
Electric and hybrid pickups moved from curiosity to credible choices this year, with GM’s Silverado EV RST reaching retail buyers, Ford expanding the F-150 hybrid’s role, Toyota’s Tacoma and Tundra hybrids gaining momentum, and Tesla’s Cybertruck maturing through software updates. Ford and GM owners now tap Tesla’s Supercharger network via adapters, easing long‑distance anxiety, while Ram readies the all-electric 1500 REV and the range-extended Ramcharger. The result is a clearer picture of where electrified trucks fit: instant torque and silent worksites on one side, proven long-haul convenience on the other. Here’s how the latest EVs and hybrids stack up against traditional gas and diesel models in real use today.
The biggest news is availability. Chevrolet’s Silverado EV RST is now in customers’ driveways with an EPA-rated 440 miles in flagship form, while fleet-spec WTs continue to roll out. Ford has pushed the F-150 PowerBoost hybrid into more trims and kept its work-friendly Pro Power Onboard generator in the mix, and the F-150 Lightning continues to receive software and charging improvements. Toyota’s i-FORCE MAX hybrids in Tacoma and Tundra are seeing strong take rates thanks to added torque and better efficiency.
Ram is next: the all-electric 1500 REV and the range-extended Ramcharger begin arriving across late 2024 into 2025, broadening choices for buyers who tow or travel far. On performance, EV pickups deliver the most dramatic change. Instant torque makes them quick off the line and confident on steep grades or slow, technical trails, and many offer one‑pedal driving that reduces fatigue. The Silverado EV and Cybertruck showcase long-range battery options, while the Lightning emphasizes smooth power delivery and smart traction control.
Hybrids split the difference, keeping strong tow ratings and refueling speed while trimming fuel bills; Ford’s PowerBoost and Toyota’s i-FORCE MAX add meaningful low-end shove. Traditional gas and diesel still rule for sustained heavy towing over long distances, where energy density and quick refueling outweigh EV efficiency. Day-to-day running favors electrification in predictable routes. Home charging turns a garage into a “fuel station,” and public fast charging is improving, with Ford and GM drivers gaining Supercharger access and peak rates spanning roughly 150–350 kW depending on the truck.
EVs cut maintenance with fewer moving parts and brake wear reduced by regeneration, though tires can wear faster under higher torque and weight. Hybrids avoid charging logistics entirely yet deliver big-city MPG gains and quiet operation at idle, all while keeping a familiar ownership rhythm. In winter or with big trailers, plan for shorter EV range and slower charging; hybrids and gas models see smaller cold-weather penalties. For work and lifestyle, the practical impacts are already clear.
Contractors and overlanders value built-in power outlets—up to 7.2 kW on some F-150s—turning trucks into silent generators for tools or campsites. Fleets with fixed routes are adopting EVs to cut fuel and maintenance costs, while suburban owners with garages find the convenience compelling. Rural users, frequent tower-haulers, and those far from fast chargers still lean toward gas or diesel, or are eyeing Ram’s range-extended Ramcharger as a bridge. With more trims, longer ranges, and wider charging access arriving through 2025, competition is making every pickup—electric, hybrid, and traditional—more capable and easier to live with.