Consumer Reports has identified five American-made pickup trucks as least reliable for 2026, based on owner surveys. This follows earlier scrutiny of models like the Tesla Cybertruck (detailed in prior coverage), with new concerns for the Chevrolet Silverado 1500, GMC Canyon, Rivian R1T, and Ram 1500.
Building on prior Consumer Reports assessments, such as the Tesla Cybertruck's below-average reliability due to build quality and motor issues (see related article), the organization's early 2026 report draws from thousands of owner surveys evaluating safety, engine, transmission, electrical systems, and repair costs. Pickup trucks average premiums over $16,000 above typical new vehicles (Kelley Blue Book, Dec 2025), making durability critical.
The five flagged models include:
- Tesla Cybertruck: Reiterates prior findings on recalls (e.g., accelerator, motors), build quality (panels, paint), and electrical glitches; frame failures under load noted. Starts at ~$80,000 USD.
- Chevrolet Silverado 1500: Long history of powertrain/electronics issues since 2000; engine repairs can exceed $5,000 (RepairPal).
- GMC Canyon: Uneven post-2023 redesign with build, electronics, powertrain problems; earlier models similar.
- Rivian R1T: Below-average since 2022; 6+ annual NHTSA recalls on safety, drives, suspension; software helps but hardware lags.
- Ram 1500: 2025 model glitches in electronics/battery/display; prior years mixed.
While some improvements in suspension, powertrain risks loom post-warranty. RepairPal/iSeeCars are more optimistic for select models, but CR data highlights 2023+ concerns.