The GMC Hummer EV is a 9,000-pound electric colossus that looks less like a truck and more like it was engineered to patrol the surface of Mars. With four-wheel steering, 1,000 horsepower, and party tricks like CrabWalk mode, it’s the loudest whisper the off-road world has ever heard. But like any bold leap into the future, this one doesn’t land without a jolt. The disruption doesn’t come from the vehicle itself, but from the world it's been unleashed into.
Let’s start with a reality check from someone who dove headfirst into this brave new world. In a Facebook post that reads like the diary of a man caught between evolution and anxiety, Ryan Stewman writes:
“Why the Hummer EV is most likely the worst idea and worst vehicle GM has ever made.
In December of last year, I leased a brand-new Hummer EV. I always wanted an H2, and this was the closest thing out there to it. On top of that, GM offered some crazy leasing incentives. Which I should have viewed as a red flag.
I have never owned an EV before, so I thought I'd try my luck with this large SUV. Thank God I own other vehicles that take real fuel like gas and diesel. When you buy the Hummer, it says it will get 300 miles to a complete (80%) charge.
When you drive the Hummer, you see the dash eat about 3 miles off the counter for every half mile you drive. I was once driving and from the time I saw an exit sign that said ½ mile, to the time I crossed the exit, I had lost 4 miles off my range.
I don’t know who calibrated these Hummers, but they must have been using kilometers, not miles. This means if you have to drive anywhere over 100 miles, you will have to stop and recharge.
Don’t get me started on recharging…If you plug the Hummer into a 110 V it adds 2 miles per hour of charging. It takes a week to get to 80%.
If you plug the Hummer into 220 V, it charges 8 miles an hour and still takes 24 hours to fully charge. This means if you need to drive over 100 miles, you have to charge for 24 hours minimum.
Well, I forgot to charge my Hummer last weekend, so it was down to 100 miles, which means like 20. So I drove to the EV charging station this morning. The app that works with the charging station is broken on iPhone. So I cannot get power.
If I want power from my house, I can charge for 3 hours and maybe drive 20 minutes, haha. If I were not fortunate enough to own other vehicles that take real fuel, and take 3 minutes to fill up and get 300-400 real miles per tank, I would be stuck at home for 24 hours.
The Hummers look and drive awesome, but being able to drive it is not as easy as just being able to look at it.
For the first time in my entire life, owning over 80 cars, this is the first one that gives me anxiety 100% of the time.
Will it get me where I need to go? Are there chargers? How long do I have to charge it? Will the technology even work to fill it up? How many miles can I really drive? To sum it up, I regret this car. This is the only vehicle that I have ever owned that I regret. There’s a reason GM is doing 0% financing with $1,000 back of the invoice to liquidate these models.
Don’t get one 1-star. On the flip side, I have had an F-250 since 2019 and it has never once given me a single issue, a drop of anxiety, or left me stranded at the pump."
Ryan’s experience underscores a truth many new EV owners face: range anxiety. As Jason Harrell shared in the comments, “that anxiety is real...having to plan your days around charging stations.” The Hummer EV doesn’t make the transition easy. Its sheer size and hunger make it less forgiving than smaller, more efficiency-minded EVs.
U.S. EV Adoption Surge: Registrations, Market Penetration & Consumer Intent
- U.S. EV registrations surged from about 280,000 in 2016 to 2.4 million in 2022, a 68% jump from 2021‑2022, while market penetration rose from around 1.8% in 2020 to over 7% by 2023
- Adoption has been fuelled by high gas prices, climate awareness, federal/state incentives, and tech improvements, but remains slowed by vehicle cost, “range anxiety,” and uneven charging infrastructure
- Charging networks are growing, yet gaps persist, particularly in rural and underserved areas, and utilities are adapting grids through smart-charging, vehicle-to-grid schemes, and time-of-use pricing to handle rising load
- Nearly half of U.S. consumers are considering EVs within two years; studies predict most current skeptics will begin considering EVs by the late 2020s or early 2030s, aligning with projected EV sales hitting 30% by 2030 and 60% by 2040
Still, it would be a mistake to throw the Hummer EV under the same bus it could effortlessly tow uphill. On a purely engineering level, this is a remarkable machine. From its adaptive air suspension to the Watts to Freedom (WTF) launch mode, it’s a truck that can go toe-to-toe with muscle cars and then crawl through terrain like a goat on Red Bull.
As Frankie Hart noted, Tesla owners don’t seem to suffer the same headaches, not because their cars are inherently better, but because Tesla built the entire experience from charger to dashboard. Legacy automakers are still playing catch-up, and when your truck weighs as much as a giraffe on a Segway, that game of catch-up matters more.
Navigating Hummer EV Charging: Speeds, Home Installations & App Challenges
And then there’s charging, the part of the EV ownership journey that makes or breaks the experience. Zachary Zimmerman noted, “An 80 amp 240 V will charge a Hummer much more quickly.” That’s good news, if you have the means and knowledge to install such a system. But most people, especially first-time EV owners like Stewman, aren’t electricians.
When your only reliable option is a household 110V outlet adding 2 miles per hour, you’re not living the Jetsons dream, you’re stuck in slow motion. And when the charging app won’t work on your iPhone? That’s not an inconvenience. That’s stranded.
Why the Hummer EV Impresses: Performance, Design & Electric Legacy
Yet the Hummer EV is not a bad vehicle. Far from it. It’s a statement, both of where we are and where we’re going. It drives incredibly well, looks like a concept car escaped from a Marvel movie, and shows what’s possible when GM throws its full weight behind a vision. As Chris Caruso rightly said,
“Chevrolet once had the best electric vehicle technology in the business… the Chevy Volt and Bolt are literal masterpieces.”
The Hummer EV is a continuation of that lineage, just aimed at a different kind of buyer.
Engineering Highlights of the GMC Hummer EV: Platform, Design & Sound Innovations
- The Hummer EV rides on GM’s BT1 “skateboard” platform, powered by the modular Ultium battery and drive-unit system, integrated traction motors, inverters, and onboard charging in a single package, supporting flexible dual- or tri-motor AWD layouts and high-voltage efficiency
- Engineers leveraged extensive Computer-Aided Engineering (CAE) tools for battery, drivetrain performance, and noise-vibration-harshness optimization, enabling a smooth ride and hushed cabin despite its heavy-duty off-road focus.
- Unique body support structures, like braced shock towers, dash-panel reinforcements, and removable roof elements, were developed to balance rigidity, e-trunk volume, and the Infinity Roof design, necessitating new tooling and logistics for oversized components
- To address the near-silent EV environment, GMC partnered with Bose to develop Electric Vehicle Sound Enhancement (EVSE), delivering dynamic interior sound cues tailored to driving modes and the dramatic “Watts to Freedom” launch sequence
There’s also something to be said for how far we’ve come. Twenty years ago, electric cars were glorified golf carts. Now we have supertrucks that make 1,200 lb-ft of torque and can summon torque vectoring on demand. The fact that we can even complain about slow apps and 20-hour charges is a sign of progress. This isn’t a failure of vision; it’s the growing pains of execution. The future is here. It just hasn’t ironed out its quirks yet.
He wanted the emotional echo of his old H2, but he ended up with a technological tour de force that demands more planning than he bargained for. His frustration is honest. But so is the achievement of this machine.
Image Sources: GMC Media Center
Noah Washington is an automotive journalist based in Atlanta, Georgia. He enjoys covering the latest news in the automotive industry and conducting reviews on the latest cars. He has been in the automotive industry since 15 years old and has been featured in prominent automotive news sites. You can reach him on X and LinkedIn for tips and to follow his automotive coverage.
Comments
This is the most hilarious…
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This is the most hilarious story I've read about Ev's and none of it is true or close to reality. What a poor job speaking against Ev's.
It's hyperbole in the…
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In reply to This is the most hilarious… by Brad (not verified)
It's hyperbole in the extreme. If they are REALLY getting one fifth of the stated range(which is doubtful based on other outrageous claims here) the vehicle needs to be serviced.
What kind of freak has owned…
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In reply to This is the most hilarious… by Brad (not verified)
What kind of freak has owned 80 cars in their life? Ha wow
You should just delete this…
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In reply to This is the most hilarious… by Brad (not verified)
You should just delete this article and pretend you were smart enough not to write it in the first place.
This is the most dramatic…
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In reply to This is the most hilarious… by Brad (not verified)
This is the most dramatic and untrue review I have ever read. Cant believe you pay this guy for this trash.
I've had my Hummer EV for…
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In reply to This is the most hilarious… by Brad (not verified)
I've had my Hummer EV for almost a year now. I LOVE it. Most favorite car I've ever owned. Taking the tops off today to enjoy this heat wave in style.
I agree, the most bogus…
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In reply to This is the most hilarious… by Brad (not verified)
I agree, the most bogus trash I’ve seen. Even acknowledging that the Hummer is monstrously inefficient, it has a 200 kw hr battery, at 2 miles per kw it will go hundreds of miles.
Who drives a luxery EV that…
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In reply to This is the most hilarious… by Brad (not verified)
Who drives a luxery EV that only a few can afford and plugs it in to a standard 110
Exactly what I was wondering…
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In reply to Who drives a luxery EV that… by Keith (not verified)
Exactly what I was wondering. I think this is someone who paid $115k for a car and wanted to brag about it in a strange complain-y way.
We had a Ford Fiesta and the transmission actually locked up (?) and exploded parts out the side. That was replaced in warranty. But just outside is warranty a fuel injector cracked and caught fire. And this happened right as the pinion in our 2nd transmission was failing for some reason and the car would barely make it up hills without that pinion slipping/grinding. Insurance gap covered it but I was at a 100% loss on a vehicle.
Out of 80 cars, a brand new Chevy Hummer scares him the most?? Dude charge it while you sleep...
Dude is the type of guy who…
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In reply to This is the most hilarious… by Brad (not verified)
Dude is the type of guy who wants to cover up his insecurities by pretending he's as successful and as masculine as Arnold, while talking about range anxiety?
It's not the range of his vehicle giving him anxiety, it's the size of his penis causing him emotional distress.
Then why does motortrend…
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In reply to This is the most hilarious… by Brad (not verified)
Then why does motortrend claim over 300 miles range (I believe 315) at 70mph on their test. Why do individual owners claim 310 to 360? Why does my wife get 325 on average?
Only way your averaging 100 miles of range out of that huge battery pack is by using all 1000 horses everytime your accelerate and then brake and do it again. Your the only person ive ever seen claim that, and ive read quite a bit about the hummer EV, before we leased one (feb 2025). This reads like a hit piece and a bad one at that. Anyone who test drives one for 20 miles or (takes one overnight like we did before buying) will know this is BS. Even on our teat drive at the dealer we were getting about 1.8miles per kw, and we did drive it hard. Your describing 3.5KW PER MILE. Thats not easy to do in anything. My old 2012 chevy volt gets about 4.5 miles per kw. 5 is considered really good. Most the trucks get 2-3miles per kw. Hummer is in that lower range. Its also the biggest. Why lie? If not show your results. Put a camera in your hummer put it on youtube and prove your not driving like an idiot to get 3.5 kw per mile. Because a 350kw pack isnt going to run out in 100 miles unless you are, and you shouldnt be, like you said its 9300lbs or so. Its not ment to be a corvette or ferrari. Your going to kill someone.
Wow! Pure sensationalism at…
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In reply to This is the most hilarious… by Brad (not verified)
Wow! Pure sensationalism at it's worst, complete noob ev driver at best. I rented one of these for a few days while in Colorado, and the only anxiety I felt was finding a fast charger (350w) coming back from one of the mountains we visited. The truck was excellent and range deviation even in the cold did even better than anticipated (speaking from someone who has owned BMW X5 hybrid, fiat 500e, and 2 Teslas 3/Y). The only other anxiety was my first time driving it in LA as its sheer width is something that can freak anyone out on LAs small roads. The only real critique is that of the charging times on anything but 350w, I will give them that. Plan accordingly.
Couldn’t agree with you more…
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In reply to This is the most hilarious… by Brad (not verified)
Couldn’t agree with you more, Brad. As an EV, PHEV, and ICE owner, this article is complete garbage.
What kind of freak has owned…
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In reply to This is the most hilarious… by Brad (not verified)
What kind of freak has owned 80 cars in their life? Ha wow
We have the GMC Sierra EV…
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In reply to This is the most hilarious… by Brad (not verified)
We have the GMC Sierra EV using with very similar stats to the hummer. We can drive to our lake house 411 miles away with one 30 minute stop to charge after about 270 miles. We get more range than advertised.
This article is pathetic,…
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In reply to This is the most hilarious… by Brad (not verified)
This article is pathetic, the author clearly has no understanding whatsoever of EVs, how they are charged ...nothing. The Hummer has a huge battery capacity , only a fool would charge this on 110V except in extreme situations. A 240v hard wired levef 2 charger gives you 20 plus miles of range per hour. It is capable of using the fastest DC. The Hummer will give you high 200 range under almost any driving style and conditions. This article is filled with misinformation. I hope the author wasn't paid because of so he should return the money
Sounds like an BEV hit piece…
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Sounds like an BEV hit piece. I need to write an article contrary to this nonsense. In my one year of ownership of a MY 22 Mercedes EQS, I'm never driving ice vehicles for everyday use. They're maintenance monsters for nostalgia purposes only lol.
"Range anxiety" is what ICE…
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"Range anxiety" is what ICE drivers feel every day, and project unnecessarily onto EV's.
With ICE, you wake up everyday wondering if you will need to 'get gas.'
Everytime an ICE driver gets in the car, they wonder, do I need to get gas, can I make it?
EV drivers never think about that. We wake up every day to a full charge, and never have to wonder if we will have to leave early for work to get gas, or if we will need to stop while dressed up nicely at a dirty dangerous gas station. Or if we will have to stop in the middle of the night, just so we can go to work in the morning. 😂
The far far far superior driving dynamics of an EV is just icing on the cake.
What kind of person owns 80…
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What kind of person owns 80 vehicles? I've been driving for over 40 years. I would have had to buy 2 cars every year to have owned 80. Who does that? Honestly?
Welcome to the real reason…
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Welcome to the real reason for EV's. Green is how they sold it. But curtailing freedom of movement is the real reason behind the Govt pushing citizens into EV's. Just read about a new 3800 acre solar field replacing 2 coal plants. How big was their land footprint? Where you going to recreate when every available inch of land is covered with solar and wind towers. That's where we're headed.
Sounds like a total act of…
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Sounds like a total act of the owner not doing his due diligence. No way no how does the world need a vehicle with that amount of ridiculous horsepower unless you're in some sort of military expeditionary force.
Huge EV's like the Hummer…
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Huge EV's like the Hummer make no sense to me. The target market for GM should be the smaller efficient EV's like the Bolt (old and new) and Equinox. I have a 2023 Bolt EUV. I live in an old house with electrical capacity limitations, so the best dedicated circuit I was able to use is just 20 amps, which means using a 16 amp charger.
And that is just fine with the Bolt, which is one of the slowest charging EV's every made. I just plug it in at night and by morning I am up to my targeted charge level (80% to 85%). That is good for about 220 miles, which more than meets my daily needs.
Remember that there is a good reason the range display is called a "guess-o-meter." It is only a rough estimate of your remaining range. There are times I will drive 20 miles and take only 8 miles off the guess-o-meter. Other times I will drive 10 miles and take 15 miles off the guess-o-meter. It depends on traffic, wind speed, temperature, driving style, etc.
I can say that aggressive driving will reduce range, so don't be tempted by the unlimited torque and off-the-line speed most EV's offer. If you wouldn't drive an ICE car that way, don't drive an EV that way.
Another buyer who didn't do…
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Another buyer who didn't do his homework. He admits to being lured in by the lease incentive and not really wanting this vehicle.
Forget " environmental "…
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Forget " environmental " considerations. Drive an ev because. You like it! Don't be a whiny, Kamala voter...b Yatch. Do your homework and make a decision and make it work .for you.
..
Petrol is king! Long live…
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Petrol is king! Long live the king!
If you leased it it isn’t…
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If you leased it it isn’t the 80th car you’ve owned, you lease
This is a very poorly…
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This is a very poorly written story.
This Hummer EV is one of the dumbest idea I've ever seen, but because of its consumption and bad engineering, not because it's an EV.
"When your only reliable option is a household 110V outlet adding 2 miles per hour" - If you bought an EV and expect not to change anything in your house and didn't include availability and cost of public charging, you didn't do your homework.
Most people who have a house will have an L2 charger installed (240V - 50 or 60A) - Not something you do yourself, you contract an electrician to do that and most power companies will subsidy these installations.
This Hummer makes no sense, as operating it (charging it) may end up costing you the same as the Gas version.
Unless you're on the green bandwagon, owning an EV is about cost and saving money.
If you really want an H2, just buy the regular one....
Wow, thinking that electrics…
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Wow, thinking that electrics are bad because you got the worst version of one that exists?
You know the exact same things occur with a gas H1, you can watch the gas gauge drop with that fuel sucker.
I agree. I hate my hummer EV…
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I agree.
I hate my hummer EV
Beautiful truck
Too many issues - back latch /front hatch -lowering/charging 2,000 miles in 6 months
The OnStar staff knows me personally
Luckily I’m able to charge for free at work but it’s definitely my to and from car
Not worth the price I paid
Bertha Benz had an electric…
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Bertha Benz had an electric vehicle, it served as the inspiration for Carl to build the first ICE automobile. The problems then were range, weight and recharge time. Sound familiar?
Pagination