2023 Cadillac Escalade V-Series Review – The Fun of Wretched Excess

Tim Healey
by Tim Healey

Fast Facts

2023 Cadillac Escalade V-Series Fast Facts

Powertrain
6.2-liter supercharged V8 (682 horsepower @ 6,000 RPM, 653 lb-ft @ 4,400 RPM)
Transmission/Drive-Wheel Layout
10-speed automatic, all-wheel drive
Fuel Economy, MPG
11 city / 16 highway / 13 combined (EPA Rating, MPG)
Fuel Economy, L/100km
21.6 city / 14.9 highway / 18.6 combined. (NRCan Rating, L/100km)
Base Price
$149,195 (U.S.) / $196,729 (Canada)
As-Tested Price
$155,365 (U.S.) / $200,999 (Canada)
Prices include $1,795 destination charge in the United States and $2,400 for freight, PDI, and A/C tax in Canada and, because of cross-border equipment differences, can’t be directly compared.

No one, but no one, needs a 2023 Cadillac Escalade V-Series.

Sure, some folks can make a reasonable argument for needing a large SUV for towing or hauling people and stuff. Far fewer people who drive these things need them rather than want them, but there is a use case.

Not for the V.


It’s one thing to say that no one really needs the luxury coddling – that’s a want. But mix in this powertrain – yeah, you don’t need this thing. But there’s a decent change that even if large, luxurious, powerful SUVs make you cringe – even if you’re one of those card-carrying members of Greenpeace who used to solicit donations from me at my local Walgreen’s – you’ll want this rig. At least after you dig into the throttle pedal.

There’s a beast of a motor underhood – a supercharged 6.2-liter that makes 682 horsepower and 653 lb-ft of torque. Despite the massive weight over 6,000 pounds, there’s enough thrust on hand to give any driver with a heavy right foot and plenty of open space in front a case of the grins.

It sounds pretty frickin’ cool, too.

Backing up a sec, here’s what you get when you opt to have the hyphen and the “V” after “Escalade”: 22-inch wheels, different front and rear fascias, quad exhaust outlets, launch control, magnetic ride control, adaptive air suspension, unique tuning for the rear springs and damper hardware, software calibrations specific to the trim, a V drive mode that lowers the suspension, turns on the active exhaust, and lets you customize the drive-mode settings. There is also V badging throughout, and Brembo brakes with red-painted, six-piston calipers. Along with other items.

I never had the chance to really push this Escalade on a challenging road – the one rural two-lane I drove on served up only gentle curves – so I can’t tell you if this behemoth handles like a Blackwing. I’d bet it wouldn’t be that good, though you’d still be pleasantly surprised. What I can say is that what I did experience, whether in the sportier drive modes or not, was a large SUV that felt much more buttoned down and tight than you’d expect. It handles pretty well, though one can only bend the laws of physics so far.

Ride-wise, the ‘Slade was silky smooth but never soft. Aside from the V8, the ride might be this Caddy’s best feature. It was my favorite part of the driving experience, acceleration aside.

I also found the available SuperCruise hands-free driving assistance feature to work fairly well – and I was enamored with the digital gauge cluster’s ability to show me a front-facing camera view as I drove. It was clear and cool-looking and was a nice way to avoid visibility suffering from the long hood, though at times I was tempted to look at it instead of out the windshield. The night-vision feature is cool, too.

I never lacked space or comfort, as you’d expect. After a while, the novelty of the fuel-sucking V8 wore off (well, not totally) and I just settled into a rhythm of relatively stress-free driving. The Escalade V is just pleasant to commute in. Spacious, smooth, silent – it’s a luxury experience.

The only letdown involves some interior materials that feel a bit dated and downmarket for the price – and compared to the competition.

It takes a deep bank account to bring one of these bad boys home. The starting price for my test unit was just a hair under $150K and with options the as-tested price was $155K and change.

That includes standard and available features like the aforementioned V features, electronic limited-slip differential, navigation, premium audio, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, rear-seat entertainment, head-up display, panoramic sunroof, camera rearview mirror, wireless device charging, heated steering wheel, heated and cooled front seats, heated second-row seats, power liftgate, tri-zone climate control, adaptive cruise control, power running boards, and a console refrigerator. Plus the usual suite of ADAS systems – trailer blind-zone alert and brake-pad monitoring are the standouts there.

Fuel economy is a predictably dismal 11 mpg city/16 mpg highway/13 mpg combined.

I can’t imagine ever needing this vehicle or anything like it. But I gotta admit, I kinda want one.

[Images © 2023 Tim Healey/TTAC]

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Tim Healey
Tim Healey

Tim Healey grew up around the auto-parts business and has always had a love for cars — his parents joke his first word was “‘Vette”. Despite this, he wanted to pursue a career in sports writing but he ended up falling semi-accidentally into the automotive-journalism industry, first at Consumer Guide Automotive and later at Web2Carz.com. He also worked as an industry analyst at Mintel Group and freelanced for About.com, CarFax, Vehix.com, High Gear Media, Torque News, FutureCar.com, Cars.com, among others, and of course Vertical Scope sites such as AutoGuide.com, Off-Road.com, and HybridCars.com. He’s an urbanite and as such, doesn’t need a daily driver, but if he had one, it would be compact, sporty, and have a manual transmission.

More by Tim Healey

Comments
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  • Wjtinfwb Wjtinfwb on Oct 09, 2023

    Makes a 175k G-class look like a smart buy.

  • GenesisCoupe380GT GenesisCoupe380GT on Oct 30, 2023

    Mid-engine Corvette: They never should've spent the money to do it

    Roided-out Escalade: What the hell took them so long to finally do it?


    Chevrolet-Cadillac(not saying GM because the other brands are completely useless) is damned difficult to like on their best years, like the Dallas Cowboys

  • Master Baiter So people who chose to drive cars need to pay extra for hybridization while Joe Six Pack can continue to tool around in his Peterbilt--otherwise known as an F150/Silverado/Ram.
  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X Imagine when the price of electricity triples because of all the intermittent sources being added to the grid to charge all the electric cars. Then it triples again because road taxes have to be collected on electric vehicles. Then the vehicles themselves triple because there are shortages of lithium and cobalt and copper.I’d break out the popcorn but since it will be up to $80 a cup by then, I will pass.
  • Kcflyer more smoke and mirrors from the installed dodo
  • Vatchy "are making cars and trucks that give American drivers more choices today than ever before"Fine, because more choices are good. What is not good is that they are trying to cut our choices down to 1 - electric - instead of letting the market decide. That, in this case, is just stupid. I personally don't have anything against electric cars but my choice is no for as long as possible.I bought a six-cylinder pickup to pull a camper. I have absolutely no interest in pulling it a hundred miles, finding a place to unhook and leave it, find a working charging station, waiting 30-60 minutes (or longer) to fill up, then go back and hope my camper is still where I left it, hook up, and finally go. So, drive a hundred, spend an hour or more, drive another hundred, spend another hour or more, etc. That is not my choice.
  • Jkross22 Didn't regulatory pressure push carmakers to cheat on emissions testing? VW took most of the smoke, but didn't every other company making diesels cheat?I wonder how many are cheating now - tests giving false EV range, MPGe phantom numbers, charging times/speeds being fudged, etc. I'm grousing more about the reality (futility?) of demanding something the public doesn't want/need/value rather than the 'common goodness' of the effort itself. With this effort on the heels of the billions being spent on chargers and less than 10 being built in the last few years, most of us are developing perma-stinkeye. Or it could just be the name Pete Buttigeig - a name synonymous with incompetence.
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