Capability · Towing & Payload

2026 Silverado 2500HD Towing & Payload Capacity NWA

Properly equipped with the available Duramax 6.6L Turbo-Diesel V8, the 2026 Chevy Silverado 2500HD pulls up to 22,050 lbs on a gooseneck or fifth-wheel hitch from a Crew Cab. Here is the full towing and payload picture by engine and configuration, built for Northwest Arkansas drivers who buy a truck for what it can pull.

Towing capability is the reason most buyers step up to a heavy-duty truck, and the 2026 Silverado 2500HD is engineered for exactly that. Two engines anchor the lineup: a standard 6.6L V8 gas engine rated at 401 horsepower and 464 lb-ft of torque, and the available Duramax 6.6L Turbo-Diesel V8 with 470 horsepower and 975 lb-ft of torque. Both run a 10-speed Allison automatic transmission tuned for heavy loads.

The rating you can actually use depends on engine, cab, bed, drivetrain, and the trailering package on the truck, so the figures below are tied to the configurations that earn them. If you are weighing the gas V8 against the Duramax, or trying to match a trailer to the right build before you shop the Silverado 2500HD inventory at George Nunnally Chevrolet, this guide lays it out.

2026 Chevrolet Silverado 2500HD heavy-duty pickup

Maximum Towing

Maximum Towing Capacity by Configuration

There is no single 2500HD tow number. With a conventional ball hitch, ratings run from 14,500 lbs on base configurations up to 20,000 lbs on a Duramax diesel Crew Cab with the Max Trailering Package. Stepping up to a gooseneck or fifth-wheel hitch raises the ceiling further, to a maximum of 22,050 lbs on a properly equipped Crew Cab Duramax, which Chevrolet calls segment-leading. The conventional ratings from the 2026 Chevrolet trailering guide:

Engine and equipment Max conventional tow GCWR
6.6L V8 gas (17" wheels) 14,500 lbs 24,500 lbs
6.6L V8 gas (18"–22" wheels) up to 16,000 lbs 26,000 lbs
Duramax 6.6L diesel (18"–22" wheels) up to 18,500 lbs up to 27,500 lbs
Duramax 6.6L diesel + Max Trailering Package 20,000 lbs 30,000 lbs

Ratings are for comparison and apply when properly equipped; the weight of passengers, cargo, and options reduces what you can tow. Source: 2026 Chevrolet Silverado 2500HD trailering guide.

Payload

Maximum Payload by Configuration

Payload is the weight you carry in the cab and bed combined, including passengers, tools, and trailer tongue weight, and it works against towing as one combined limit (your GCWR). On the 2026 Silverado 2500HD, gas configurations carry more payload than diesel, because the Duramax adds weight up front, and lighter Regular and Double Cab bodies carry more than the Crew Cab.

Edmunds lists 3,426 lbs on a gas Crew Cab, and marketed maximums reach up to about 3,700 lbs depending on configuration. A heavy trailer with high tongue weight eats into that figure, so your truck's exact payload is printed on the door-jamb certification label. If you regularly load the bed while towing, plan the two numbers together rather than chasing the headline tow rating alone.

Equipment

Trailering Packages and Features

Every Silverado 2500HD starts with real trailering hardware: a standard Trailering Package, vertical trailering mirrors, and an automatic locking rear differential, plus the legendary Durabed with 12 standard tie-downs. The single most important option for serious towing is the Max Trailering Package, which is what lifts a Duramax diesel to its 20,000-lb conventional rating and a 30,000-lb GCWR. If your loads push past the mid-teens, that package is the box to check.

Every 2026 Silverado 2500HD also includes an integrated trailer brake controller for smoother stops with a loaded trailer behind you, and higher trims add power-adjustable, heated, and power-folding trailering mirrors. Engine choice and exact availability vary by trim, which is covered on the all-trims comparison and the full specs page.

Heavy Trailering

Fifth-Wheel and Gooseneck Capability

For the heaviest loads, a fifth-wheel or gooseneck hitch positions the trailer's weight over the rear axle instead of behind the bumper, which improves stability and unlocks the truck's highest ratings. That is how the 2500HD reaches its 22,050-lb maximum, on a properly equipped Crew Cab with the Duramax diesel. The bed is engineered to accept gooseneck and fifth-wheel setups, and the available Transparent Trailer View camera still works with these hitches so you can effectively see through the trailer. Large travel trailers, horse trailers, and equipment haulers are exactly the use case this configuration is built for.

Technology

Available Trailering Technology

The 2026 Silverado 2500HD offers a deep set of camera and trailering technology. The available Advanced Trailering System pairs with up to 8 cameras and as many as 14 views, including Transparent Trailer View, Hitch View for easier coupling, and Bed View for lining up a gooseneck or fifth-wheel pin. An available in-vehicle Trailering App stores trailer profiles, runs pre-departure checklists, and tracks trailer status, while Trailer Side Blind Zone Alert watches the lanes alongside a long trailer. Chevrolet notes the Silverado HD has been named America's Most Awarded Heavy Duty Truck for Dependability by J.D. Power, 2016 to 2025.

What It Can Tow

What Can the 2026 Silverado 2500HD Actually Tow?

Ratings only matter once you match them to a real trailer. The loaded weights below are typical ranges, not exact figures, so check your own trailer and gear before you hitch up. Read them against the 2500HD ceilings: roughly 14,500 to 16,000 lbs on a gas conventional setup, up to 20,000 lbs on a Duramax conventional, and up to 22,050 lbs on a Duramax gooseneck or fifth-wheel.

Loaded trailer / load Typical weight What it asks of the truck
Tandem-axle bass or ski boat plus trailer about 3,500–6,000 lbs Any 2500HD configuration handles it easily.
Enclosed car hauler with a vehicle inside about 7,000–11,000 lbs Gas conventional works; diesel adds ease on grades.
Two or three-horse aluminum gooseneck, loaded about 8,000–12,000 lbs Duramax with a gooseneck hitch is the comfortable pick.
Skid steer or mini-excavator on an equipment trailer about 10,000–16,000 lbs Duramax, conventional with Max Trailering or gooseneck.
Large fifth-wheel RV, loaded about 12,000–18,000 lbs Duramax plus a fifth-wheel hitch, properly equipped.

The build that reaches the headline numbers is a Crew Cab with the Duramax 6.6L Turbo-Diesel, the Max Trailering Package, and a gooseneck or fifth-wheel hitch. You can browse Silverado 2500HD trucks in stock to find one set up that way, and the Silverado 2500HD vs Ford F-250 comparison shows how those ratings stack up against the competition.

Local Towing

Real-World Towing in Northwest Arkansas

Around here the rating matters most in specific places. Boats and pontoons head to Beaver Lake all summer, where a winter-slick or steep launch ramp is exactly where the margin between your trailer's weight and the truck's rating keeps the descent controlled. Loaded equipment and dump trailers climb the Ozark grades along US-412, and the diesel's torque is what holds a steady line on a long pull. Horse and livestock haulers running out past Berryville and Lincoln, and jobsite trailers serving the growth around Highfill and Decatur, are everyday work for a properly configured 2500HD.

Questions

Towing FAQs

How much can the 2026 Silverado 2500HD tow?

When properly equipped, the 2026 Silverado 2500HD tows up to 22,050 lbs on a gooseneck or fifth-wheel hitch with the available Duramax 6.6L Turbo-Diesel V8 in a Crew Cab. With a conventional ball hitch, the maximum is 20,000 lbs on a Duramax with the Max Trailering Package. Gas configurations tow up to 16,000 lbs conventionally, and base configurations are rated at 14,500 lbs.

Gas V8 or Duramax diesel for towing?

The standard 6.6L V8 gas engine makes 401 horsepower and 464 lb-ft and tows up to 16,000 lbs conventionally, which covers most boats, car haulers, and lighter equipment trailers. The available Duramax 6.6L Turbo-Diesel V8 makes 470 horsepower and 975 lb-ft, reaches 20,000 lbs conventional and 22,050 lbs on a gooseneck, and is the better choice for heavy, frequent towing and long grades.

How much can the Silverado 2500HD carry (payload)?

Payload depends on cab, bed, drivetrain, and engine. Edmunds lists 3,426 lbs on a gas Crew Cab, and marketed maximums reach up to about 3,700 lbs depending on configuration. Gas models carry more than diesel, and lighter Regular and Double Cab bodies carry the most. Your truck's exact payload is on the door-jamb certification label.

Do I need the Max Trailering Package?

For the highest conventional rating, yes. The Max Trailering Package is what lifts a Duramax diesel 2500HD to its 20,000-lb conventional tow rating and a 30,000-lb GCWR. If your trailers stay in the low-to-mid teens, a standard Duramax or the gas V8 may be enough, but for anything heavier the package is worth ordering.

Can the 2500HD pull a fifth-wheel or gooseneck trailer?

Yes. The bed is built to accept gooseneck and fifth-wheel hitches, and that setup is how the truck reaches its 22,050-lb maximum on a properly equipped Crew Cab Duramax. The available Transparent Trailer View and Bed View cameras work with these hitches to make coupling and backing easier.

Where can I find a Silverado 2500HD set up for towing near Bentonville?

George Nunnally Chevrolet stocks the 2026 Silverado 2500HD in gas and Duramax diesel configurations, including trucks equipped for heavy trailering. The 2500HD starts at $45,900, and you can browse the current inventory online or get pre-approved before you visit. Our team can match a truck to the trailer you actually pull around Northwest Arkansas.

Next Step

Match a 2026 Silverado 2500HD to your trailer

Tell us what you tow and we will help you spec the right engine, cab, and trailering package at George Nunnally Chevrolet in Bentonville.

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MSRP excludes destination freight charge, tax, title, license, dealer fees, and optional equipment. Dealer sets final price. Maximum trailering and payload ratings require properly equipped vehicles; the weight of passengers, cargo, and options reduces capacity.


May not represent actual vehicle. (Options, colors, trim and body style may vary)

The Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price excludes tax, title, license, dealer fees and optional equipment. Dealer sets final price.