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
    EV Towing Range Loss Percentage: What To Really Expect
    Battery & Range·10 min read·By Recharged Editorial Team

    EV Towing Range Loss Percentage: What To Really Expect

    ev-towingbattery-rangeroad-tripelectric-trucksioniq-5f-150-lightningrivian-r1tcaravans-and-trailersused-ev-buyingrecharged-score

    Table of Contents

    • How much range do EVs lose when towing?
    • Real-world EV towing range loss examples
    • Factors that change EV towing range loss percentage
    • How to estimate your EV’s towing range
    • Planning road trips when towing with an EV
    • EV towing vs. gas towing: how different is it?
    • Choosing an EV for regular towing
    • How Recharged helps used EV buyers who plan to tow
    • EV towing range loss FAQ

    If you’re thinking about hitching a camper, boat, or utility trailer to your electric vehicle, the first question is obvious: **what EV towing range loss percentage should you expect**? The honest answer is that towing can cut your usable range roughly in half, and sometimes even more, but the exact number depends heavily on what you’re pulling and how you drive.

    Key takeaway

    Most EV drivers see a **40–60% range loss when towing a full‑size camper or heavy trailer at highway speeds**. With smaller, lighter, or more aerodynamic loads, range loss is often closer to **25–40%**.

    How much range do EVs lose when towing?

    Every EV and every trailer combination is different, but we now have enough testing data to talk in realistic ranges instead of guesses. Think in **bands** rather than a single number.

    Typical EV towing range loss percentages

    Approximate drops in usable range compared with driving solo, based on independent testing and owner reports.

    Light, low trailer

    Examples: small utility trailer, light PWC trailer, compact cargo box.

    • ~20–35% range loss
    • Often manageable with one extra charge stop

    Mid-size, moderate weight

    Examples: small/medium boat, pop-up camper, compact RV.

    • ~35–50% range loss
    • Plan for charging twice as often

    Large, boxy camper

    Examples: full-size travel trailer, tall toy hauler near max tow rating.

    • ~50–70%+ range loss
    • Real‑world range can drop to a third of the EPA rating

    Independent tests of electric pickups towing near their maximum capacity have seen real‑world range fall to **about one‑third of the original EPA rating**. In other words, a truck rated for 300 miles solo might realistically do only 90–110 miles with a heavy, boxy trailer at highway speeds.

    Don’t plan on the EPA rating

    When you’re towing with an EV, treat the EPA range as a **starting point only**. For conservative trip planning, assume you’ll get **40–60% of that rating** with a sizable trailer at freeway speeds, especially in poor weather.

    Real-world EV towing range loss examples

    To make “EV towing range loss percentage” feel less abstract, let’s look at real test data and owner experiences from popular models. These aren’t lab numbers, they’re what drivers have actually seen on the road or test track.

    Sample EV towing range results

    Illustrative examples of range loss when towing, based on public road tests and independent evaluations. Numbers rounded for simplicity.

    EV model & setupSolo range (approx.)Towing scenarioTowing range (approx.)Estimated range loss
    Ford F-150 Lightning~280 miles EPAEnclosed trailer near max tow at highway speeds~90 miles≈ 65% loss
    Rivian R1T~320 miles EPA (varies by pack)Similar heavy trailer, highway speeds~85 miles≈ 70% loss
    BMW i4 eDrive40~258 miles testedCaravan ~85% of kerb weight113 miles≈ 56% loss
    Tesla Model Y Long Range~260 miles testedSimilar caravan load113 miles≈ 57% loss
    Hyundai Ioniq 5 (73 kWh RWD)~210 miles testedCaravan at recommended match98 miles≈ 53% loss
    Hyundai Ioniq 5 (AWD) – light boat~240 miles real‑world~1500 lb boat, mixed speedsRange per kWh dropped from ~3.4 to ~2.0 mi/kWh≈ 40% efficiency loss

    Actual results vary by route, weather, speed, and trailer; treat these as ballpark guides, not promises.

    Across multiple tests of crossovers, SUVs, and pickups pulling caravans or heavy trailers, the **average range shortfall has been in the 50–60% range**. That’s steeper than the roughly one‑third fuel‑economy hit many gas SUVs take when towing the same loads, largely because EVs start from a finite battery energy budget.

    Electric SUV towing a mid-size travel trailer on a highway, illustrating reduced EV range when towing
    With a sizable boxy trailer, many EVs see **around half their normal range**, sometimes even less at high speeds or in headwinds.

    Factors that change EV towing range loss percentage

    Two drivers can own the same EV and the same trailer and still see **very different towing range loss percentages**. That’s because towing efficiency is shaped by a handful of key variables.

    6 big drivers of EV towing range loss

    Dialing these in can turn a painful 60% range loss into something much more manageable.

    1. Trailer size & shape

    Aerodynamics often matter more than pure weight. A tall, flat‑front camper drags a huge hole in the air compared with a low boat or enclosed cargo trailer with a sloped nose.

    2. Trailer weight & load

    Heavier trailers demand more energy to accelerate and climb. Fully loaded campers or toy haulers can push some EVs right to their max tow rating, amplifying losses.

    3. Speed

    Drag rises with the square of speed. Jumping from 60 mph to 75 mph can dramatically increase energy use. Many EV owners see towing efficiency plunge above ~65 mph.

    4. Weather & wind

    Cold temps reduce battery efficiency and heating draws extra power. A steady headwind can feel like driving up an invisible hill, bad news with a tall trailer.

    5. Terrain

    Long climbs eat energy quickly. You regain some on the way down via regen, but not all. Hilly routes often mean more frequent fast‑charging stops.

    6. Vehicle & battery

    Larger battery packs, more efficient powertrains, and effective thermal management systems cope better with towing loads. Some EVs also have smarter trailer modes that adjust range estimates.

    Simple rule of thumb

    If you’re towing a **tall, boxy trailer at 70+ mph**, assume you’ll lose about **half to two‑thirds of your normal range**. If you’re towing a **low, aerodynamic, relatively light trailer at 55–60 mph**, planning on a **25–40% loss** is often realistic.

    How to estimate your EV’s towing range

    You don’t need a PhD in aerodynamics to make a smart plan. A back‑of‑the‑envelope calculation will put you much closer to reality than trusting the EPA sticker or the default range gauge.

    Step-by-step: estimating your EV’s towing range

    1. Start with a realistic solo range

    Don’t use the window‑sticker EPA number if your real driving never matches it. Think about what you actually see on the highway today. If your crossover is rated for 300 miles but you really get about 240 on the interstate, start with **240 miles**.

    2. Choose a loss percentage band

    Pick a conservative band based on your trailer: **30–40% loss** for a small, low trailer; **40–60% loss** for a medium camper; **60–70%+** for a big, boxy trailer at or near max tow rating.

    3. Apply the loss to your solo range

    Multiply your solo range by (1 – loss). Example: 240 miles solo × (1 – 0.55) ≈ **108 miles** when you expect about a 55% loss. That’s your rough towing range assuming you arrive close to empty.

    4. Add a safety buffer

    You don’t want to roll into a charger at 0%. Many EV drivers try to stay above **10–20% state of charge (SoC)**. If you only want to use 80% of the battery (from 90% down to 10%), multiply that 108 miles by 0.8 → ~**86 miles practical leg distance**.

    5. Cross-check with trip data or online reports

    Search for your EV + trailer type and see what others are reporting. Real‑world stories from drivers in similar conditions help you validate whether your estimate is aggressive or conservative.

    6. Test a shorter shakedown trip

    Before a cross‑country adventure, do a **half‑day tow** on familiar roads. Note your mi/kWh towing versus solo. That ratio is your personal range‑loss percentage, and you can use it to refine your planning.

    Quick mental shortcut

    Take your honest highway range, **cut it in half**, and then plan your charge stops so you never use more than about **70–80%** of that half‑range. If the EV can comfortably handle the trip under that assumption, you’ll likely be fine in the real world.

    Planning road trips when towing with an EV

    Once you know your approximate EV towing range loss percentage, the next step is structuring your trip so those limitations don’t ruin the vacation. That’s part math, part mindset.

    Think in legs, not in total miles

    Instead of asking, “Can my EV tow this 500‑mile trip?” ask, “Can I comfortably string together **60–100‑mile legs** between DC fast chargers?” Long trips become much more manageable when you break them into chunks that fit your realistic towing range and your preferred SoC window.

    Apps like A Better Routeplanner, PlugShare, and many OEM navigation systems can model **elevation, speed, and weather**, which helps refine those legs further.

    Prioritize easy-in, easy-out chargers

    When you’re hitched up, tight urban chargers or short pull‑in spaces become a headache. Look for **pull‑through or trailer‑friendly charging stops**: highway plazas, big-box parking lots, or charging sites with room to swing wider turns.

    It’s often worth stopping a little earlier at a trailer‑friendly charger rather than squeezing out the last few miles to a cramped location.

    • Charge **more often, to a lower SoC**. DC fast‑charging usually slows dramatically above ~70–80%. Many towers find a rhythm of charging from ~10–20% up to ~60–70%.
    • Build in **extra time** for each stop. Even if the charge itself is quick, bathroom breaks, food, and kids take time. When towing, assume each stop is 30–45 minutes door to door.
    • Have a **Plan B charger** within 20–30 miles whenever possible, in case your first choice is full or offline.
    • In cold weather or strong headwinds, lean on your most conservative towing range estimate, not the optimistic one you calculated on a perfect day.

    Watch your exit options

    Long trailers can make it tough to back out of dead‑end parking lots or blocked chargers. When in doubt, choose **truck‑stop style sites** and always have a way to loop around and leave without un‑hitching.

    EV towing vs. gas towing: how different is it?

    If you’ve towed with a gas or diesel SUV, the basic physics haven’t changed. A heavy, non‑aero trailer punishes fuel economy no matter what’s under the hood. What’s different with EVs is how **visible** that penalty is and how **quickly** it can shrink your usable range.

    EV vs. gas towing: what actually changes?

    Both vehicle types suffer when towing; EVs just start from a smaller energy “tank.”

    FactorTypical gas SUVTypical EV
    Energy loss from towingFuel economy often drops ~30–40% with a sizeable trailerRange often drops ~40–60% with a sizeable trailer
    Refueling/charging3–5 minutes nearly anywhere20–40 minutes at specific DC fast chargers
    Planning needsBasic gas-station awarenessDetailed charger planning & SoC management
    Driving feelMore downshifts, engine noise, heatSmooth torque, strong low‑speed pull, very quiet
    Downhill controlEngine braking or transmission modesStrong regenerative braking can help control speed and recapture some energy

    The percentage hit when towing can be similar, but the impact feels bigger in an EV because you have fewer total miles to give up.

    From a pure numbers standpoint, **EVs and gas vehicles both take a substantial efficiency hit when towing**. The reason towing feels more limiting in an EV is simply that your “tank” is fixed and smaller than a big gas tank, and you can’t refuel everywhere in five minutes. Smart planning shrinks that gap.

    Choosing an EV for regular towing

    If towing is an occasional weekend chore, nearly any tow‑rated EV can work with enough planning. If you’ll tow a camper **often**, it’s worth prioritizing the right hardware from day one, especially in the used market.

    What to look for in an EV you’ll tow with

    These traits matter more than 0–60 times when there’s a trailer on the hitch.

    Bigger usable battery

    More kWh equals more miles of towing range. All else equal, a 90+ kWh pack gives you more flexibility than a 60 kWh pack, especially on hilly routes.

    Serious tow rating

    Check the manufacturer’s **braked tow rating** and payload. Many crossovers top out around 2,000–3,500 lbs, while electric trucks can be rated much higher. Stay well within the rating for comfort and range.

    Fast, reliable DC charging

    When you’re stopping more often, **charging speed really counts**. Look for EVs that can hold strong charge rates from ~10–60% and have access to robust networks (including NACS / Tesla Superchargers where supported).

    Towing or trailer modes

    Some EVs offer a dedicated towing mode that adjusts range estimates, stability control, and regen. This makes predicted range while towing more trustworthy.

    Thermal management

    Good battery cooling helps sustain performance when you’re pulling a heavy load in heat or cold and when you’re fast‑charging multiple times per day.

    Stability & brakes

    A long wheelbase, solid brakes, and electronic trailer‑sway control are huge confidence boosters when crosswinds or passing trucks hit your rig.

    Think about your trailer too

    Sometimes the smarter move isn’t a bigger battery, it’s a **more aerodynamic trailer**. Swapping a tall, flat‑front camper for a slightly smaller, tapered model can save just as much range as moving up to a larger‑pack EV, and it may cost far less.

    How Recharged helps used EV buyers who plan to tow

    If you’re shopping the used market, the big unknown is often the **battery**. Towing safely is one thing; towing confidently is another. That’s where a data‑driven used‑EV specialist like Recharged becomes valuable.

    See real battery health, not just a guess

    Every vehicle sold through Recharged includes a **Recharged Score Report** with verified battery diagnostics. Instead of gambling on how much usable capacity is left in a five‑year‑old pack, you’ll see a clear picture of battery condition, projected range, and charging performance.

    If you know you’ll be towing, that transparency helps you decide whether the remaining capacity is enough for your planned trailer and routes.

    End-to-end, EV‑savvy support

    Recharged pairs that battery data with **EV‑specialist guidance**, nationwide delivery, financing options, and flexible selling solutions, trade‑in, instant offer, or consignment. You can complete the entire process digitally, or visit the Recharged Experience Center in Richmond, VA if you’d rather talk through towing scenarios in person.

    Tell the team how, where, and what you plan to tow, and they can help you narrow in on used EVs whose tow ratings, range, and charging capabilities fit your real world.

    Match the EV to your towing lifestyle

    Whether you tow a pair of jet skis a few times a summer or a camper every weekend, buying the **right used EV up front** is far cheaper than trying to fix the wrong choice later. Data‑backed battery health and expert advice make that much easier.

    EV towing range loss FAQ

    Frequently asked questions about EV towing range loss

    Towing with an EV absolutely magnifies the importance of honest range expectations. Once you understand that a typical **EV towing range loss percentage sits in the 40–60% band** for most real‑world setups, it’s much easier to plan routes, choose the right trailer, and select an EV that fits your life. Do a little math up front, give yourself a comfortable buffer, and, if you’re shopping used, lean on clear battery health data and expert guidance so that your EV, your trailer, and your favorite destinations all line up without surprises.

    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

    Lucid Air Safety Rating & Crash Test Results: How Safe Is It Really?
    Safety·9 min

    Lucid Air Safety Rating & Crash Test Results: How Safe Is It Really?

    See how the Lucid Air performs in crash tests, its Euro NCAP 5-star safety rating, advanced ADAS tech, and what used EV shoppers should know before buying.

    lucid-airev-safetycrash-tests
    EVs With Pet-Friendly Features: Best Models, Safety Tips & Must-Have Tech (2026)
    EV Education·9 min

    EVs With Pet-Friendly Features: Best Models, Safety Tips & Must-Have Tech (2026)

    Shopping for an EV you can share with your dog? Explore EVs with pet-friendly features, cargo space, Dog Mode-style tech, and safety tips, plus used EV advice.

    evs-with-pet-friendly-featuresdog-friendly-evspet-safety
    Best Used Tesla Model S to Buy in 2026: Years, Trims & Buyer Guide
    Used EVs·11 min

    Best Used Tesla Model S to Buy in 2026: Years, Trims & Buyer Guide

    Shopping for a used Tesla Model S in 2026? See the best and worst years, key trims like Raven and Plaid, battery and Autopilot tips, plus pricing insights.

    tesla-model-sused-ev-buyingbattery-health