The 2025 Cadillac Escalade IQ Gets Impressive Tech and a Six-Figure Starting Price

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

There are Cadillacs, and then there’s the Escalade. The hulking luxury family hauler has been around since the late 1990s and has become a showcase for the automaker’s technology and design prowess, but GM is going electric, and a three-ton V8-powered SUV doesn’t fit with that vision. Of course, Cadillac couldn’t just drop the Escalade, so it’s going electric with the 2025 Escalade IQ, an impressive and expensive EV that looks every bit as deluxe as its liquid dinosaur-guzzling counterparts. 


The IQ’s $130,000 starting price buys a three-row SUV with curvier lines than the current gas model, and Cadillac said it’s the most aerodynamic Escalade to date. Riding on 24-inch wheels, the SUV has air suspension, a 450-mile range, and eye-popping specs. It delivers up to 750 horsepower using the Velocity Max setting, and there’s a whopping 785 pound-feet of torque. Those numbers enable a sub-five-second 0-60 mph time and up to 8,000 pounds of towing capacity. 

Like the GMC Hummer EV, the Escalade IQ has rear-wheel steering and its own version of the funky crab walk feature that helps the big-boy Cadillac maneuver in tight spaces. The IQ also offers one-pedal driving and adjustable regenerative braking. Cadillac also equipped a heat pump system that improves range and speeds up charging. It can also redirect heat from the battery to the SUV’s climate control system.


The current Escalade’s cabin is packed with screens, and the IQ will follow suit. It features 55 inches of screen that stretches across the dash. The system uses a powerful Qualcomm Snapdragon processor and runs Google built-in. That said, one of the most notable stories about the IQ’s tech comes from what it’s missing: Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. GM promised that the features would not be available in its upcoming EVs, and we’re now starting to see the controversial policy in action.

Cadillac equips a long list of safety features, including intersection automatic emergency braking, blind spot steering assist, and an HD surround-view camera system. Super Cruise comes standard with a three-year free subscription through OnStar, bringing hands-free driving on more than 400,000 miles of highway in the U.S. and Canada.


The IQ will be built in GM’s Factory Zero in Michigan and enter production in the summer of 2024. 

[Images: Cadillac]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • MaintenanceCosts MaintenanceCosts on Aug 10, 2023

    This is what results when your answer to any engineering issue that crops up during development is "MAKE IT BIGGER!"

    • Peter Peter on Aug 11, 2023

      MERICA


  • Art_Vandelay Art_Vandelay on Aug 11, 2023

    wow...some posts deleted here. I guess some folks don't like being reminded of the Motors Liquidation Corp

    • RHD RHD on Aug 11, 2023

      Lots of posts were deleted. What, we can't say that when someone buys an Escalade IQ, they get too much of the former and lack too much of the latter?


  • Ras815 The most interesting small detail I picked up from the brochures: in 1960, there was a Cadillac dealer on the Grand Concourse in the Bronx. How times would change in that area just a few years later...
  • Bee Actually will be moving up that way soon around end of October, and bringing my 2008(9) Premier Sable with me, so glad to know there are some local spare parts kicking around. Most of what I read in this article is spot on. On my end Microsoft Sync was (and still is) god awful, the buttons didn't last as long as I'd have liked (both the window controls and the O/D button have broken at least once), and the lacking interior lighting in spite of how spacious the interior is makes road trips a bit tricky should anyone drop something into the abyss. On the flip side, the air conditioning is better than any car I've bought since (and this is in Texas heat so I take a/c seriously), I have been keeping a consistent 30mpg on highway drives, and the interior has been able to handle everything I've thrown at it. With it running almost as well as in 2009, it's been a hard car to even consider getting rid of, with all the room and conveniences, it's sad to have seen them cut the cord on this division.
  • Doc423 Not in my lifetime.
  • MRF 95 T-Bird Find a beat up Volvo 122s wagon with a good rear section. Build a pickup (El Volvomino) by grafting it on the back of this one.
  • Ravenuer I was quite surprised when reading about the lead based Pininfarina build quality issue with the 59-60 Eldorado Broughams. Never read that before. Interesting.
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