from EPA numbers to independent highway runs, so you know what to expect before you hit the road or start shopping.

    Why the 2025 R1S matters for range

    Among three‑row electric SUVs on sale today, a Dual‑Motor R1S with the Max Pack sits at the very top of the range charts, with an EPA estimate of about 410 miles and real‑world highway results in the mid‑300‑mile range when driven at typical interstate speeds.

    2025 Rivian R1S range overview

    Key 2025 Rivian R1S range numbers

    410 mi
    Max EPA range
    Approximate EPA estimate for Dual‑Motor R1S with Max Pack battery
    270 mi
    Standard pack
    Expected EPA range for the new LFP Standard battery pack
    330 mi
    Large pack
    Approximate EPA range for Dual‑Motor Large Pack R1S
    341 mi
    Highway test
    Real‑world highway result from a Dual‑Motor R1S Dual Max at ~70 mph, starting near full charge

    Rivian’s 2025 refresh did two big things for the R1S: it improved efficiency and reshuffled the battery lineup. The new Standard pack uses LFP chemistry and around 92.5 kWh of usable capacity, while the Large and Max packs keep nickel‑rich cells but shrink in size slightly compared with earlier years. Thanks to powertrain and software tweaks, Rivian still targets about 270 miles from the Standard pack and around 330 miles from the Large pack, while the Dual‑Motor Max tops out around 410 miles of EPA range.

    Think in terms of "usable" range

    You’ll rarely drive an R1S from 100% down to 0%. For trip planning, most owners use a 10–90% window. On a Dual‑Motor Max, that’s still roughly 330–340 miles of comfortable, real‑world highway range in mild weather.

    EPA ratings vs. real‑world range tests

    Every Rivian R1S is tested under the EPA’s multi‑cycle procedure, which mixes city and highway driving and assumes relatively mild temperatures. Those tests produce the window‑sticker range number that most shoppers see. Out on the road, especially at 70–75 mph, you won’t match that figure exactly, and you’re not supposed to. Highway‑only range tests are more demanding, and that’s where the 2025 R1S has been quietly impressive.

    What the EPA numbers say

    • Dual‑Motor Standard Pack: around 270 miles EPA range.
    • Dual‑Motor Large Pack: roughly 330 miles EPA range with the revised 109.4‑kWh pack.
    • Dual‑Motor Max Pack: about 410 miles EPA range, the headline number Rivian quotes.
    • Tri‑ and Quad‑Motor models trade some range for big power.

    Exact figures can vary by wheel size and tire choice; Rivian and the EPA list different ratings for 20‑, 21‑, and 22‑inch wheels.

    What independent tests have found

    • MotorTrend’s Dual‑Motor R1S Dual Max delivered about 341 miles of real‑world range at ~70 mph from roughly 95% charge to near empty.
    • That’s about 83–85% of the EPA number, typical for a tall, heavy EV at steady interstate speeds.
    • Earlier Gen‑1 Dual‑Motor Large Pack R1S tests often landed in the 280–320‑mile range at highway speeds, depending on tires and weather.

    Treat EPA numbers as a ceiling for mixed driving; steady highway runs usually come in 10–20% lower.

    Highway speed matters more than you think

    Push a boxy three‑row SUV like the R1S from 65 mph up to 80 mph and you can easily lose 15–25% of your range. Aerodynamic drag ramps up fast, and even a very efficient drivetrain can’t hide that.

    Battery packs and configurations that change range

    For 2025, Rivian simplified the lineup into three main battery packs, Standard, Large, and Max, paired with several motor configurations. The combination you choose has a huge impact on both EPA range and what you’ll see in your own tests.

    2025 Rivian R1S battery packs & range estimates

    Approximate EPA‑style range for major 2025 R1S configurations; exact numbers vary with wheels and options.

    ConfigurationUsable batteryMotorsApprox. EPA rangeTypical highway range @ 70 mph*
    Dual Standard~92.5 kWh LFPDual‑Motor AWD270 mi215–230 mi
    Dual Large~109.4 kWhDual‑Motor AWD~330 mi260–280 mi
    Dual Large Performance~109.4 kWhDual‑Motor Performance~330 mi260–280 mi
    Dual Max~141.5 kWhDual‑Motor AWD~410 mi320–350 mi
    Tri‑Motor Max~141.5 kWhTri‑Motor AscendHigh‑300s (est.)300–330 mi
    Quad‑Motor Max~141.5 kWhQuad‑Motor AscendLow‑ to mid‑300s (est.)260–300 mi

    Use this as a directional guide when planning your own range tests or shopping for a used R1S.

    About those estimates

    Rivian and the EPA occasionally revise official numbers as hardware and software evolve. Think of these figures as ballpark guidance for planning and comparing, not laboratory‑grade promises.

    Highway range test: what you can realistically expect

    If you’re looking up “2025 Rivian R1S range test,” you’re probably picturing a simple question: how far can I go on the highway before I’m hunting for a charger? Let’s walk through a realistic highway test and what you’re likely to see in the real world, using the Dual‑Motor Max as the benchmark and the Dual‑Motor Large as the more common sweet spot.

    1. Start at ~90–100% state of charge, tires at the recommended pressures, climate control set around 70°F.
    2. Set cruise control to 70 mph on a mostly flat interstate route.
    3. Drive until the battery nears 5–10% state of charge, stopping only for traffic or short breaks.
    4. Record miles driven, average speed, outside temperature, and energy consumption shown on the trip computer (kWh/100 mi or mi/kWh).

    In a scenario like that, most owners report about 80–90% of the EPA rating in calm conditions. That lines up well with independent tests. A Dual‑Motor Max that’s rated around 410 miles will typically turn in something like 330–350 miles of real‑world highway range. A Dual‑Motor Large rated around 330 miles will land closer to 260–280 miles at the same speeds.

    Temperature sweet spot

    The 2025 R1S is most efficient in mild weather, think 60–75°F. Cold snaps or heat waves force the battery and cabin to use more energy, and your highway range can shrink by 10–30% depending on conditions.

    City and mixed-driving range in the R1S

    Here’s where the big Rivian can surprise you. That brick‑like shape is a penalty on the highway, but in town and on rolling secondary roads the R1S often does better than expected. Regenerative braking recovers energy every time you lift off the accelerator, and stop‑and‑go traffic isn’t as punishing as it is in a gasoline SUV.

    How the R1S behaves in different driving

    Same battery, different results depending on your daily routine

    City & suburban driving

    • Lots of chances for strong regen in one‑pedal drive.
    • Speeds under 50 mph cut aerodynamic drag dramatically.
    • Owners often see range close to, or even above, the EPA rating.
    • Dual‑Motor Large can feel like a true 300‑mile SUV in everyday use.

    Steady highway cruising

    • Speeds above 65 mph push a lot of air out of the way.
    • Less opportunity for regen; you’re mostly using power, not recapturing it.
    • Expect 10–20% below EPA ratings at 70–75 mph.
    • Wind, hills, and weather can swing that number further.

    Good news for commuters

    If your daily drive is a mix of suburban streets and lower‑speed highways, a Dual‑Motor Large R1S is typically plenty for a full week of normal commuting between charges, especially if you can plug in at home overnight.

    The biggest range killers on the R1S

    Every EV has its kryptonite. For the 2025 R1S, the usual suspects are speed, tires, elevation, climate control, and towing. Understanding how much each one bites into your range will help you interpret any range test you see online, and plan your own trips with fewer surprises.

    Top 5 real‑world R1S range killers

    1. High cruising speeds

    Jumping from 65 mph to 80 mph can easily cost you 15–25% of your range. If you’re trying to stretch to the next charger, slowing down is your most powerful tool.

    2. Aggressive all‑terrain tires

    The R1S is offered with chunky off‑road rubber that looks fantastic but adds rolling resistance. Swapping from 20‑inch all‑terrains to 21‑ or 22‑inch road‑biased tires can add tens of miles back to your highway range.

    3. Big elevation changes

    Long climbs chew through energy, especially when you’re pulling weight. You’ll earn some of it back on the way down through regen, but not all. Mountain passes are harder on range than flat plains.

    4. Extreme heat or cold

    Running the heater hard in sub‑freezing weather or blasting the A/C in triple‑digit heat draws noticeable power. Pre‑conditioning the cabin while plugged in can offset some of that hit.

    5. Towing and roof loads

    Hook up a trailer or add a big cargo box, and you’ve just stacked weight and drag. It’s not unusual to see range cut in half when towing with a large SUV like the R1S.

    Don’t plan to the last mile

    Whether you’re in a Standard, Large, or Max Pack R1S, avoid planning legs that run the battery from 100% to near 0%. Leave at least 10–15% in your plan for weather, traffic, and detours.

    Range and charging time: how fast you get miles back

    Range is only half of the road‑trip equation. The other half is how quickly you can put miles back in the pack. The 2025 R1S supports DC fast charging up to roughly 200–220 kW depending on battery, and Rivian’s own testing plus independent reviews suggest that the Dual‑Motor Max can add roughly 90–180 miles of highway range in a 15–30 minute stop when conditions are right.

    • A 10–80% fast‑charge session on a Max Pack can take around 30–40 minutes, depending on temperature and charger capability.
    • In that window, you’re likely to gain 200+ miles of mixed‑driving range, or 150–180 miles of honest highway range.
    • Standard and Large packs charge slightly quicker in terms of minutes, but you’ll leave with fewer absolute miles in the battery.
    • For 2025, Rivian also supports access to Tesla’s Supercharger network using an adapter, hugely expanding fast‑charge options on major corridors.
    Digital driver display of a 2025 Rivian R1S showing state of charge, remaining range, and energy graph while cruising on the highway
    The 2025 R1S makes it easy to watch real‑time efficiency and projected range, which matters more than any single test number when you’re out in the real world.

    Plan stops by time, not just percent

    On a long trip, it’s rarely worth charging from 80% all the way to 100%; the last few percent are much slower. Many experienced R1S owners hop between chargers using a 10–75% window, stopping a bit more often but saving overall time.

    Range tips for road trips in a Rivian R1S

    The 2025 R1S is perfectly at home on a cross‑country run. With a little planning, you can match or beat the range you see in published tests. Here are some practical, experience‑driven tips to squeeze the most out of the battery on your next long drive.

    Dialing in your R1S for maximum range

    1. Use the built‑in trip planner

    Rivian’s navigation can route you via fast chargers and estimate arrival state of charge. Treat it as a baseline, then build in a buffer if weather looks sketchy.

    2. Precondition while plugged in

    Warm or cool the cabin and battery before you leave, especially in winter. Doing this on grid power means you start your trip with a full pack instead of spending the first few miles heating or cooling everything up.

    3. Set a realistic cruise speed

    If you’re tight on range to the next charger, dropping from 77 to 68 mph can be the difference between a white‑knuckle arrival and a relaxed one. Watch the projected arrival state of charge and adjust accordingly.

    4. Travel light and low

    If you don’t need the roof box or the bike rack, leave it off. Extra weight and drag are enemies of range, especially at speed.

    5. Watch the energy screen, not just the guess‑o‑meter

    The R1S offers detailed energy graphs and average consumption readouts. Use those to see how hills, speeds, and wind are affecting your efficiency in real time.

    6. Practice conservative charging the first few trips

    Until you know how your R1S behaves, aim to arrive at chargers with 15–20% in hand. Once you’re familiar with your routes, you can trim those buffers if you like.

    What range to expect when buying a used R1S

    Range tests are especially important if you’re shopping for a used Rivian R1S. Battery technology is robust, but real‑world range depends on pack size, motor configuration, tire choice, software version, and how the SUV was used. Early R1S models used slightly larger Standard and Large packs; the 2025 refresh brought smaller but more efficient batteries. The good news: most well‑cared‑for packs show modest degradation, often on the order of just a few percentage points after several years.

    Reading range results on a used R1S

    How to make sense of someone else’s range claims

    Look for consistent numbers

    A single screenshot isn’t a full story. Ask for multiple highway runs or a detailed log, and look for consistency across temperatures and routes.

    Check battery health reports

    Tools like the Recharged Score can reveal verified battery health and estimated remaining capacity, instead of guessing from dash photos.

    Match results to configuration

    Confirm whether you’re looking at a Standard, Large, or Max Pack, and which wheels/tires it has. A Max Pack on all‑terrains behaves very differently than a Large pack on road tires.

    At Recharged, every used EV we list, including Rivian R1S models, comes with a Recharged Score Report that includes battery diagnostics and fair market pricing. That gives you a grounded sense of how much real‑world range you can expect on day one, and how it compares to a brand‑new 2025 R1S.

    How to do a quick test drive range check

    On a 20–30 mile test drive, reset the trip computer, drive a mix of speeds, and compare energy use (kWh/100 miles) to what new owners report. It won’t give you an exact range number, but it’s a quick health check when paired with a proper battery report.

    2025 Rivian R1S range test FAQ

    Frequently asked questions about 2025 R1S range

    Bottom line: how far the 2025 R1S really goes

    On paper, the 2025 Rivian R1S sits squarely at the sharp end of the EV‑SUV world, with an EPA‑rated 410‑mile Max Pack and solid numbers from the new Standard and Large batteries. In real‑world range tests, the story is more grounded but still impressive: think 330–350 miles of steady‑state highway range from a Dual‑Motor Max, and 260–280 miles from a Dual‑Motor Large in typical American interstate driving.

    If you’re cross‑shopping or considering a used R1S, focus less on a single headline number and more on how, where, and at what speed you actually drive. Battery pack, tires, temperature, and charging access all matter more in practice than whatever’s printed on the window sticker. And if you’d rather skip the guesswork, shopping a used R1S through Recharged means you’ll see verified battery health and transparent pricing up front, so the range you’re counting on is the range you’ll really get.

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