Chevrolet Silverado EV 14-mod battery, 2026 makes the most sense as an AWD electric pickup truck for utility use, daily driving and carefully planned longer trips. The range story is the difference between 286 mi official, about 228 mi in mixed use and about 181 mi in cold highway driving.
In daily use, home charging takes about 11 h 46 min from 0-100%; on trips, the 10-80% DC estimate is about 30 min (est.), which should make highway stops manageable. The practical side is documented with 5 seats and 8 years / 100,000 miles battery warranty. The official EPA number is optimistic compared with the BEVDB mixed estimate. Range confidence is high, while specs completeness is partial.
Best fit
Daily drivingHome chargingUtility use
Main caveatThe official EPA number is optimistic compared with the BEVDB mixed estimate.
Range reality
Official EPA range
286 mi
BEVDB mixed estimate
228 mi
Cold highway estimate
181 mi
Official vs BEVDB gap
-58 mi / -20%
Charging reality
Home charging
0-100% 11 h 46 min
Fast charging
10-80% 30 min (est.)
10-80% range added
161 mi Based on BEVDB combined consumption
Practical ownership
Seats
5
Cargo
No Data
Battery warranty
8 years / 100,000 miles
Data quality
Range confidence
High
Specs completeness
Partial
Estimate basis
EPA data + BEVDB model
Missing key data
Safety rating, Roof load, Cargo
Real Range
City - Mild Weather
272 miles
City - Cold Weather
202 miles
Highway - Mild Weather
217 miles
Highway - Cold Weather
181 miles
Estimates of actual range. The values given here are BEVDB estimates calculated from EPA data and usable battery capacity, based on the BEVDB model. The BEVDB real-range card uses four fixed reference scenarios: City (Mild), Highway (Mild), City (Cold), and Highway (Cold). Mild means +20°C (70°F) without intensive climate-control use; cold means -10°C (14°F) with cabin heating. City speed is 50 km/h (30 mph), and highway speed is 110 km/h (70 mph). These figures are not official test results. Actual range will vary depending on speed, temperature, road conditions, road profile, load, tires, and driving style.
Fast-charging times may use BEVDB estimates when measured 10–80% data is unavailable. Lower-power charger scenarios are estimated from the vehicle's 10–80% charging profile.
Estimated charging times are based on usable battery capacity, charging power and vehicle charging limits. Peak DC power is usually reached only briefly; average 10–80% power is more useful for estimating real charging time. Actual charging speed can vary by charger output, battery temperature, state of charge, weather, software and battery condition.
BEVDB estimates use EPA-rated (or derived) consumption and usable battery capacity to model city/highway ranges; the combined value is a weighted mix of city/highway and mild/cold scenarios. See the methodology and data sources for inputs, official source boundaries, fallback rules, and versioning.
Reminder: Range and energy consumption figures are estimates. Actual results may vary depending on weather, driving style, terrain, and other conditions. Review the BEVDB methodology for estimate boundaries and source labels. If this model page looks wrong, use Contact and include this page URL plus an official source link when possible.