Ram 1500 Towing Capacity by Year (2010-2026)

Ram 1500 max tow ratings from 2010 to 2026 - HEMI, EcoDiesel, Hurricane I-6, and the upcoming Ramcharger. With cab-and-engine breakouts.

📊 17 model years🛻 OEM tow ratings✓ J2807 compliant

📋 Quick Facts

Brand
Ram
Model
1500
Years Covered
2010-2026
Peak Tow
12,750 lb

Ram 1500 max trailer-tow ratings, by model year. Always cross-reference your truck's exact configuration on the door-jamb tow sticker and in the Trailer Towing Selector in your owner's manual.

📊 Ram 1500 Towing Capacity Table

YearTop-Tow Engine / ConfigMax Towing
20263.0L Hurricane High-Output I-6 + Max Tow11,580 lb
20253.0L Hurricane High-Output I-6 + Max Tow11,550 lb
20245.7L HEMI V8 + Max Tow12,750 lb
20235.7L HEMI V8 + Max Tow12,750 lb
20225.7L HEMI V8 + Max Tow12,750 lb
20215.7L HEMI V8 + Max Tow12,750 lb
20205.7L HEMI V8 + Max Tow12,750 lb
20195.7L HEMI V8 + Max Tow12,750 lb
20185.7L HEMI V810,640 lb
20175.7L HEMI V810,640 lb
20165.7L HEMI V810,650 lb
20155.7L HEMI V810,650 lb
20145.7L HEMI V810,650 lb
20135.7L HEMI V810,450 lb
20125.7L HEMI V810,450 lb
20115.7L HEMI V810,450 lb
20105.7L HEMI V810,450 lb

Capacities shown are manufacturer maximum ratings for properly equipped configurations. Your truck's actual capacity depends on cab style, bed length, engine, axle ratio, and tow package. Check the door-jamb sticker and owner's manual before towing.

📝 Configuration Notes

The 3.0L EcoDiesel (2014-2023) rated about 12,560 lb max. The 3.6L Pentastar V6 tops out near 7,730 lb. The Hurricane Standard-Output I-6 tows about 10,260 lb. Numbers vary by 4x2 vs 4x4 and rear axle ratio.

Max tow numbers assume the lightest cab/bed, optimal axle ratio, the official Tow Package, and a 150 lb driver with minimal cargo. Add a passenger, fuel, gear, and a cap, and your real-world towable weight drops by 500-1,500 lb. Never load past 80% of rated capacity if you can avoid it - hills, headwinds, and altitude all eat into margin.

⚠ Read this before you tow Manufacturer numbers are SAE J2807 ratings - hot, loaded, at altitude, with a level trailer. They are NOT a target to hit. Your real safe-tow weight is limited by GCWR (Gross Combined Weight Rating), tongue weight, brakes, and tire load index. Many owners overload tongue weight without realizing it, which causes trailer sway above 55 mph.

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❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Where do I find the exact tow rating for my Ram 1500?
Open the driver's door and look for the yellow Tire and Loading Information sticker on the door jamb - the trailer-tow rating is printed there. The Trailer Towing Selector in your owner's manual lists it by VIN-decode of cab, bed, engine, and axle ratio.
Does the Tow Package actually matter?
Yes. The factory Tow / Trailering Package adds a Class IV or V hitch receiver, transmission cooler, integrated brake controller pre-wire, beefier alternator, and revised axle ratio. Without it, max tow is often 2,000-4,000 lb lower than the advertised figure.
Should I tow at the maximum capacity?
No. Stay below 80% of max in real-world use. SAE J2807 ratings are derived in lab/track conditions with one 150 lb driver. Once you add passengers, fuel, cargo, and a hot day, the safety margin disappears fast.
What is GCWR and is it more important than tow rating?
GCWR (Gross Combined Weight Rating) is the maximum your truck plus loaded trailer can weigh together. Many owners hit GCWR before hitting tow rating once they load the truck with passengers and gear. Tow rating alone is not the limit. Read our /what-is-gross-combined-weight-rating guide.
What tongue weight should I target?
10-15% of the loaded trailer weight, measured at the coupler. Below 10% causes trailer sway. Above 15% overloads the rear axle and lifts the front, ruining steering. A weight-distribution hitch helps for heavier trailers - see /weight-distribution-hitch-explained.
Do I need a brake controller?
Yes - in every state, any trailer over roughly 3,000 lb GVWR requires its own electric brakes plus a controller in the tow vehicle. Most modern Ram 1500 trucks have an integrated controller in the dash; older trucks need an aftermarket unit. See /brake-controller-for-trailer-explained.
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