Stellantis unveils Ram EV pickup, to debut at New York auto show in 2024

Mike Koval Jr., Ram Brand Chief Executive Officer, and Carlos Tavares, Chief Executive Officer of Stellantis, pose during a presentation at the New York International Auto Show, in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., April 5, 2023

Stellantis NV on 5th April unveiled its new electric Ram pickup truck, which is poised to debut on the market late in 2024 as a key part of the French-Italian automaker’s strategy to electrify its vehicle line-up.

The 2025 model year Ram 1500 REV, introduced at the New York Auto Show which runs until April 16, will have a range of as much as 500 miles (804 km) using an optional, bigger 229-kilowatt battery pack. The EV truck will go on sale in one of the most important segments of the North American electric vehicle market.

Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares said the truck will be built in the U.S. and the location would be announced soon. He said the company was still “fine tuning the plan.” He told reporters that consumers will choose the Ram over other EV trucks because it will exceed other trucks’ performance on range, speed of charge, towing and other factors. He said after the announcement a lot of rivals “will be under pressure to try to beat us.”

The Ram truck’s launch late in 2024 will come more than two years after similar EV trucks like the Rivian R1T electric pickup and Ford’s F-150 Lightning electric truck.

The RAM EV truck will be built on a new body-on-frame architecture designed for full-size EVs, capable of towing up to 14,000 lbs and carry a payload of up to 2,700 lbs. It will have a range of up to 350 miles with a standard 168-kilowatt battery pack, rising to 500 miles on the optional 229-kilowatt battery.

Stellantis also unveiled its 2024 model plug-in hybrid electric Jeep Wrangler at the show. By 2030, 50% of Jeep brand sales in the U.S. will be battery-electric, the company said.

Tavares has set ambitious targets to slash emissions in half by 2030, including that 100% of car sales in Europe and 50% of car and light-duty truck sales in the U.S. be of electric vehicles by the end of the decade.

Stellantis in late February indefinitely idled a Jeep assembly plant in Illinois, blaming the high cost of EVs. Automakers face tougher vehicle emissions standards in the U.S. and Europe and mandates from California and other U.S. states to sell a rising number of electric vehicles.