Buy an EV

  • EVs for sale
  • Learn about EVs
  • Articles
  • Charging

Sell or trade

  • How it works

Financing

  • Get pre-qualified
  • Credit application

Contact us

  • Book a consultation
  • Call us at (804) 390-5910
  • Email us at hello@recharged.com
  • Visit our Experience Centers
    • Richmond, VA
    • Fairfax, VA
    • Charlotte, NC

© 2025 Recharged. All Rights Reserved.

7-Day Return Policy·Privacy Policy·SMS Opt-In·Do Not Sell or Share My Information·
TikTokYouTubeInstagramLinkedInFacebook
    Electric Truck Towing Range in the Real World: What You Actually Get
    Battery & Range·9 min read·By Recharged Editorial Team

    Electric Truck Towing Range in the Real World: What You Actually Get

    electric-trucksev-towingbattery-rangef-150-lightningrivian-r1tsilverado-evused-ev-trucksroad-trippayload-and-towingev-efficiency

    Table of Contents

    • Why real‑world electric truck towing range matters
    • How much range do you actually lose when towing?
    • Real‑world towing results by electric truck
    • Key factors that crush or extend towing range
    • Planning trips around real‑world towing range
    • Daily use vs heavy towing: which electric truck fits you?
    • Used electric trucks and towing: what to watch for
    • Frequently asked questions about electric truck towing range
    • Bottom line: is an electric truck right for your towing?

    If you’re shopping for an electric pickup, you’ve probably noticed something missing from the glossy marketing: honest **real‑world electric truck towing range**. On paper, today’s EV trucks look like towing beasts. Hook up a real trailer at real highway speeds, though, and the numbers change fast. This guide walks through what actually happens to range when you tow, how different models behave, and how to decide if an electric truck fits the way you haul.

    EPA range vs. towing reality

    EPA range ratings are measured **without a trailer**, at moderate speeds and in controlled conditions. When you tow at 65–75 mph with a big, boxy trailer, you’re in a completely different world of aerodynamics and energy use.

    Why real‑world electric truck towing range matters

    With a gas truck, you’re used to range dropping when you tow. You shrug, stop for fuel more often, and move on. With an EV truck, that same drop feels more dramatic for three reasons: there are fewer fast chargers than gas stations, recharging takes longer than refueling, and you often can’t use your preferred charger if it’s behind tight parking or short cables. That’s why understanding **real‑world towing range** is key before you commit to an electric pickup.

    • Trip planning becomes non‑negotiable on long hauls
    • Charge stops are dictated by trailer‑friendly stations, not just state lines
    • Payload, tongue weight, and passengers all eat into effective range
    • Buying the wrong configuration (battery, wheels, tires) can cut usable towing range in half

    Don’t just divide EPA range by two

    A common rule of thumb is “assume half your EPA range when towing.” That can be directionally right, but real‑world results vary from **about 40% to 70% of normal range** depending on trailer, speed, weather, and truck setup.

    How much range do you actually lose when towing?

    Typical real‑world towing range loss for EV trucks

    40–60%
    Range loss vs. empty
    Most owners see their towing range drop to 40–60% of the unloaded highway range for full‑size electric pickups.
    ~110 mi
    Rivian R1T result
    In independent testing, an R1T towing a ~6,100‑lb camper at 70 mph only managed about 110 miles on a charge, vs. over 220 miles unladen on the same route.
    ~50%
    Chevy estimate
    Chevrolet expects the Silverado EV’s range to drop roughly 50% when towing a 5,000‑lb trailer, a pattern that lines up with other trucks.
    100–150 mi
    Per towing leg
    Practically, most EV truck owners plan towing legs of 100–150 miles between fast‑charge stops when pulling large campers or car haulers.

    Those headline numbers sound scary if you’re used to 300–400 miles between fill‑ups. The flip side is that electric drivetrains are incredibly **stable and controllable under load**. Instant torque, regenerative braking, and sophisticated stability controls make towing feel calmer and more precise than in many gas trucks, as long as you plan around the shorter legs.

    Real‑world towing results by electric truck

    Let’s look at how leading electric pickups perform when you bolt on a real trailer. These aren’t perfect apples‑to‑apples tests, but they give you a concrete feel for what “half range while towing” actually looks like brand by brand.

    Real‑world electric truck towing range snapshots

    Approximate results from independent tests and manufacturer guidance. Actual range will vary widely with speed, trailer, weather, terrain, and truck configuration.

    Truck & setup (approx.)EPA or claimed empty rangeTrailer & conditionsObserved or expected towing range% of empty range
    Rivian R1T Quad Motor, Large pack, 20" AT tires~314–328 mi highway in ideal spec; real highway test around 220–280 mi depending on tires~6,100‑lb, tandem‑axle camping trailer at ~70 mph~110 mi between charges~35–50% depending on which empty baseline you compare
    Chevy Silverado EV WT (Work Truck), big batteryEPA ~450–490+ mi; some highway tests exceeding 480–500 mi emptyManufacturer guidance towing 5,000‑lb trailer at highway speeds~50% range drop expected (~225–250 mi)~50%
    Ford F‑150 Lightning Extended RangeEPA 300–320 mi depending on trim and wheelsManufacturer and owner reports towing large travel trailers or car haulers at mixed 60–70 mph speedsCommonly 120–170 mi per charge~40–55%
    GMC Hummer EV pickupEPA ~329 mi; real highway tests often below that due to weight and tiresHeavy enclosed trailer or large toy hauler at highway speedsFrequently under 150 miOften ~40–50%
    Smaller, aerodynamic utility trailer on any full‑size EV truckVaries by truck~2,000‑3,000‑lb, low‑roof, narrow trailer at 60 mphOften 60–70% of empty range~60–70%

    Use these as directional guides, not promises. When in doubt, **plan conservatively** and build in a buffer.

    Think in percentage, not miles

    Every truck, route, and trailer combination is different, but the pattern is consistent: **big, blunt trailers at 65–75 mph slash range hardest**, while lighter, more aerodynamic loads hurt efficiency less. Instead of fixating on one mileage number, think in terms of what percentage of your usual highway range you’ll keep.
    Electric pickup truck towing a midsize camper trailer while plugged into a highway fast charger
    When you’re towing with an electric truck, plan your route around fast chargers with trailer‑friendly access and expect shorter legs between stops.

    Key factors that crush or extend towing range

    Six biggest levers on real‑world towing range

    You can’t control all of them, but understanding each one helps you plan smarter.

    1. Trailer shape & size

    Boxy travel trailers and enclosed car haulers punch a **huge hole in the air**. That aerodynamic drag is often a bigger enemy than weight. Lower, narrower, rounded trailers are much easier on range.

    2. Trailer weight & payload

    Heavier trailers still matter, especially on hills and stop‑and‑go, but they’re often secondary to frontal area. A 4,000‑lb tall box can hurt more than a 5,000‑lb low‑slung trailer.

    3. Speed

    Aerodynamic drag increases with the **square of speed**. Jumping from 60 to 75 mph can blow up your energy use, especially with a big box behind you. Slowing down 5–10 mph is one of the simplest ways to gain range.

    4. Terrain & elevation

    Long climbs chew through battery, and while you regain some energy on the way down through regen, you never get it all back. Hilly routes take a bigger toll than flat interstates.

    5. Weather & temperature

    Cold batteries are less efficient, winter tires add rolling resistance, and cabin heat is energy‑hungry. Strong headwinds can dramatically increase drag even in perfect temperatures.

    6. Truck setup & tires

    Big off‑road tires, lift kits, roof racks, and heavy accessories all drag efficiency down. If towing range matters, prioritize **smaller wheels, road‑biased tires, and clean aerodynamics**.

    Easy way to estimate your towing range

    If you already own an EV truck, look at your **real highway efficiency when empty** on the route you’ll be towing (for example, 2.3 mi/kWh). Then multiply by about **0.4–0.6** depending on how big and boxy the trailer is. That gets you a ballpark mi/kWh while towing that’s usually more accurate than generic rules of thumb.

    Planning trips around real‑world towing range

    Towing with an EV isn’t impossible, in many ways it’s a nicer experience, but it’s less forgiving of winging it. The solution is to reframe how you think about trip planning.

    Step‑by‑step: planning an EV towing trip

    1. Start with a realistic range estimate

    Use your **empty highway range** as the baseline, then apply a 40–60% factor depending on your trailer. If your Lightning reliably does 260 miles at 70 mph empty and you’re pulling a tall camper, assume 110–140 miles per leg, not 260.

    2. Map chargers that work with a trailer

    Look for **pull‑through or back‑in spots with room to maneuver**. Apps like A Better Routeplanner and PlugShare reviews can help, and many newer Superchargers and DC stations are adding trailer‑friendly stalls, but plenty still aren’t.

    3. Aim to arrive with a buffer

    Instead of running the pack near 0%, plan to arrive at each charger with **15–20% remaining**. Towing magnifies small headwinds, detours, or elevation changes, and your buffer is your safety margin.

    4. Charge in the fast zone

    On road trips, you usually don’t need to charge to 100%. Most EV trucks charge fastest between **10–60% or 10–80%**. Multiple shorter sessions in that window can be quicker than fewer very long ones.

    5. Plan food and rest around charging

    Think of charging stops as **forced breaks**, for you and your passengers. Time your meals and bathroom breaks with your fastest charging window so the wait feels like less of a chore.

    6. Do a shakedown run before the big trip

    If you’re new to EV towing, take a **shorter practice trip** with your full setup. Note your energy use at your typical speed, in both directions, so your big trip plan is built on real numbers from your truck, trailer, and driving style.

    Trailer access can matter more than kW

    A 350‑kW charger you **can’t reach with a trailer** is less useful than a 150‑kW charger in a truck‑friendly travel plaza. When planning routes, always zoom in on satellite view and recent user photos to make sure you can actually get in and out without unhooking.

    Daily use vs heavy towing: which electric truck fits you?

    Occasional towers: EV trucks are in their element

    If you tow a boat to the lake a few times a year or haul a small utility trailer around town, a modern electric pickup is often **easier and cheaper to live with** than a gas truck.

    • Silent, smooth power and instant torque for merging and ramp pulls.
    • Strong regen braking and stability controls that keep the trailer settled.
    • Plenty of range for most weekend trips without leaning on DC fast charging at all.

    For this group, the main decision is picking the right truck and battery size, not whether EV towing is viable at all.

    Serious RVers and heavy haulers: it depends

    If your life revolves around **long‑distance towing**, a big fifth‑wheel, multi‑state horse shows, or heavy equipment, you’re in the current edge case for EV trucks.

    • Expect frequent charging, often every 100–150 miles with large campers.
    • Routes will be dictated by charger locations and trailer access.
    • You’ll want the largest battery, the most efficient wheel/tire package, and the best DC fast‑charging capability you can get.

    For some of these use cases, a plug‑in hybrid or a two‑truck strategy (electric daily, gas HD tow rig) still makes more sense today.

    Where electric trucks shine today

    For many owners, the sweet spot is **daily driving on electricity plus occasional moderate towing**, boats, snowmobiles, smaller campers, or flatbed utility trailers within a few hours of home. In those scenarios, you get the benefits of an EV truck without leaning too hard on the sparse trailer‑friendly DC network.

    Used electric trucks and towing: what to watch for

    If you’re looking at a used F‑150 Lightning, Rivian R1T, or Silverado EV, the towing story gets another layer: history. How the previous owner used and charged that truck can matter just as much as the spec sheet.

    Checklist for evaluating a used EV truck for towing

    Beyond the usual used‑truck inspection, you’re trying to understand battery health, charging behavior, and how hard a life the truck has lived.

    Battery health & fast‑charge history

    Ask for any available battery health reports and look for signs of **excessive DC fast‑charging**. Occasional fast‑charging is fine, but a work truck that lived on DC rails with heavy towing may show more degradation.

    Suspension, brakes & hitch hardware

    Towing stresses bushings, shocks, brakes, and hitches. Inspect for **sagging springs, uneven tire wear, worn brake components, and damaged receiver or wiring** from years of trailer duty.

    Real efficiency numbers

    On a test drive, reset the trip computer and drive a known highway loop at your normal speed. Compare the **mi/kWh you see to what owners typically report** for that truck empty. Big discrepancies can hint at aggressive tires, accessories, or underlying issues.

    Transparent history & documentation

    Maintenance records, accessory installs (lift kits, tire changes), and any aftermarket electrical work are especially important on EV trucks. Clean, well‑documented history is worth paying for.

    How Recharged can help with used EV trucks

    Every EV listed on Recharged includes a **Recharged Score Report** with verified battery health and detailed diagnostics. If you’re planning to tow, our EV specialists can help you interpret that report, choose the right truck and battery configuration, and even talk through your typical routes to make sure the range will work in the real world.

    Frequently asked questions about electric truck towing range

    EV truck towing range: common questions

    Bottom line: is an electric truck right for your towing?

    In the **real world**, electric truck towing range isn’t magic, and it isn’t a mystery. Big trailers at highway speeds will usually cut you down to roughly half your normal highway range. The question is whether that reality fits how you actually tow: how far, how often, and with what kind of trailer.

    If you’re mostly commuting and running errands with occasional weekend towing, a well‑chosen EV truck can be a huge upgrade over gas, quiet, quick, and cheap to run, with more than enough range. If your life is built around long‑distance RV travel or heavy commercial towing, you’ll need to think harder, choose your configuration carefully, and plan around the current charging network.

    Either way, going in with **clear expectations about real‑world towing range** will make you far happier with whatever you buy. And if you’re considering a used electric truck, Recharged can help you decode battery health, match the right truck to your towing needs, and deliver it to your driveway ready for its next chapter of work.

    Rivian R1T on Recharged

    See all →
    Coming Soon
    2023 Rivian R1T

    2023 Rivian R1T

    Adventure•29K mi•321 mi range
    Pending Recharged Score
    $57,998
    Coming Soon
    2023 Rivian R1T

    2023 Rivian R1T

    Adventure•21K mi•360 mi range
    Pending Recharged Score
    $61,998
    Coming Soon
    2023 Rivian R1T

    2023 Rivian R1T

    Adventure•19K mi•360 mi range
    Pending Recharged Score
    $64,998

    Related Articles

    2025 Chevrolet Equinox EV Reliability Rating & Long‑Term Outlook
    Problems & Recalls·10 min

    2025 Chevrolet Equinox EV Reliability Rating & Long‑Term Outlook

    See how reliable the 2025 Chevrolet Equinox EV really is. Owner ratings, early problem trends, warranty coverage, and what it means if you’re buying used.

    chevrolet-equinox-evev-reliabilitybattery-health
    2024 Mercedes EQS Review (Used): Luxury EV Bargain or Money Pit?
    Reviews & Comparisons·11 min

    2024 Mercedes EQS Review (Used): Luxury EV Bargain or Money Pit?

    Considering a used 2024 Mercedes EQS? See real-world range, charging, depreciation, reliability, and buying tips, plus how to shop smarter with verified battery health.

    mercedes-eqsused-evsluxury-ev
    2026 Hyundai Ioniq 6 Problems and Fixes: What Owners Should Know
    Problems & Recalls·10 min

    2026 Hyundai Ioniq 6 Problems and Fixes: What Owners Should Know

    Worried about 2026 Hyundai Ioniq 6 problems? Learn the most likely issues, recalls, and fixes plus how to protect yourself when buying a used Ioniq 6.

    hyundai-ioniq-62026-ioniq-6ev-problems