If you’re cross-shopping a 2027 Ford Expedition against a 2026 Chevy Tahoe or Suburban, you’re asking one of the most practical full-size-SUV questions in this part of the country. Both trucks do the same jobs — haul a family, pull a livestock or gooseneck trailer, cover long highway stretches to Sioux Falls or Fargo — but they get there with different powertrains, different tech, and different body-style philosophies.
This guide is an honest cross-shop written for the buyers we actually see at Beadle Ford: ranchers and ag operators who’ve run GM full-size SUVs for decades, families who want the MAX-length option, and highway commuters deciding between EcoBoost V6 and V8 power. We’ll compare powertrains, towing, interior and tech (including BlueCruise vs. Super Cruise), and the MAX-vs.-Suburban body-style decision — then close with who should pick which truck and why.
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Ford EcoBoost V6 vs. GM V8 — which powertrain wins?
It depends on what you’re measuring. The 2027 Ford Expedition runs the 3.5L EcoBoost V6 — a twin-turbocharged V6 — with a 440 hp / 510 lb-ft High Output variant available on the Tremor, Platinum Stealth Performance, and Platinum Ultimate configurations. The 2026 Chevy Tahoe and Suburban use naturally aspirated V8s: a 5.3L as the standard engine, a 6.2L V8 as the upgrade. Both brands mate their engines to 10-speed automatic transmissions.
Where the V6 turbo wins: cruise fuel economy on flat interstate (the EcoBoost is off-boost at 70 mph and behaves like a smaller engine), altitude tolerance (a turbocharged V6 doesn’t lose power at elevation the way a naturally aspirated V8 does — relevant if you tow into Wyoming or the Black Hills), and peak torque delivered lower in the rev range. The Ford’s 510 lb-ft High Output figure outpaces the Tahoe’s 6.2L V8 on peak torque, and both High Output and the Tahoe’s 6.2L use the same 10-speed auto.
Where the GM V8 wins: throttle feel at cold starts, a mechanical simplicity that some long-time owners value, and the sound. Buyers who have run GM V8s for a decade or more often describe the EcoBoost as “different” — not worse, but different. Under load with a trailer, the EcoBoost spools up and delivers; a 6.2L V8 just digs in. Both work.
For the full 2027 Expedition lineup and engine-by-trim availability, see the complete 2027 Ford Expedition overview.
How does the 2027 Expedition’s towing compare to Tahoe and Suburban?
The Expedition has a few hundred pounds of headroom over comparable Tahoe and Suburban configurations. Official 2027 tow ratings will be confirmed when Ford releases the 2027 Towing Guide. Public reporting on the current-generation Expedition Tremor cites a maximum tow rating of approximately 9,600 lbs when properly equipped. Chevrolet’s published figures for the 2026 Tahoe cite a maximum tow rating in the 8,400 lb range when properly equipped, with the Suburban rated slightly lower due to its longer wheelbase and additional mass.
For most buyers in our service area, the real-world question isn’t peak rating — it’s whether the truck handles your specific trailer comfortably. A 24-foot gooseneck loaded with a pair of quarter horses, a 20-foot enclosed trailer with a side-by-side and gear, or a tandem-axle boat trailer for Lake Oahe all sit well inside both trucks’ capabilities when properly equipped. Configuration, payload, and weight distribution matter more than peak figures.
Where the Expedition adds practical value: Pro Trailer Hitch Assist and Pro Trailer Backup Assist are standard across every retail Expedition trim via Ford Co-Pilot360 Assist 2.0 — they’re not package-dependent. BLIS with Trailer Coverage extends blind-spot monitoring around whatever you’re pulling. The Tremor’s 3.73 Electronic Locking Rear Differential and seven drive modes give you a recovery option that a Tahoe or Suburban simply doesn’t offer from the factory.
If you’re sizing an Expedition to a specific trailer, contact Beadle Ford and we’ll run the configuration against your actual load before you reserve.
Ready to explore the Ford side?
Ford Digital Experience vs. GM tech — what’s different?
Both brands now run Google-integrated infotainment. The 2027 Expedition’s Ford Digital Experience pairs a 24" panoramic driver display with a 13.2" center display, with Google Maps, Google Assistant, and Google Play Store embedded natively. Wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto are standard from Active (200A) and up. The 2026 Tahoe and Suburban use GM’s Google Built-In system across a 17.7" center touchscreen on upper trims, with a similar Google Maps and Assistant integration.
The driver-monitoring hands-free systems are the bigger differentiator. Ford’s BlueCruise works on approximately 97% of controlled-access U.S. and Canada highways, includes Lane Change Assist and In-Lane Repositioning, and uses a driver-facing camera for attention monitoring. A 90-Day Trial is included on Active Touring (202A) retail orders, and the 1-Year + 90-Day plan is standard on Platinum Ultimate (17A) and King Ranch (400A). GM’s Super Cruise is the mature competing system — it’s hands-free on a different set of mapped roads and uses its own driver-monitoring approach.
For South Dakota buyers, the coverage question matters most on two routes: I-90 east-west across the state and the US-12 / US-281 highway system north-south. Both systems cover I-90 well; coverage on the two-lane and semi-divided highway stretches that most of us actually drive is narrower for both. The BlueCruise vs. Super Cruise vs. ProPilot comparison walks through which system covers which roads — it’s the right resource if hands-free driving is a real decision factor for you.
Ford Co-Pilot360 Assist 2.0 is standard on every retail Expedition. Features include a 360-degree camera with off-road overlays and a Rock Crawl view (the camera hardware that enables the Tremor’s trail-running), adaptive cruise with lane centering and Predictive Speed Assist, Pre-Collision Assist with automatic emergency braking, and BLIS with cross-traffic and trailer coverage. GM offers comparable tiers on the Tahoe and Suburban depending on trim.
Expedition MAX vs. Suburban — which is the right long-haul SUV?
Both are the extended-length full-size SUV answer from their respective brands. The Expedition MAX is the stretched version of the standard Expedition — available for 2027 on XL, Active Select, Active Touring, Platinum (including the 30th Anniversary Appearance Package), and King Ranch. Tremor is standard-length only. New for 2027: MAX Platinum is offered in 4×2 configuration as well as 4×4. The Suburban is GM’s always-extended full-size — there is no “standard Suburban” body style; the name itself denotes the extended platform.
The body-style decision usually comes down to powertrain and tech preference rather than size. Both offer meaningful third-row legroom and cargo volume behind the third row — enough for a family of five or six with luggage for a week. If you want extended length plus V8 power, Suburban is the answer. If you want extended length plus EcoBoost V6 plus Ford Digital Experience plus the option of the 30th Anniversary Appearance Package on a MAX Platinum, the MAX is the answer.
For a full Expedition vs. MAX decision framework — standard-length vs. extended, trim availability by body style, and when the extra length is genuinely worth it — see the 2027 Ford Expedition vs. Expedition MAX guide.
Which buyers should pick Ford and who should stay with GM?
Both trucks are legitimate. The right call depends on what you actually value in a full-size SUV, how you drive, and what your history with both brands has taught you.
Pick the 2027 Ford Expedition if:
- You want EcoBoost V6 turbocharged power and the cruise-fuel and altitude benefits that come with it
- You’re considering a factory off-road trim — the Tremor has no direct GM equivalent (GM’s Z71 is a package, not a standalone trim)
- You want the 30th Anniversary Appearance Package on a Platinum — the only Expedition configuration offering Blue Ember Metallic
- You want Pro Trailer Hitch Assist and Pro Trailer Backup Assist standard on every retail trim, not as an upsell
- You want BlueCruise coverage and the 97% controlled-access highway figure matches how you drive
- You want the 24" panoramic driver display and the Ford Digital Experience’s pano mode
Stay with the 2026 Chevy Tahoe or Suburban if:
- You’ve run GM V8s for decades and the sound, feel, and mechanical character of a naturally aspirated V8 matter to you
- You want a 6.2L V8 specifically and don’t want a turbocharged V6 alternative
- You want the 3.0L Duramax diesel inline-six option (Ford doesn’t offer a diesel in the Expedition)
- Super Cruise’s mapped-road footprint covers your specific highway routes better than BlueCruise does
- You’re deeply loyal to the Chevrolet brand and have a service relationship you want to keep
For the ag buyer who has run GM full-size forever and is considering the switch because of a specific feature — whether that’s BlueCruise, the EcoBoost V6’s altitude behavior, Pro Trailer Hitch Assist, or the Tremor — come drive both and see which one you get out of at the end of a 200-mile day. That usually decides it.
Key Takeaways
- Ford: 3.5L EcoBoost V6 (standard) and 3.5L EcoBoost V6 High Output at 440 hp / 510 lb-ft (confirmed). GM: 5.3L V8 standard, 6.2L V8 optional, 3.0L Duramax diesel I6 optional.
- Both brands use 10-speed automatic transmissions.
- Expedition max tow is reported at approximately 9,600 lbs (Tremor) pending the 2027 Ford Towing Guide; Tahoe tops out near 8,400 lbs per Chevrolet’s published figures.
- Pro Trailer Hitch Assist and Pro Trailer Backup Assist are standard on every retail 2027 Expedition trim via Ford Co-Pilot360 Assist 2.0.
- BlueCruise covers approximately 97% of controlled-access U.S. and Canada highways; Super Cruise covers a different mapped footprint. Compare by the routes you actually drive.
- No direct GM equivalent to the Expedition Tremor as a factory off-road trim. No Ford Expedition diesel option.
Frequently Asked Questions
My Take on the Expedition vs. Tahoe & Suburban Cross-Shop
Both trucks are legitimate. I won’t pretend otherwise. What I tell buyers who walk into Beadle Ford cross-shopping from a GM full-size is this: drive the EcoBoost V6 before you decide. It’s different from a 5.3L or 6.2L V8, and whether that difference registers as “better” or just “different” depends on what you’re used to. The Expedition’s advantages — peak tow headroom, standard Pro Trailer assists, Tremor capability, BlueCruise coverage, the 24" panoramic display — are real, but they matter more to some buyers than others.
If you’ve been running GM for decades and everything works for you, there’s no shame in sticking with GM. If you’re curious about what the sixth-generation Expedition does better, come drive one. I’ll walk you through the configuration and we’ll figure out honestly whether switching makes sense for your week. No pressure, no scripts.
About the Author
Lexy Tabbert — Beadle Ford, Bowdle, SD
Lexy Tabbert is the Director of Sales and Marketing at Beadle Ford in Bowdle, South Dakota. She covers Ford vehicles, trim comparisons, and buyer guidance — helping families, ranchers, and ag operators across the region find the right truck and configuration for their needs. Learn more about Lexy.

