Close Menu
SkytikSkytik

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    At Least 32 People Dead After a Mine Bridge Collapsed Due to Overcrowding

    November 17, 2025

    Here’s how I turned a Raspberry Pi into an in-car media server

    November 17, 2025

    Beloved SF cat’s death fuels Waymo criticism

    November 17, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    SkytikSkytik
    • Home
    • AI Tools
    • Online Tools
    • Tech News
    • Guides
    • Reviews
    • SEO & Marketing
    • Social Media Tools
    SkytikSkytik
    Home»Guides»Here’s the problem with plug-in hybrids
    Guides

    Here’s the problem with plug-in hybrids

    AwaisBy AwaisJanuary 17, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    Here's the problem with plug-in hybrids
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    EVs aren’t the only cars that plug in. Plug-in hybrids can theoretically serve as stepping stones to all-electric vehicles, providing enough electric range for short trips while still offering the flexibility of a gasoline engine. For those who can’t charge at home, or just don’t want to deal with the uncertainty of public charging infrastructure on road trips, they seem like a decent option. But the news cycle just delivered two reminders of the limits of plug-in hybrids.

    Last week, Stellantis abruptly confirmed that it would discontinue three popular plug-in hybrid models. And at the Automotive Press Association conference in Detroit on Monday, General Motors CEO Mary Barra admitted an inconvenient truth — that many plug-in hybrid owners don’t actually plug their cars in. The auto industry as a whole isn’t giving up on plug-in hybrids, but they’re certainly in a rough patch.

    Plug-in hybrid promise

    2012 Chevrolet Volt front quarter view.
    Chevrolet

    The rise of plug-in cars in the early 2010s was a technological revolution not seen since the dawn of the automobile itself. And like the early days of automobiledom, there was a bit of a Wild West feel as competing technologies tried to stake a claim. In this case, all-electric vehicles, plug-in hybrids and, to a lesser extent, hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles were all promoted as the cars of the future.

    While GM is bearish on plug-in hybrids today (outside of China, that is), it kicked things off with arguably the most famous plug-in hybrid of all. The Chevrolet Volt was inspired by a crude-yet-effective solution from GM’s EV1 project. In the absence of charging stations, engineers used trailers with generators to keep the batteries of those all-electric vehicles topped up. And that remains the main appeal of plug-in hybrids: enough electric range for the short trips that make up the vast majority of vehicle usage, while keeping a way to top up the battery when charging stations are unavailable. Using that electric range — usually between 25 and 50 miles — to fullest means less gasoline burned.

    Automakers found more niche uses as well. In cars like the Bentley Continental GT Speed and Mercedes-AMG S63 E Performance, plug-in hybrid powertrains keep inefficiency in check by giving engineers a route to more power without increasing engine displacement. The instant torque of electric motors can also complement combustion engines by filling gaps in their power bands. In the Lamborghini Temerario, electrification helps tame a wild, high-revving engine, even if it doesn’t provide much of an efficiency boost.

    But do they get plugged in?

    Closeup of 2016 Chevrolet Volt charge port with cable plugged in.
    Chevrolet

    The Achilles’ Heel of plug-in hybrids is that owners don’t have to plug them in. If they don’t, that leaves a regular hybrid lugging around hundreds of pounds of extra weight in the form of a bigger battery pack that isn’t being used. And that’s how most plug-in hybrids are being driven, GM CEO Mary Barra told Reuters reporter Kalea Hall in a video interview.

    “What we also know today with plug-in hybrids is that most people don’t plug them in,” Barra said. “So that’s why we’re trying to be very thoughtful about what we do from a hybrid and plug-in hybrid perspective.”

    Barra said what many of her fellow executives may be unwilling to admit. In 2024, InsideEVs investigated whether owners were actually plugging in regularly, reaching out to several automakers for usage data. However, most automakers either could not provide that data or would not say specifically how often their plug-in hybrids were being used as intended.

    Multiple studies have concluded that owners often don’t plug in. In 2022, the International Council on Clean Transportation said that real-world electric miles driven could be 25%-65% lower than the range ratings on plug-in hybrid window stickers, resulting in fuel consumption 42%-67% higher. Looking at the European market, a 2025 study by Transport & Environment found that the gap between real-world emissions and officially-rated emissions for plug-in hybrids has widened in recent years. In 2023, plug-in hybrids averaged five times higher real-world emissions than officially rated, according to the study.

    And do buyers want them?

    Three Jeep Wrangler 4xe SUVs on grass and dirt.
    Andrew Martonik / Digital Trends

    Automakers can ignore this issue because regulations don’t account for real-world emissions or driver behavior. But they do need to sell cars, and Stellantis apparently thinks it can’t sell plug-in hybrids. Last week it confirmed that the Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid, Jeep Grand Cherokee 4xe, and Jeep Wrangler 4xe would not return for the 2026 model year. A spokesperson told The Drive that this was due to “customer demand shifting” and that the automaker would refocus on “more competitive electrified solutions, including hybrid and range-extended vehicles.”

    Stellantis never broke out sales of the plug-in hybrids from their non-hybrid counterparts, but it was understood that they sold fairly well. The automaker previously said the Wrangler 4xe was the bestselling plug-in hybrid in the U.S. But that made it a big fish in a small pond. In late 2024, J.D. Power estimated that plug-in hybrids represented just 1.9% of the U.S. new-car market — less than all-electric vehicles.

    There are likely other factors at play. The Chrysler and Jeep plug-in hybrids have been plagued by recalls, the loss of the federal EV tax credit makes these vehicles less attractive to shoppers, and the Trump Administration’s disinterest in enforcing emissions rules gives Stellantis some temporary leeway. But it’s still a bad sign that Stellantis doesn’t think it has a business case for what were overall good vehicles. The Pacifica Hybrid was a unique and versatile offering in an SUV-saturated marketplace, while the Jeep 4xe models preserved towing capacity and off-road capability, giving owners a taste of zero-emission four-wheeling.

    Is it worth keeping plug-in hybrids around?

    2025 Volvo XC90.
    Volvo

    Plug-in hybrids will persist for the time being. Other automakers, such as Porsche and Volvo, see them as a hedge against unpredictable EV sales. And even as it adds more EVs to its lineup, Toyota just gave the RAV4 plug-in hybrid even more electric range as part of a 2026-model-year redesign.

    A variation on the theme, known as “extended-range electric vehicles (EREV)” could also see a resurgence. Here, the internal-combustion engine is used purely as a generator to charge the battery pack. The BMW i3 REx pioneered the concept, but it’s now being repurposed for big pickup trucks like the Ram 1500 Ramcharger, Scout Terra Harvester, and a replacement for the Ford F-150 Lightning.

    The question is whether these efforts are motivated by the desire to make good cars and trucks or just the desire to avoid tackling the issues of charging infrastructure and cost that are holding back wider EV adoption. Plug-in hybrids don’t have to be an evolutionary dead end, but they shouldn’t hold back EVs either.

    Heres hybrids plugin Problem
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Awais
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Linear Regression Is Actually a Projection Problem, Part 1: The Geometric Intuition

    March 19, 2026

    Vibe Coding Plugins? Validate With Official WordPress Plugin Checker

    March 17, 2026

    Solving the Human Training Data Problem

    March 12, 2026

    WordPress Releases Updated AI Experiments Plugin

    March 10, 2026

    Sommeliers and Restaurants Have an AI Problem

    March 9, 2026

    The Black Box Problem: Why AI-Generated Code Stops Being Maintainable

    March 7, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    At Least 32 People Dead After a Mine Bridge Collapsed Due to Overcrowding

    November 17, 20250 Views

    Here’s how I turned a Raspberry Pi into an in-car media server

    November 17, 20250 Views

    Beloved SF cat’s death fuels Waymo criticism

    November 17, 20250 Views
    Don't Miss

    Escaping the SQL Jungle | Towards Data Science

    March 21, 2026

    don’t collapse overnight. They grow slowly, query by query. “What breaks when I change a…

    SEO’s new battleground: Winning the consensus layer

    March 21, 2026

    A Gentle Introduction to Nonlinear Constrained Optimization with Piecewise Linear Approximations

    March 21, 2026

    23 Radish Recipes for Salads, Pickles, and More

    March 21, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews

    Google confirms AI headline rewrites test in Search results

    March 21, 2026

    How to add Google Calendar to Outlook

    March 21, 2026
    Most Popular

    13 Trending Songs on TikTok in Nov 2025 (+ How to Use Them)

    November 18, 20257 Views

    How to watch the 2026 GRAMMY Awards online from anywhere

    February 1, 20263 Views

    Corporate Reputation Management Strategies | Sprout Social

    November 19, 20252 Views
    Our Picks

    At Least 32 People Dead After a Mine Bridge Collapsed Due to Overcrowding

    November 17, 2025

    Here’s how I turned a Raspberry Pi into an in-car media server

    November 17, 2025

    Beloved SF cat’s death fuels Waymo criticism

    November 17, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube Dribbble
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    © 2025 skytik.cc. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.