I am currently the owner of a 2025 Limited with the Hurricane HO but that truck has been nothing but headaches and is currently involved in litigation with FCA. At some point I need to find something else but really I don't think there's anything that checks my boxes like a RAM does. Heck, I even like the Hurricane engine. The thing is I don't want to jump out of the pan just to land in, well, the pan. There's of course my own personal experiences but I've even caught folks at the dealership saying things that seem to point toward a reality where the 2025's were not very good and had a lot more issues then their predecessors.
Furthermore, I'm having a hard time deciding because of my RAM experience so far
RAM #1: Perfect truck. Never needed anything
RAM #2: Excellent truck - no issues
RAM #3: Wiped the cam at 25mi (yes, twenty-five) and got swapped for a different truck
RAM #4: The replacement for #3 and probably the best vehicle I've had so far
RAM #5: Basically a disaster that's been nothing but problems, stress, and drama
So here I am where the best and worst vehicles I've owned are the same make, model, and general age and let's just say I've had a healthy number of cars in my life so far.
What's everyone's read on the 2026 model year? Of course the Hemi is back which is great but I'm thinking more in terms of reliability concerns. Do you think Stellantis got their crap together and did a little better job on the second model year (of the 5th gen refresh/Hurricane platform in RAM)? Does anyone out there have one that has some miles on already?
I cant comment on rams reliability. Im here basically looking to find out how it is with this engine. I can comment on other brands though. I've owned a 2017 ford f150 lariat, a 2019 gmc sierra denali and currently have a 23 chevy silverado high country. I got scared off of ram before my latest truck purchase and kind of wish I had just gotten that instead.
My f150 had problems with the transmission and at one point completely shut down while I was driving it. It was in the shop for 28 days straight before they could even figure out to get it to start. Evidently it was such a strange problem, it went all the way to one of the highest engineers in the company who was the only person tk figure it out. I ended up going throw lemon law with that one.
My 2019 denali had tons of random electronics problems and, had I kept it, probably would have been part of the massive recall for all the failing 6.2 liter v8 engines. I traded it after about six months because I was sick of all the random problems and the seats also were horribly uncomfortable.
After that I went to a car for a couple years then bought my silverado. The silverado, at first was pretty good. Only real issue was the parking sensor which was replaced under warranty and has now stopped working again outside of warranty. I didnt have a lot of problems for a couple years, but now at 77k miles im having issues with electronics, recognizing the key fob, the infotainment not working intermittently, sometimes the left turn signal and entire light cluster wont come on at all and it will say service needed but then start working again next time I turn it on and not have thst issue for weeks. Im getting some worrying ticking sounds, transmission is getting jerkier and sometime have grinding sounds at low speeds. I've had all of it checked out multiple times, not just by the dealer and no one can find anything specific wrong with it.
What I've learned from this, and the main point of my rant, is that, all the companies making trucks have some big quality control/reliability problems. Even Toyota cant make a reliable vehicle anymore, so, for me at least, ill look at major known issues and use that as a factor (ie. Engine/transmission failures), but other than that, im just going to get whatever I like the best and go into it expecting that im probably going to have some problems with the vehicle regardless of the brand.