2013
Chevrolet Suburban

Starts at:
$47,630
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New 2013 Chevrolet Suburban
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Available trims

See the differences side-by-side to compare trims.
  • 2WD 4dr 1500 LS
    Starts at
    $43,870
    15 City / 21 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas/Ethanol V8
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 4dr 2500 LS
    Starts at
    $45,480
    10 City / 16 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V8
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4WD 4dr 1500 LS
    Starts at
    $46,715
    15 City / 21 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas/Ethanol V8
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 4dr 1500 LT
    Starts at
    $47,630
    15 City / 21 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas/Ethanol V8
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4WD 4dr 2500 LS
    Starts at
    $48,320
    10 City / 15 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V8
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 4dr 2500 LT
    Starts at
    $49,220
    10 City / 16 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas V8
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4WD 4dr 1500 LT
    Starts at
    $50,475
    15 City / 21 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas/Ethanol V8
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4WD 4dr 2500 LT
    Starts at
    $52,065
    10 City / 15 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas V8
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 4dr 1500 LTZ
    Starts at
    $56,765
    15 City / 21 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas/Ethanol V8
    Engine
    Rear Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4WD 4dr 1500 LTZ
    Starts at
    $59,765
    15 City / 21 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas/Ethanol V8
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs

Photo & video gallery

2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban 2013 Chevrolet Suburban

Notable features

Longer version of Chevrolet Tahoe
Trailer-sway control
Available 4WD
Seats up to nine
Tows up to 9,600 pounds (2500 version)

The good & the bad

The good

Relative gas mileage
Seating capacity
Cargo room
Ride quality with adaptive suspension (1500)
Roomy second row

The bad

Third row doesn't fold flat
Ungainly dimensions
Modest acceleration (1500)
Steering and handling
Available front middle seat lacks three-point seat belt

Expert 2013 Chevrolet Suburban review

our expert's take
Our expert's take
By Kelsey Mays
Full article
our expert's take

Editor’s note: This review was written in June 2012 about the 2012 Chevrolet Suburban. Little of substance has changed with this year’s model. To see what’s new for 2013, click here, or check out a side-by-side comparison of the two model years.

Should SUVs such as the Chevrolet Suburban, a longer version of the Tahoe, be extinct? Faced with gas mileage in the teens, dimensions that hug both lines of a parking space and an outmatched V-8 that huffs more than it hauls, most shoppers will laugh their way to anything else. But for the few who need its capabilities, the Suburban has few peers.

For many, the 2012 Chevrolet Suburban is yesterday’s dinosaur, but if you need an SUV of its ilk, it’s actually the efficient choice.

The Suburban comes in regular-duty 1500 and heavy-duty 2500 versions, though the 2500 is hard to find. Both versions have LS and upscale LT trims; the 1500 gets a top-of-the-line LTZ trim, too. Click here to compare them.

For 2012, the Suburban adds trailer-sway control, but little else has changed. Stack up the 2012 and 2011 Suburban here. Beyond the Tahoe relation, the Suburban 1500 has upscale siblings in the GMC Yukon XL and Cadillac Escalade ESV. We tested a four-wheel-drive Suburban 1500 LTZ.

Efficient, for a Barge
The Suburban 1500 packs a curb weight of nearly 3 tons, for which GM’s familiar 5.3-liter V-8 is no match. The SUV picks up speed at a leisurely pace, needing a good prod on the gas for enough passing oomph. In city driving, pronounced accelerator lag plays into the torpor: Things start off gradually, and any call for immediate power is met with initial hesitation. It’s curious because our last Tahoe, by contrast, had no such accelerator issues.

The Suburban’s standard six-speed automatic finds the right gear more often than not, but even as the V-8 roars to its highest revs, the acceleration is modest. At least it’s a consistent sensation, regardless of load: Five adults and a few weekend bags invoked similar performance. So would, I suspect, ditching four-wheel drive, which saves 152 pounds — a sliver of the SUV’s tonnage. Either way, GM needs to mix a stronger drink next time around. This ‘burban is weak.

Of course, the Suburban’s only direct competitor — the extended-length Ford Expedition, called the Expedition EL — is pretty weak, too. Lead-footed haulers should look to the 5.7-liter Toyota Sequoia, which is a closer competitor to the Tahoe but far swifter in the passing lane. The Suburban’s passing torpor is forgivable, given the drivetrain’s best-in-class EPA rating of 15/21 mpg city/highway with rear- or four-wheel drive. That beats the others by 1 to 3 mpg, which is nothing to sneeze at when mileage is in the teens. Still, make sure you need the truck-based Chevy’s towing capacity. If not, car-based crossover SUVs and minivans are rated 2 to 6 mpg better in combined driving, with lower starting prices to boot.

Towing capability comes out to 8,100 pounds in the Suburban 1500, which beats the Sequoia but loses to the Expedition EL by 1,100 pounds. The Suburban 2500, meanwhile, beats the group with 9,600 pounds of capacity. It has a 6.0-liter V-8, which cranks out 352 horsepower and 382 pounds-feet of torque — 32 more hp and 47 more pounds-feet than the 1500’s V-8 — and returns 12 mpg in combined city/highway ratings.

Less forgivable is the Suburban’s tentative composure. Boatlike handling comes with the territory, and the SUV corners like its nautical full-size SUV peers. But in other situations, the steering still disappoints. At low speeds, the power assist finds pockets of sudden stiffness; on the highway, it feels over-assisted and jittery. Ride comfort — a longtime strength in GM’s trucks — is excellent in the 1500 LTZ, which gets an optional adaptive suspension, but the need for constant, fidgety corrections brings its own brand of road-trip fatigue.

Utility
See our Tahoe review for major impressions of the interior. The Suburban gets an extra 14 inches of wheelbase and nearly 2 feet of length, which goes toward the third row and cargo area. Third-row legroom increases a huge 9.3 inches, making it habitable for adults, if not as generous as the Expedition EL’s legroom. Cargo room behind all the seats, meanwhile, totals 45.8 cubic feet. That’s comparable to the EL’s, and nearly three times what the Tahoe has. Remove the 50/50-split third-row seats — a hefty 50 pounds for each section — and fold down the second row, and maximum cargo volume is a crossover-beating 137.4 cubic feet. Most minivans have upward of 140 cubic feet, but achieving that often requires removing second-row seats, which is an equally onerous task: The captain’s chairs in a Honda Odyssey weigh 55 pounds apiece.

The Suburban seats seven to nine, depending on the layout. The first and second rows come as bucket seats or a three-position bench, while the third row has the bench only. We recommend against the front bench, however, as the center position lacks frontal airbag coverage and gets only a lap seat belt. It’s odd because the second- and third-row center seats have three-point belts.

Safety, Features & Pricing
The Suburban hasn’t been crash-tested by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, but the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration rates the 1500 four out of five stars overall. The SUV earned top ratings in frontal and side impacts but just a three-star rollover rating. (Three stars is the norm for truck-based SUV rollover resistance, but the Expedition and Sequoia buck the trend with four-star ratings.) The Suburban 2500 hasn’t been crash-tested.

Standard features include head-protecting side airbags for all three rows, plus the required antilock brakes and electronic stability system. Click here for a full list or here to see our evaluation of child-seat provisions in the Tahoe.

The Suburban 1500 starts just over $43,000 (including a destination charge of $995), with the 2500 running another $1,610. Standard features include tri-zone manual climate control, partial power front seats, a USB/iPod-friendly stereo and Bluetooth cellphone connectivity but not audio streaming. Heated and cooled leather seats, fully powered seat adjustments, a heated steering wheel, rear DVD entertainment and a navigation system are optional. A factory-loaded 2500 LT tops out near $60,000, and the 1500 LTZ can reach around $65,000.

Suburban in the Market
The justification behind full-size SUVs has worn thin over the years as buyers have switched to more-efficient crossovers: In the early 2000s, GM was pushing more than 115,000 Suburbans a year. Last year, the automaker sold 49,427. Still, the Suburban is the best-selling full-size SUV, with sales in the first five months of this year up 18 percent, outpacing the market’s gains. In fact, if you were to combine the Suburban with its Tahoe sibling — as Ford does for the Expedition and Expedition EL — they would be 45th best-selling vehicle in America through May.

No doubt some full-size SUV shoppers are buying more car than they need, but the sales tell an undeniable truth: A certain chunk of drivers still need V-8 towing capacity with a minivan’s appetite for people and cargo, and enough of them exist for the segment to stick around.

So the Suburban will continue, as it should.

Send Kelsey an email  
Assistant Managing Editor-News
Kelsey Mays

Former Assistant Managing Editor-News Kelsey Mays likes quality, reliability, safety and practicality. But he also likes a fair price.

2013 Chevrolet Suburban review: Our expert's take
By Kelsey Mays

Editor’s note: This review was written in June 2012 about the 2012 Chevrolet Suburban. Little of substance has changed with this year’s model. To see what’s new for 2013, click here, or check out a side-by-side comparison of the two model years.

Should SUVs such as the Chevrolet Suburban, a longer version of the Tahoe, be extinct? Faced with gas mileage in the teens, dimensions that hug both lines of a parking space and an outmatched V-8 that huffs more than it hauls, most shoppers will laugh their way to anything else. But for the few who need its capabilities, the Suburban has few peers.

For many, the 2012 Chevrolet Suburban is yesterday’s dinosaur, but if you need an SUV of its ilk, it’s actually the efficient choice.

The Suburban comes in regular-duty 1500 and heavy-duty 2500 versions, though the 2500 is hard to find. Both versions have LS and upscale LT trims; the 1500 gets a top-of-the-line LTZ trim, too. Click here to compare them.

For 2012, the Suburban adds trailer-sway control, but little else has changed. Stack up the 2012 and 2011 Suburban here. Beyond the Tahoe relation, the Suburban 1500 has upscale siblings in the GMC Yukon XL and Cadillac Escalade ESV. We tested a four-wheel-drive Suburban 1500 LTZ.

Efficient, for a Barge
The Suburban 1500 packs a curb weight of nearly 3 tons, for which GM’s familiar 5.3-liter V-8 is no match. The SUV picks up speed at a leisurely pace, needing a good prod on the gas for enough passing oomph. In city driving, pronounced accelerator lag plays into the torpor: Things start off gradually, and any call for immediate power is met with initial hesitation. It’s curious because our last Tahoe, by contrast, had no such accelerator issues.

The Suburban’s standard six-speed automatic finds the right gear more often than not, but even as the V-8 roars to its highest revs, the acceleration is modest. At least it’s a consistent sensation, regardless of load: Five adults and a few weekend bags invoked similar performance. So would, I suspect, ditching four-wheel drive, which saves 152 pounds — a sliver of the SUV’s tonnage. Either way, GM needs to mix a stronger drink next time around. This ‘burban is weak.

Of course, the Suburban’s only direct competitor — the extended-length Ford Expedition, called the Expedition EL — is pretty weak, too. Lead-footed haulers should look to the 5.7-liter Toyota Sequoia, which is a closer competitor to the Tahoe but far swifter in the passing lane. The Suburban’s passing torpor is forgivable, given the drivetrain’s best-in-class EPA rating of 15/21 mpg city/highway with rear- or four-wheel drive. That beats the others by 1 to 3 mpg, which is nothing to sneeze at when mileage is in the teens. Still, make sure you need the truck-based Chevy’s towing capacity. If not, car-based crossover SUVs and minivans are rated 2 to 6 mpg better in combined driving, with lower starting prices to boot.

Towing capability comes out to 8,100 pounds in the Suburban 1500, which beats the Sequoia but loses to the Expedition EL by 1,100 pounds. The Suburban 2500, meanwhile, beats the group with 9,600 pounds of capacity. It has a 6.0-liter V-8, which cranks out 352 horsepower and 382 pounds-feet of torque — 32 more hp and 47 more pounds-feet than the 1500’s V-8 — and returns 12 mpg in combined city/highway ratings.

Less forgivable is the Suburban’s tentative composure. Boatlike handling comes with the territory, and the SUV corners like its nautical full-size SUV peers. But in other situations, the steering still disappoints. At low speeds, the power assist finds pockets of sudden stiffness; on the highway, it feels over-assisted and jittery. Ride comfort — a longtime strength in GM’s trucks — is excellent in the 1500 LTZ, which gets an optional adaptive suspension, but the need for constant, fidgety corrections brings its own brand of road-trip fatigue.

Utility
See our Tahoe review for major impressions of the interior. The Suburban gets an extra 14 inches of wheelbase and nearly 2 feet of length, which goes toward the third row and cargo area. Third-row legroom increases a huge 9.3 inches, making it habitable for adults, if not as generous as the Expedition EL’s legroom. Cargo room behind all the seats, meanwhile, totals 45.8 cubic feet. That’s comparable to the EL’s, and nearly three times what the Tahoe has. Remove the 50/50-split third-row seats — a hefty 50 pounds for each section — and fold down the second row, and maximum cargo volume is a crossover-beating 137.4 cubic feet. Most minivans have upward of 140 cubic feet, but achieving that often requires removing second-row seats, which is an equally onerous task: The captain’s chairs in a Honda Odyssey weigh 55 pounds apiece.

The Suburban seats seven to nine, depending on the layout. The first and second rows come as bucket seats or a three-position bench, while the third row has the bench only. We recommend against the front bench, however, as the center position lacks frontal airbag coverage and gets only a lap seat belt. It’s odd because the second- and third-row center seats have three-point belts.

Safety, Features & Pricing
The Suburban hasn’t been crash-tested by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, but the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration rates the 1500 four out of five stars overall. The SUV earned top ratings in frontal and side impacts but just a three-star rollover rating. (Three stars is the norm for truck-based SUV rollover resistance, but the Expedition and Sequoia buck the trend with four-star ratings.) The Suburban 2500 hasn’t been crash-tested.

Standard features include head-protecting side airbags for all three rows, plus the required antilock brakes and electronic stability system. Click here for a full list or here to see our evaluation of child-seat provisions in the Tahoe.

The Suburban 1500 starts just over $43,000 (including a destination charge of $995), with the 2500 running another $1,610. Standard features include tri-zone manual climate control, partial power front seats, a USB/iPod-friendly stereo and Bluetooth cellphone connectivity but not audio streaming. Heated and cooled leather seats, fully powered seat adjustments, a heated steering wheel, rear DVD entertainment and a navigation system are optional. A factory-loaded 2500 LT tops out near $60,000, and the 1500 LTZ can reach around $65,000.

Suburban in the Market
The justification behind full-size SUVs has worn thin over the years as buyers have switched to more-efficient crossovers: In the early 2000s, GM was pushing more than 115,000 Suburbans a year. Last year, the automaker sold 49,427. Still, the Suburban is the best-selling full-size SUV, with sales in the first five months of this year up 18 percent, outpacing the market’s gains. In fact, if you were to combine the Suburban with its Tahoe sibling — as Ford does for the Expedition and Expedition EL — they would be 45th best-selling vehicle in America through May.

No doubt some full-size SUV shoppers are buying more car than they need, but the sales tell an undeniable truth: A certain chunk of drivers still need V-8 towing capacity with a minivan’s appetite for people and cargo, and enough of them exist for the segment to stick around.

So the Suburban will continue, as it should.

Send Kelsey an email  

Available cars near you

Safety review

Based on the 2013 Chevrolet Suburban base trim
NHTSA crash test and rollover ratings, scored out of 5.
Overall rating
4/5
Combined side rating front seat
5/5
Combined side rating rear seat
5/5
Frontal barrier crash rating driver
5/5
Frontal barrier crash rating passenger
5/5
Overall frontal barrier crash rating
5/5
Overall side crash rating
5/5
Rollover rating
3/5
Side barrier rating
5/5
Side barrier rating driver
5/5
Side barrier rating passenger rear seat
5/5
Side pole rating driver front seat
5/5
23.7%
Risk of rollover
Side barrier rating driver
5/5
Side barrier rating passenger rear seat
5/5
Side pole rating driver front seat
5/5
23.7%
Risk of rollover

Factory warranties

New car program benefits

Basic
3 years / 36,000 miles
Corrosion
3 years / 36,000 miles
Powertrain
5 years / 100,000 miles
Roadside Assistance
5 years / 100,000 miles

Certified Pre-Owned program benefits

Age / mileage
5 model years or newer / up to 75,000 miles
Basic
12 months / 12,000 miles bumper-to-bumper original warranty, then may continue to 6 years / 100,000 miles limited (depending on variables)
Dealer certification
172-point inspection

Compare similar vehicles

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  • 2011
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  • 2008
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  • 2014
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Consumer reviews

4.4 / 5
Based on 57 reviews
Write a review
Comfort 4.6
Interior 4.4
Performance 4.4
Value 4.1
Exterior 4.6
Reliability 4.5

Most recent

A great vehicle

Owned for10 yrs, no oil leaks, no loss of freon, consistent engine performance, no major power train, body, or engine repair. Best suburban, SUV I have owned. 100,000 miles.
  • Purchased a New car
  • Used for Transporting family
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 4.0
Interior 4.0
Performance 5.0
Value 5.0
Exterior 5.0
Reliability 5.0
13 people out of 13 found this review helpful. Did you?
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Most reliable vehicle I have ever owned!

I have driven this Suburban 2500 since it was new in 2013 and it has a comfortable ride, 4 wheel drive for the snow and ice, and has a trailering package for those times when pulling a trailer is necessary. It has always been garaged and has no rust.
  • Purchased a New car
  • Used for Commuting
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 5.0
Performance 5.0
Value 5.0
Exterior 5.0
Reliability 5.0
29 people out of 31 found this review helpful. Did you?
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FAQ

What trim levels are available for the 2013 Chevrolet Suburban?

The 2013 Chevrolet Suburban is available in 3 trim levels:

  • LS (4 styles)
  • LT (4 styles)
  • LTZ (2 styles)

What is the MPG of the 2013 Chevrolet Suburban?

The 2013 Chevrolet Suburban offers up to 15 MPG in city driving and 21 MPG on the highway. These figures are based on EPA mileage ratings and are for comparison purposes only. The actual mileage will vary depending on vehicle options, trim level, driving conditions, driving habits, vehicle maintenance, and other factors.

What are some similar vehicles and competitors of the 2013 Chevrolet Suburban?

The 2013 Chevrolet Suburban compares to and/or competes against the following vehicles:

Is the 2013 Chevrolet Suburban reliable?

The 2013 Chevrolet Suburban has an average reliability rating of 4.5 out of 5 according to cars.com consumers. Find real-world reliability insights within consumer reviews from 2013 Chevrolet Suburban owners.

Is the 2013 Chevrolet Suburban a good SUV?

Below are the cars.com consumers ratings for the 2013 Chevrolet Suburban. 86.0% of drivers recommend this vehicle.

4.4 / 5
Based on 57 reviews
  • Comfort: 4.6
  • Interior: 4.4
  • Performance: 4.4
  • Value: 4.1
  • Exterior: 4.6
  • Reliability: 4.5

Chevrolet Suburban history

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