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    2025 Rivian R1T Review: Still the EV Truck to Beat?
    Reviews & Comparisons·11 min read·By Recharged Editorial Team

    2025 Rivian R1T Review: Still the EV Truck to Beat?

    rivian-r1telectric-pickupev-trucksbattery-rangetowing-and-haulingoff-road-evused-ev-buyingrecharged-scoreownership-costsadventure-ev

    Table of Contents

    • 2025 Rivian R1T overview
    • What’s new for the 2025 Rivian R1T
    • Powertrain, performance and off-road capability
    • Range, batteries and charging experience
    • Towing, hauling and real-world utility
    • Interior, tech and comfort
    • Pricing, trims and key rivals
    • Ownership costs, reliability and daily living
    • Who should buy a 2025 Rivian R1T (and who should buy used)
    • 2025 Rivian R1T FAQ
    • Final thoughts: Is the 2025 R1T still the benchmark?

    The 2025 Rivian R1T is the rare truck that can pull off three different roles at once: silent luxury cruiser, desert-storm off-roader, and tech-forward family shuttle. In this 2025 Rivian R1T review, we’ll unpack how the heavily updated second-generation R1T actually lives in the real world, what’s brilliant, what’s compromised, and what you should know if you’re shopping one new or used.

    Gen-2 R1T, explained

    For 2025, the R1T moves to Rivian’s second-generation platform with new motors, revised batteries, updated suspension and a big software refresh. If you drove an early 2022 truck, the 2025 model is quieter, quicker, and more efficient, without losing its outdoorsy personality.

    2025 Rivian R1T overview

    2025 Rivian R1T: key numbers at a glance

    533–1,025 hp
    Power output
    From base Dual Motor to wild Quad Motor performance trims.
    258–420 mi
    EPA-estimated range
    Three battery packs: Standard, Large and Max, each with different trade-offs.
    11,000 lb
    Max towing
    Enough to challenge full-size gas trucks, if you accept the range penalty.
    ~3.0 sec
    0–60 mph (est.)
    Tri- and Quad-Motor R1Ts launch like supercars in hiking boots.

    Even in a world of Cybertrucks and electric Silverados, the 2025 Rivian R1T still feels like the most fully realized idea of what an electric pickup should be. It’s sized between a midsize and full-size truck, wears its outdoorsy design without apology, and backs it up with serious hardware: air suspension, a flat underbody, and motor options that range from more-than-enough to totally excessive.

    Best all-rounder pick

    For most buyers, the sweet spot is a Dual Motor R1T with the Large or Max battery and 20-inch all-terrain wheels. You get strong performance, real-world range in the 300–380 mile band, and the most comfortable ride on bad pavement.

    What’s new for the 2025 Rivian R1T

    2025 refresh highlights

    More efficient, more powerful, and a bit more grown-up

    New motor lineup

    Rivian replaces the original motors with a new family of Dual, Performance Dual, Tri- and Quad-Motor setups. The Tri-Motor makes around 850 hp, while the new Quad-Motor rockets to roughly 1,025 hp.

    Reworked battery packs

    The Standard pack now uses LFP chemistry for durability and lower cost. The Large and Max packs are re-engineered, trimming weight while preserving strong range.

    Chassis & tech updates

    Revised air springs, dampers and hydraulic roll control improve comfort and body control. New matrix LED lights, a more efficient heat pump, and UI updates sharpen the experience.

    The 2025 refresh isn’t cosmetic tinkering; it’s Rivian rewriting the truck’s mechanical and electrical underpinnings. The new motors are more powerful but also more efficient, the suspension tuning takes the edge off the earlier trucks’ jittery ride, and the updated lighting and driver-assistance tech finally feel aligned with the truck’s price point.

    Watch the battery chemistry

    The new LFP-based Standard battery favors longevity and cost over outright range. It’s a smart choice for city and short-commute owners, but frequent road-trippers and towers are better served by the Large or Max packs.

    Powertrain, performance and off-road capability

    Motor options & performance

    • Dual Motor (~533 hp, 610 lb-ft): Plenty for daily duty; feels like a fast luxury SUV.
    • Performance Dual (~665 hp, 810 lb-ft): Noticeably snappier; still efficient, especially with Max pack.
    • Tri-Motor (~850 hp, 1,103 lb-ft): Supercar-quick with instant passing power even at highway speeds.
    • Quad-Motor (~1,025 hp, 1,198 lb-ft): Frankly absurd; 0–60 mph in the mid‑2s with the right tires.

    On-road character

    • Ride quality: The revised air suspension and hydraulic roll control give the 2025 R1T a calmer, less busy ride than early trucks, though it’s still firmer than a luxury SUV.
    • Handling: With the battery down low, the truck feels planted and eager to change direction in a way body-on-frame pickups simply don’t.
    • Noise: Cabin isolation is excellent. Wind and road noise show up before motor whine does.

    Driven hard, the 2025 R1T feels like a sports sedan that fell in love with a REI catalog. The steering is precise, body motions are disciplined, and even the base Dual Motor will dust most V8 pickups from a stoplight. The Tri- and Quad-Motor trucks are arguably overkill, and delicious because of it, letting you teleport out of freeway clumps with a toe flex.

    Off-road hardware, for real

    With up to ~14 inches of ground clearance, sophisticated traction management, and genuine underbody protection, the R1T is not a cosplay off-roader. It will go as far as your courage (and charging plan) allows.
    • Multiple ride-height settings let you drop the truck for highway aero or raise it for serious trail work.
    • Drive modes tune throttle, regen, and suspension for rock crawling, sand, snow, or efficiency cruising.
    • Precise one-pedal driving off-road helps you pick your way down loose, steep descents without cooking the brakes.

    Range, batteries and charging experience

    2025 Rivian R1T battery options (approximate EPA estimates)

    Exact range varies with wheels, tires, drive mode and temperature, but these are the headline numbers many shoppers will see.

    Battery packChemistryUsable capacityEstimated range (R1T Dual)Max DC fast-charge rate
    StandardLFP~92.5 kWh≈258 mi200 kW
    LargeHigh-nickel~108.5 kWh≈330 mi220 kW
    MaxHigh-nickel~140 kWhUp to ≈420 mi220 kW

    Standard pack suits commuters; Max pack is the road-trip and towing hero.

    Those are the brochure numbers. Real life is messier. Wheel choice alone can swing highway range by 40–60 miles; early testing has shown that going from chunky 20-inch all-terrains to 22-inch street rubber can add meaningful highway efficiency. Cold weather, mountain grades and high speeds will also bend the curve downward.

    Quick charging reality check

    On a healthy fast charger, Rivian says an R1T can add roughly 140 miles in about 20 minutes. Think of it as: grab a coffee, walk the dog, come back to enough range for the next leg. That’s competitive with most non-Tesla EV trucks today.
    2025 Rivian R1T interior with large central touchscreen showing charging route planning while parked at a campsite
    The 2025 R1T’s route planner can automatically route you to DC fast chargers and factor in elevation, weather and payload. When you buy used through Recharged, our specialists help you sanity-check that plan against your real driving patterns.

    Choosing the right R1T battery for your life

    Mostly city and suburban driving

    If you rarely drive more than 100–120 miles in a day and have reliable home charging, the <strong>Standard LFP pack</strong> is plenty. You’ll get long-cycle durability and lower cost.

    Mixed commuting and weekend trips

    If your weekends look like 200–250-mile round trips, the <strong>Large pack</strong> is the pragmatic middle ground, especially with 20-inch wheels.

    Frequent road trips or towing

    If you plan to tow regularly or cross states frequently, the <strong>Max pack</strong> is worth the price jump. Even after a 30–40% towing penalty, you’re left with usable range.

    Shopping used

    On a used R1T, ask for <strong>verified battery health</strong>, not just range estimates on the dash. A Recharged Score Report shows measured usable capacity so you know what you’re really buying.

    Towing, hauling and real-world utility

    Numbers first: the 2025 Rivian R1T is rated to tow up to 11,000 pounds and carry roughly 1,700 pounds of payload when properly equipped. That’s squarely in half-ton territory. The bed is only 4.5 feet long with the tailgate up, but the long, flat floor with the gate down accommodates lumber and bikes better than the spec sheet suggests.

    The towing-range truth

    Hook up a 6,000‑pound camper and that pretty EPA range figure can easily drop by half. That’s not a Rivian problem, that’s a physics problem shared by every electric truck on sale today.
    • Smart, low bed height makes loading gear feel more like an SUV than a lifted truck.
    • Lockable under-bed storage and the iconic gear tunnel swallow coolers, recovery gear or even a small e-bike.
    • Factory accessories, bed racks, camp kitchens, and now a dedicated iKamper tent, turn the R1T into a highly curated camping ecosystem rather than a blank canvas.

    If you’re coming from a traditional pickup, the R1T feels more like a Swiss Army knife than a bare steel toolbox. Everything has a clever double use: the air suspension doubles as a self-leveling hitch helper, the built-in compressor inflates tires and paddleboards, and the gear tunnel doors make surprisingly good camp stools.

    Interior, tech and comfort

    Rivian’s cabin design remains one of the R1T’s standout virtues. It’s outdoorsy without being rustic, modern without feeling like you’re living inside a smartphone. Sustainable woods, vegan leather and a huge central touchscreen combine in a way that feels expensive but not fragile.

    Living with the R1T from the driver’s seat

    Where it nails the brief, and where it still annoys

    Comfort & space

    • Front seats: Supportive on long drives, with plenty of adjustment.
    • Rear seats: Adult-friendly, but not as sprawling as a crew-cab F‑150.
    • Ride height: Step-in height is friendly even for shorter drivers thanks to the air suspension’s lowest setting.

    Infotainment & controls

    • Gorgeous UI and snappy responses on the central screen.
    • No physical climate or audio knobs, you live on the screen more than you might like.
    • Over-the-air updates have steadily improved driver-assistance and route planning, but you’re still in Rivian’s ecosystem for almost everything.

    Screen dependence is real

    If you hate the idea of adjusting wipers or seat heaters in a menu, the 2025 R1T will test your patience. It’s better than it was, but traditionalists may prefer a less screen-centric truck.

    Noise isolation and overall refinement put the R1T closer to a German luxury SUV than a work-truck. There’s a sense that Rivian wanted you to be able to commute daily, haul kids, and then point the nose at a trailhead on Friday without needing two separate vehicles, and it largely succeeds.

    Pricing, trims and key rivals

    2025 Rivian R1T pricing snapshot (MSRP, US)

    Exact pricing changes frequently, but this reflects typical 2025 window-sticker territory before incentives.

    TrimConfiguration highlightApprox. starting MSRP*
    Dual StandardDual Motor, Standard LFP pack≈ $71,700
    Dual LargeDual Motor, Large pack≈ $78,700
    Dual MaxDual Motor, Max pack≈ $85,700
    California Dune / Tri MaxTri-Motor, Max pack, heavily optioned≈ $101,700+
    Quad Max (anticipated street pricing)Quad-Motor, Max pack, performance focusWell into six figures

    High, yes, but in line with similarly specced electric trucks.

    It’s an expensive truck, but not an out-of-bounds one. A Ford F‑150 Lightning specced to match the R1T on equipment lands in similar money; a GMC Hummer EV regularly soars past it. Tesla’s Cybertruck undercuts the R1T in some trims, but lacks Rivian’s polished cabin and soft-road manners.

    Ford F‑150 Lightning

    • More traditional full-size footprint and bed.
    • Better dealer availability but less distinctive cabin.
    • Feels like a familiar truck that happens to be electric.

    Tesla Cybertruck

    • More range and efficiency in some configurations.
    • Wild styling and polarizing ergonomics.
    • Charging advantage on Tesla network, but rougher ride and interior.

    Chevy Silverado EV / GMC Hummer EV

    • Big, heavy and powerful, with impressive tow ratings.
    • Interior quality varies, and prices climb quickly.
    • Less cohesive adventure identity than the Rivian.

    Where the R1T still wins

    As a lifestyle adventure truck that also has to commute and carry kids, the Rivian R1T remains the most charming, best-integrated package in the segment. It feels designed, not assembled by committee.

    Ownership costs, reliability and daily living

    Owning a 2025 Rivian R1T is not the same as owning a Camry with a bed. Energy costs are lower than a comparable gas truck, and there’s no oil to change, but tires, insurance and repairs live in luxury-vehicle territory. Early owners have reported more teething issues than with mainstream brands, everything from door seals to infotainment glitches, though Rivian’s mobile service tends to leave a good impression.

    The running-cost reality

    Where you save, and where you don’t

    Costs that usually go down

    • Fuel: Even with high electricity rates, most owners see hundreds of dollars in yearly savings versus a thirsty V8.
    • Routine maintenance: No oil changes, fewer moving parts.
    • Brakes: Strong regen means pads can last a very long time.

    Costs that can go up

    • Tires: Heavy EV + instant torque = faster tire wear, especially on 22-inch wheels.
    • Insurance: High sticker prices and repair complexity can lift premiums.
    • Repairs out of warranty: Still an unknown for many components; this is where buying used from a specialist like Recharged can de-risk things.

    How Recharged helps used buyers

    Every used R1T sold through Recharged includes a Recharged Score Report with verified battery health, fair-market pricing analysis, and inspection results. You’ll see how the truck’s pack performs today, not just what Rivian advertised when it was new.

    Day to day, the R1T is easy to live with if you have home charging. Plug it into a Level 2 overnight and you wake up to a “full tank” more days than not. If you rely heavily on public fast charging, you’ll want to map your routines around high-speed CCS or NACS stations and give yourself more buffer in winter.

    Who should buy a 2025 Rivian R1T (and who should buy used)

    Choosing your Rivian R1T path

    Buy a new 2025 R1T if…

    You want the latest Gen‑2 hardware: new motors, updated suspension and reworked battery packs.

    You’re planning to keep the truck for a long time and value a full factory warranty.

    You’re particular about spec, battery, wheels, color, interior, and don’t want to compromise.

    You want the most up-to-date driver-assistance and infotainment features out of the box.

    Shop used R1T (2022–2024, early 2025) if…

    You like the R1T idea but want to let someone else take the steepest depreciation hit.

    You’re flexible on color and options, but want proof the battery and high-voltage system are healthy.

    You live near a Rivian service center or mobile-service hub and are comfortable with an upstart brand.

    You buy through a specialist like Recharged that can provide diagnostics, financing, trade‑in support and nationwide delivery.

    Leasing vs financing

    Given Rivian’s evolving tech and still-unknown long-term reliability picture, leasing a new 2025 R1T can be a smart hedge. If you’re buying used, look for fair, transparent pricing and consider extended coverage to protect against big-ticket surprises.

    2025 Rivian R1T FAQ

    Frequently asked questions about the 2025 Rivian R1T

    Final thoughts: Is the 2025 R1T still the benchmark?

    The 2025 Rivian R1T isn’t perfect, it’s expensive, range shrinks dramatically with a big trailer in tow, and the all‑screen cockpit will never win over the analog faithful. But as an integrated idea of what an electric pickup can be, it remains the benchmark: a truck that can climb a fire road on Friday, glide silently through a Monday commute, and still feel special in your driveway on Wednesday.

    If you’re shopping new, the 2025 updates make the R1T sharper, quicker and more efficient than ever. If you’re shopping used, the early trucks now represent compelling value, as long as you have clear visibility into battery health and service history. That’s where a platform like Recharged earns its keep, pairing transparent pricing and diagnostics with EV‑savvy guidance. For the right driver, the Rivian R1T isn’t just an electric truck; it’s the point where daily life and adventure finally overlap.

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