The American electric SUV market has never been this crowded. You’ve got entry-level picks under $35K, luxury barges pushing six figures, and everything in between — including a few models that raise more questions than answers. This list covers 14 electric SUVs sold or incoming in the USA, from everyday commuter-friendly options to statement machines built for people who really don’t need to worry about budgets.
A couple of caveats upfront: Fisker Ocean is on this list, but Fisker filed for bankruptcy in 2024 and production is effectively dead — so that section is more of an obituary than a recommendation. And the Ford Bronco Electric hasn’t officially launched yet, so what’s available there is still mostly confirmed specs and reveal details. Everything else is on sale or arriving in 2025–2026.
1. Tesla Model Y — The One Everyone Compares Against

The Model Y still sets the standard. It outsells almost everything else in the segment globally, and for good reason: the real-world range holds up, the Supercharger network is genuinely useful on road trips, and the interior — while minimalist to a fault — is efficient and well-executed.
- Base price: From ~$44,990 (RWD)
- Range: Up to 330 miles (Long Range AWD)
- Key variants: RWD, Long Range AWD, Performance
The 2025 update (internally called the “Juniper”) brought a refreshed exterior with cleaner lines, updated LED lighting, and interior revisions including ambient lighting and an improved audio system. The Model Y Long Range (sometimes listed as “Model Y L”) is the trim most buyers should target — it hits the sweet spot on range without the Performance premium.
The Performance trim is fast (0–60 in 3.5 seconds), but unless you’re specifically chasing that, Long Range AWD makes more practical sense for a family SUV.
2. Tesla Model X — Still the Big Tesla SUV

- Base price: From ~$79,990
- Range: Up to 348 miles (Long Range)
- Key variants: Long Range, Plaid
The Model X is older, larger, and considerably more expensive than the Model Y — but it carries the falcon-wing doors, a third-row option, and a Plaid variant that’s comically quick for something this size (0–60 in 2.5 seconds). The 2025 refresh brought it in line with the Model Y’s updated interior treatment.
If you genuinely need three rows and want Tesla’s ecosystem, the Model X makes sense. Otherwise, the Model Y does most of the same job for $35K less.
3. Rivian R1S — The Serious Off-Road Option

- Base price: From ~$75,900
- Range: Up to 410 miles (Max Pack)
- Key variants: Dual-Motor, Quad-Motor, Max Pack battery
The Rivian R1S is what happens when you build an electric SUV without treating off-road capability as an afterthought. Air suspension, multiple drive modes, proper ground clearance, and a gear tunnel that adventure-minded buyers actually use — it’s a well-thought-out truck platform dressed as an SUV.
Range varies significantly depending on configuration. The standard Dual-Motor Large Pack gets around 321 miles, while the Max Pack stretches to 410 miles — one of the best figures in this segment. Production has improved considerably since the rocky early days, and software updates have been steady.
It’s expensive, but it earns the money in a way that not every luxury EV does.
4. Lucid Gravity — Range King of the Segment

- Base price: From ~$94,900
- Range: Up to ~440 miles (estimated, Grand Touring)
- Key variants: Grand Touring, Stealth Look, Performance (upcoming)
Lucid’s battery and drivetrain technology is legitimately impressive. The Gravity SUV carries over the same efficiency edge that made the Air sedan notable — and in a larger, seven-seat body. Up to 440 miles of range in a full-size luxury SUV is a number most competitors can’t touch.
Interior quality is excellent, the driving dynamics are composed, and the 800V architecture means fast charging when you find a compatible station. The trade-off is price — this is firmly premium territory — and Lucid’s service network is still thin compared to Tesla’s.
Worth serious consideration if you want maximum range and can live with a smaller dealer footprint.
5. GMC Hummer EV SUV — Big, Heavy, Unapologetic

- Base price: From ~$98,845
- Range: Up to 314 miles (Edition 1)
- 2026 updates: Revised trim structure, pricing adjustments
The Hummer EV SUV is 9,000+ pounds of electric ambition. It has Crab Walk mode, Extract Mode that raises the suspension to climb over obstacles, and a party trick called “Watts to Freedom” that launches the three-motor setup to 60 mph in around 3.5 seconds. It’s genuinely impressive engineering dressed in a very loud package.
The range-to-weight ratio isn’t flattering — 314 miles from a 200+ kWh battery pack shows how much energy it takes to move something this big. Towing brings that down further. The 2026 model brings revised trim levels and modest price adjustments across the lineup.
This is a niche vehicle. If the Hummer appeals to you, nothing else really replaces it. If it doesn’t, the price and efficiency tradeoffs won’t make sense.
6. Cadillac Lyriq — The Luxury Sweet Spot
- Base price: From ~$58,590
- Range: Up to 314 miles (RWD)
- Key variants: RWD, AWD
The Lyriq is Cadillac’s most successful EV launch in years — and it’s not hard to see why. The 33-inch curved display is genuinely good, the interior materials are well-chosen, and the exterior styling is sharp without being garish. Range on the RWD version is competitive at 314 miles, though AWD drops to around 307 miles.
GM’s Ultium platform does the job here without drama. It charges at up to 190 kW on DC fast chargers, which is respectable. The Lyriq targets buyers stepping out of Audi Q5 or BMW X3 territory, and it competes reasonably well on interior quality and features.
Reliability data is still maturing, but early ownership feedback has been mostly positive.
7. Cadillac Optiq-V — The Compact Performance Cadillac

- Base price: ~$54,000+
- Range: TBD (V-Series performance-tuned)
- Status: Arriving 2025–2026
The Optiq-V is Cadillac’s performance compact electric SUV — smaller than the Lyriq but carrying the V-Series badge that implies sportier tuning and higher output figures. Full specs are still being confirmed as availability rolls out, but positioning puts it between the Lyriq and a vehicle like the BMW iX M60 in terms of intent.
If you want a compact Cadillac EV with some edge to it, this is the one to watch.
8. Ford Mustang Mach-E — Still Relevant, Still Contested

- Base price: From ~$39,995
- Range: Up to 320 miles (Select RWD, Extended Range)
- Key variants: Select, Premium, California Route 1, GT, GT Performance
The Mach-E has been around long enough that it’s now a known quantity. The Mustang name still sparks arguments — purists never accepted it — but as a standalone electric SUV, it’s a genuinely solid option at the price. Ford Blue Oval Charge Network access and the option to use Tesla’s Supercharger network (with the right adapter) make charging logistics manageable.
The GT Performance Edition does 0–60 in 3.5 seconds. The California Route 1 prioritizes range over performance. Most buyers will land on the Premium or GT and be satisfied.
Ford’s EV software has improved substantially over the past two years. Early adopters had a rough ride; current buyers have it better.
9. Chevrolet Equinox EV — The Affordable Entry Point
- Base price: From ~$34,995
- Range: Up to 319 miles (FWD)
- Key variants: LT, RS (FWD and AWD)
The Equinox EV is arguably the most strategically important American electric vehicle right now. At $34,995, it’s one of the few EVs that can realistically compete with mainstream SUV pricing — especially with federal tax credits applied. The range is good, the interior is practical, and the Ultium platform underneath it is proven.
It’s not exciting. The interior won’t make you forget about a Lyriq. But for a buyer who wants an electric daily driver without the premium-SUV price tag, the Equinox EV makes a strong case. AWD is available on the RS trim if you need it.
10. Buick Electra E4 — Chinese-Market Buick, Now US-Bound

- Base price: TBD for US market
- Range: ~300+ miles (estimated)
- Status: US arrival expected 2025–2026
The Electra E4 is part of Buick’s electric lineup that launched in China first. A midsize electric SUV with a relatively clean exterior and an interior that leans into the brand’s traditional luxury positioning, it slots below the larger Electra E5 and is expected to bring competitive range figures when it arrives for US buyers.
Pricing will determine how well it competes in a segment where the Lyriq and Equinox EV already have a head start. More details are expected closer to US launch.
11. Jeep Wagoneer S — Jeep Goes Electric

- Base price: From ~$56,000
- Range: Up to ~303 miles
- Key variants: Launch Edition, standard AWD
Stellantis finally brought a proper electric Jeep to the US market with the Wagoneer S. It’s a midsize luxury SUV running dual motors and AWD standard, with a 100.5 kWh battery pack doing the work. Performance is solid at 0–60 in around 3.4 seconds.
The 303-mile range is respectable, and the Wagoneer S charges at up to 150 kW DC. Design-wise, it’s distinctly Jeep without relying on the old boxy templates — a sleeker, road-biased look that fits the luxury positioning. Jeep’s charging partnerships give it decent public network access.
It’s a strong first effort, though it’ll need reliable real-world delivery experience to build the brand equity Jeep is banking on here.
12. Ford Bronco Electric — Waiting on Ford’s Most Anticipated EV
- Status: Confirmed, not yet on sale
- Expected arrival: 2026
- Range target: ~200+ miles (off-road focused)
Ford confirmed the electric Bronco is coming. Given the Bronco nameplate’s off-road identity, the electric version faces an interesting challenge: range and off-road driving are difficult to optimize for simultaneously (crawling through trails drains batteries fast). Ford hasn’t fully detailed the specs yet, and a launch window around 2026 is the current expectation.
The Bronco fanbase is passionate, and the electric version needs to deliver genuine capability — not just the badge — to earn their approval. Watch this space.
13. Chevrolet Bolt EUV — The Practical Budget Pick

- Base price: From ~$26,500 (with 2024 price reductions)
- Range: Up to 247 miles
The Bolt EUV doesn’t have the longest range or the flashiest interior, but at this price — particularly with available tax credits — it fills a real gap. It’s a compact crossover with enough practicality for daily use, decent DC fast charging (though capped at 55 kW), and a well-established service network through Chevy dealerships.
If budget is the primary driver and you’re covering mostly urban or suburban distances, the Bolt EUV deserves a serious look.
14. Fisker Ocean — Gone, But Worth Knowing About

- Status: Production ended. Fisker Inc. filed Chapter 7 bankruptcy in 2024.
The Fisker Ocean launched with strong visual appeal, a California Cool identity, and an ambitious feature set — including a solar roof panel on higher trims and a rotating “California Mode” dashboard. For a moment, it looked like Fisker might actually pull it off.
It didn’t. Software bugs plagued early units, over-the-air fixes were slow and inconsistent, and the company ran out of capital before it could fix the business. Existing Ocean owners are now left without manufacturer support or warranty coverage, which is exactly the kind of outcome that makes EV buyers nervous about betting on startups.
The Ocean is worth including here because secondhand units will circulate for years and buyers will encounter them. Approach with significant caution.
Quick Comparison: Key Specs at a Glance
| Model | Starting Price (USD) | Range (miles) | Drivetrain | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tesla Model Y (2025) | ~$44,990 | Up to 330 | RWD / AWD | On sale |
| Tesla Model X (2025) | ~$79,990 | Up to 348 | AWD | On sale |
| Rivian R1S | ~$75,900 | Up to 410 | Dual/Quad Motor AWD | On sale |
| Lucid Gravity | ~$94,900 | Up to ~440 | AWD | On sale |
| GMC Hummer EV SUV (2026) | ~$98,845 | Up to 314 | AWD (3-motor) | On sale / 2026 updates |
| Cadillac Lyriq | ~$58,590 | Up to 314 | RWD / AWD | On sale |
| Cadillac Optiq-V | ~$54,000+ | TBD | AWD | Arriving 2025–2026 |
| Ford Mustang Mach-E | ~$39,995 | Up to 320 | RWD / AWD | On sale |
| Chevrolet Equinox EV | ~$34,995 | Up to 319 | FWD / AWD | On sale |
| Buick Electra E4 | TBD | ~300+ (est.) | AWD | US arrival pending |
| Jeep Wagoneer S | ~$56,000 | Up to 303 | AWD | On sale |
| Ford Bronco Electric | TBD | ~200+ (est.) | AWD | Expected 2026 |
| Chevrolet Bolt EUV | ~$26,500 | Up to 247 | FWD | On sale |
| Fisker Ocean | N/A | Up to 360 | RWD / AWD | ⚠️ Bankrupt — avoid |
Which One Should You Buy?
No single answer fits everyone, but here’s a rough breakdown by buyer profile:
- Best value under $35K: Chevrolet Equinox EV — competitive range, real-world practicality, solid incentive eligibility.
- Best all-rounder: Tesla Model Y Long Range — range, charging network, and resale value all work in its favor.
- Best for adventure/off-road: Rivian R1S — purpose-built for it, not just marketed that way.
- Best range, full stop: Lucid Gravity — 440 miles is a real number and a real advantage.
- Best luxury under $65K: Cadillac Lyriq — interior quality and feature set punch above the price.
- Most interesting niche pick: GMC Hummer EV SUV — nothing else does what it does, for better or worse.
Prices and specifications are based on available information as of 2025 and are subject to change. Always verify with manufacturers or dealers before purchasing.
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