America's longest-running nameplate still does what it's always done: move more people and cargo than almost anything else. Built on a full-size pickup frame since 1935, it's the original family hauler that never abandoned its truck roots. The sheer size means you'll pay at the pump, expect mid-teens fuel economy with the V8, and parking takes planning. Upper trims push into luxury SUV pricing where Navigator and Expedition become real alternatives. But if you need three rows, serious towing capacity, and that specific Suburban presence, nothing else quite fills the role. Just know you're buying capability over efficiency, and the size is both the point and the compromise.
Quick acceleration, strong range, and the Supercharger network still make this a capable electric crossover, and the 2026 Juniper refresh genuinely fixes the harsh ride and cabin noise that plagued earlier versions. But the ownership experience is the catch: 2023 models leaked water through the trunk seals badly enough for Consumer Reports to flag it, delivery quality is a coin toss (paint damage, misaligned panels, even a reported roof detachment), and service is email-only with centers that can go quiet for weeks. If you can tolerate the support gamble, the fundamentals work, but the Ioniq 5, EV6, and Mach-E deliver similar capability with a company that answers the phone.