When the sporty Cadillac Escalade-V was announced in May with a $149,990 price tag, it became the brand’s most expensive model ever.
Now it almost seems cheap.
Cadillac has since unveiled the Celestiq electric four-door fastback car that’s going on sale next year for over $300,000.
It’s also raised the base price of the Escalade-V to $152,490, which now includes a mandatory three-year subscription to GM’s OnStar telematics service but could probably hike it up a bit more without losing any sweat.
CADILLAC ALMOST PUT A V16 ENGINE IN THE ESCALADE
Customers have been buying Escalade-Vs as quickly as they show up at dealers, even with tens of thousands of dollars of markup added on.
If that seems absurd, it’s appropriate, because the Escalade-V is one of the most ridiculous SUVs ever built.
The full-size truck is powered by a 6.2-liter supercharged V-8 rated at 682 horsepower that makes it the most powerful Cadillac ever built.
Did I mention it seats seven and is available in an extended wheelbase Escalade-V ESV model?
It also features a computer-controlled suspension system with air springs that does its best to make it handle like a sports car while also offering a plush ride on demand. But it's better at the latter. There’s only so much you can do with over 6,000 pounds of high-riding metal, whether the 7,000-pound trailer the Escalade-V is capable of towing is attached.
A set of high-performance Brembo brakes tucked inside its enormous 22-inch wheels do their best to slow it down, but making it go fast in the first place is the fun part.
A launch control feature lets you hold the brake pedal and floor the accelerator simultaneously as it revs the engine, then uses a traction management system to put the power down through a full-time all-wheel drive when you release the brakes and rocket the Escalade-V to 60 mph in less than four and a half seconds while waking up everyone in what’s probably a square-mile radius. Its top speed has been wisely restricted to 125 mph.
The exhaust system is never less than thunderous and absolutely ear-splitting when the Escalade-V is set to its most aggressive V Mode, which cranks up the volume and drivetrain response.
Considering the standard Escalade with its 420-horsepower V-8 is no slouch, there’s not much of a point to the Escalade-V aside from kicks, but it definitely delivers them at the rate of 13 miles per gallon of premium gasoline combined, so factor that into your monthly budget.
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Anyone playing in this league probably won’t be too worried about that, and Cadillac admits it's just as interested in the prestige that comes with the Escalade-V as its performance.
Buyers can rest assured they’ll get it, or at least admiring glances. Certainly the Escalade-V painted the same $1,225 Radiant Red Tintcoat as our test car turned heads even when it was parked with the engine shut off.
It’s otherwise loaded with every feature, including a 360-degree camera system and rear seat entertainment screens. But one thing you can’t get right now is Cadillac’s Super Cruise hands-free driving system, which has seen its availability delayed by the ongoing semiconductor shortage affecting the automobile industry.
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Money can’t buy you everything, apparently, but it can still buy a pretty cool toy if you’ve got enough of it.
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2023 Cadillac Escalade-V
Base price: $152,490
Type: 7-passenger, 4-door, all-wheel-drive SUV.
Engine: 6.2-liter supercharged V-8
Power: 682 hp, 653 lb-ft torque
Transmission: 10-speed automatic
MPG: 11 city/16 hwy