2022 Cadillac Escalade

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It’s no accident that the best-selling Cadillac model right now is very much like the models that used to define what a Cadillac was – back when Cadillac sold more luxury cars than any other luxury car brand.  

It just happens to be an SUV. 

That model is the Escalade – a vehicle that has much in common with Cadillacs of the past like the 1970 Sedan de Ville, notwithstanding it isn’t a sedan. But the Escalade is built the same way Cadillac sedans once were. The body bolted to a heavy steel frame. A huge V8 bolted under its hood. The whole thing purposely, unapologetically huge – including on the inside, where there’s room for six.

In both of these Cadillacs.

Cadillac stopped building cars like the Sedan de Ville a long time ago.

But this SUV carries on that Cadillac tradition.     

What It Is

The Escalade is a full-size luxury SUV with three rows of seats, which gives it the same passenger carrying capacity as a 1970 Sedan de Ville – which carried the same number of people three across in two rows of seats. 

Like the old Sedan de Ville, the Escalade comes with the biggest V8 GM offers in any vehicle – a Cadillac tradition. It is also the only Cadillac still available with a V8 – and the only Cadillac that still features body-on-frame construction  . . . just like a ’70 Sedan de Ville.

It also offers something no Sedan de Ville ever did – a turbodiesel six. And four wheel drive, too. Plus amenities such as an available 36 speaker audio system and a 38 inch digital dashboard. 

Prices start at $77,940 for the base luxury trim in 2WD (rear-wheel drive) form. A 3.0 liter Duramax diesel V6 is standard but you can swap that out for the 6.2 liter V8 for an extra $50, making the V8 effectively a no-cost option. There are also Premium, Sport, Premium Luxury Platinum and Sport Platinum trims – as well as an even bigger (longer) ESV version offered in the same trims with the same engines that stretches 227 inches end to end, which is just slightly longer than any Cadillac sedan of the ’70s.

A Premium-Luxury Platinum version with 4WD and the 3.0 liter Duramax diesel lists for $111,840.

The Escalade’s chief historic rival is the Lincoln Navigator – which is dimensionally similar. However, the Lincoln doesn’t offer the prestige of a V8 engine or the superior fuel efficiency of a diesel engine. The Navigator’s only engine is a twin-turbocharged 3.5 liter gasoline burning V6. It makes more power than the Caddy’s V8 – and it’s rated to tow a little bit more than the Caddy’s V8. 

But it’s still not a V8.

There is also a new rival – the revived Jeep Grand Wagoneer. It is even larger – and comes with the largest V8 you can get in a new SUV (6.4 liters). It also costs considerably more than the Escalade, with a base price of $86,995.

But it’s still a Jeep – not that there’s anything wrong with that.

What’s New 

The Escalade was fully redesigned for the 2021 model year so the ’22 is pretty much identical except for some minor shuffling of trim/standard and optional equipment.

What’s Good

A Cadillac like they used to make them that’s also good in the snow  – unlike the Cadillacs they used to make. 

Last of the somewhat affordable V8s.

One of the few available diesel sixes. 

What’s Not So Good

Even with 24 gallons of gas in the tank, you won’t go very far – with the V8.

Astoundingly expensive for a Cadillac that’s based on a much less pricey Chevy. 

Available Super Cruise self-driving feature arguably encourages inattentive driving.

Under The Hood

You can choose either a 6.2 liter, 420 horsepower gas V8 or a 277 horsepower (and 460 ft.-lbs. of torque) turbo-diesel engine. What do you get for so much less horsepower – if you go with the diesel?

Range.

Cadillac touts the diesel’s mileage advantage – 21 city, 27 highway vs. the V8’s 15 city, 20 highway – but it’s just another way of saying the same thing. And in a very real sense, it’s also something else – because people who buy vehicles with a starting price of nearly $80,000 aren’t people who generally sweat their vehicle getting five or even ten MPG less.

But they do sweat not going as far before they have to stop.

With the V8, you stop often – as was true back in 1970 in a Sedan de Ville, which got about the same gas mileage. Even with 24 gallons of gas in its tank, the V8 Escalade has an advertised city-driving range of just 380 miles – and n real world driving, it’s less. On the same 24 gallons – of diesel – the Escalade’s city range increases to just over 500 miles. And on the highway, the diesel-powered Caddy can go about 650 miles – vs. 480 for the V8.

It costs more to fuel the diesel-powered Escalade – because diesel costs more than even premium unleaded gas. And because diesel-powered vehicles now require periodic topping off with Diesel Exhaust Fluid (DEF). But – again – it’s not the savings or the costs that are determinative here. It is the convenience – the luxury – of being able to travel nearly as far as a Prius hybrid in a leather-wrapped, massaging seat-equipped SUV that that’s three times the size of a Prius.

This SUV can also pull the equivalent of three Priuses – 8,200 lbs. It’s not quite as much as the class-leading (n terms of towing capacity) Lincoln Navigator can pull (8,300 lbs.) but it’s so close as to be negligibly less – and the Lincoln doesn’t offer a V8 or a turbodiesel.

The Cadillac is also the only ultra-lux SUV out there that offers a V8 for less than six figures. You can get one – for more than six figures – in the Land Rover Range Rover P525 Westminster. Mercedes also offers one in the GLS 580 for – for $98,850. Technically not quite six figures.  But by the time you pay the taxes, you’ll be paying well over six figures for it, too.

That makes the Escalade’s V8 the bargain of the bunch. 

On the other hand, you can get the same 6.2 liter V8 for even less than the $77,990 Cadillac asks for it in the Escalade. . . in the Chevy Tahoe. Which is the Escalade, with a few less bells and whistles.

Or – if you’re not hung up on the luxury badge – there’s the Grand Wagoneer. It offers more V8 (and  more horsepower, 471) for not much more money, relatively speaking.

Both the V8 and the turbodiesel six are paired with ten speed automatics and the option to go rear-drive (standard) or four-wheel-drive, in all trims. The four-wheel-drive is real four-wheel-drive, with an electronically controlled transfer case and Low range gearing.

The current model also features an independent suspension, which allows for great wheel articulation off-road and better ride quality, on-road.

On The Road

When you drove a Cadillac back in the ’70s – or the ’60s or the ’50s – you felt like the king of the road. Which you were – because nothing else on the road had the large-living presence of a Cadillac.

Nothing else had an engine as big as a Cadillac’s, either.

This is how you feel behind the wheel of the Escalade. Especially with the 6.2 liter V8 under the hood. The diesel has the legs – but the V8 has the sound. Also, the power. Enough to get this 5,823 pound (empty) block of steel and glass that seats six to 60 in six hard-to-believe-it seconds. That is something a Sedan de Ville could not do – even when equipped with the biggest V8 Cadillac ever offered (500 cubic inches, 8.2 liters).

If you go purely by the numbers, the Lincoln Navigator is nominally superior.

Its 3.5 liter twin-turbo’d V6 makes 450 horsepower (and 510 ft.-lbs. of torque). It is also slightly quicker to 60 (5.9 seconds) and – per above – it is rated to pull 100 pounds more. But there is no music accompanying any of this. Just a whoosh and the sensation of thrust. The Cadillac V8 rumbles soothingly at idle. Under hard acceleration this becomes an authoritative bellow which transitions to a Corvette-like wail as the tach swings past 6,000 RPM.

But forget even that. There is something unquantifiably satisfying about having a V8 when  almost everyone else has just a six. You don’t feel gypped. What, after all, is the point of paying close to $80k to have more or less what people who paid half as much also have?

An interesting aside is that the Navigator’s much smaller V6 uses not much less gas than the Caddy’s almost twice-as-big V8. The twice-turbo’d Lincoln rates a kind of pathetic 16 city, 22 highway (vs. the V8 Caddy’s 15 city, 20 highway). All that effort (and all those additional parts) to squeeze equivalent power out of a smaller engine without a meaningful fuel efficiency difference.

And at the cost of the joy of owning a V8 at a time when such ownership is becoming the almost-exclusive purview of the extremely affluent (see that bit above about the price of the Range Rover V8 and the Benz GLS V8).

At The Curb

This is what a Cadillac is supposed to be.

Imposing. Audacious. Unapologetic. It is what Cadillacs used to be – before Cadillac began emulating everyone else and gave up trying to be Cadillac.

Someone there might consider why those Cadillacs come and go – while the Escalade remains the model that has kept Cadillac afloat.

The standard Escalade is enormous: 211.9 inches long overall. It rides on a 120.9 inch wheelbase. This makes it longer than any full-sized new car, including full-size luxury sedans like the BMW 7 Series (207.4 inches) and Mercedes S-Class (208.2 inches). It is also vastly roomier – with seating for six and almost twice as much space for cargo (25.5 cubic feet) even with those seats occupied. When not, you can avail yourself of 121 cubic feet of space – for whatever you need to carry, besides passengers.

The ESV extends that length to 227 inches on a 134.1 inch wheelbase – with 41.5 inches of space for cargo with all its seats in place (and148.2 cubic feet with the second and third row seats folded).

Like Trump – and like him or not – it is yuge. In capacity – and attitude.

It’s not for everyone. But for the person who wants to own the Cadillac of SUVs, it’s the only thing there is.

The Rest

Because it is a Cadillac, the Escalade has a plethora of luxury amenities and technology features not available in the lesser Tahoe (or the GMC Yukon, which occupies the space in between the Tahoe and the Escalade). The chief among these being the Escalade’s enormous – and sweeping – fully digital dashboard, which extends from the driver’s side A pillar almost to the passenger side A pillar. This is a Cadillac-ian one-upping of the current trend to digitize the displays of . . . everything.

Traditional Cadillac manifest in the wood trim – real, this time – which is used to counterbalance the hyper-modernity. There is also hyper-luxury, manifested in the form of the available massaging seats (though these are restricted to the more expensive trims) and the 36 speaker AKG ultra-premium audio system. Big as a ’70s Caddy sled like the Sedan de Ville was, you couldn’t find space for 36 speakers inside one.

You can also opt for a factory-installed cat-back performance exhaust system, which makes the V8 even more Cadillac in its can’t-fail-to-notice-me personality.

Another option that manifests this Caddy’s tech is the available self-driving Super Cruise option. It works much like the Tesla system you’ve probably heard more about. When engaged, the Caddy steers itself, changes lanes, adjust its speed and generally leaves the driver to do things beside drive . . .  which may not be the greatest idea since sliced bread. It presents a dichotomous situation in which the driver is relieved of some of the chore involved in driving while at the same time expecting the driver to remain in an alert, supervisory role over the vehicle’s driving.

No one wants to admit that what self-driving encourages is for the driver to stop paying full attention to driving. For that reason, it’s only a good idea if the self-driving system doesn’t require the driver’s supervision. If it does, then what’s the point – beyond being able to show off a “neat” feature to your passengers?

The Bottom Line

It’s ironic that the most successful Cadillac is also the type of vehicle Cadillac seems to shying away from – in favor of un-Cadillacs that are smaller, crossover and electric. Which means pretty much like what everyone else is selling.

Wouldn’t it be smarter to sell more of what they’re not?

. . .

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13 COMMENTS

  1. Pretty awesome vehicle. And your right Eric, it certainly has comparisons to the old boats that a lot of us still wish were around.
    I’ve had my share of Tahoe’s, Suburban’s, Yukon XL Denali’s. Liked them all until around the late 2000’s, when GM had a sea change of trying to maximize mpg at the cost of drivability. I, and my wife, dis-liked this change a lot. Enough so that we switch our loyalty to FCA with the likes of durango’s, grand cherokee and rams.
    Maybe the new 10 speeds have made them better, don’t know, don’t care, because in that timeframe of 2007 to around 14 we had had enough.

    BTW, you can still get the 6.2 in the Burb and Yukons, obviously with less fluff, but they are still relatively close if you get the high trims, starting in the high 70’s.
    I would not own these vehicles with the std. 5.3.

  2. This probably would make a nice open road vehicle for long journeys.

    For daily errands and commuting, driving the Escalade would seem to be a very unpleasant experience. A major hassle to park and manuever. Like driving a school bus everywhere you go.

    Some people might look at the Escalade and say “who needs it ?”

    For me, the real question is ” who even wants it ?”

    • Until you ride in one, you’d think Need??…Want???
      But once you experience the ride in one, you’ll want one bad enough to need it.
      Eric, great review as always, but pretty sure the TurboDiesel 3.0 is a straight 6 design. And unless the rear bench seat only holds two, then it should hold 7 peeps. But, we are getting fatter…
      My experience in the 10 speed transmission is you typically see 23 to 28 on the Hwy, even with the 6.2L gasser. The diesel will most likely return hybrid like MPG`s in real life driving, unless you operate in the drive-it-like-you-stole-it mode.

      • Agree with Saxon. Just rented one for our trip to Florida. On a full tank (V8, 420 HP) you can go a bit over 600 miles. Hubby and I were traveling between 70 to 80 MPH down I95 and the SUV averaged 20 mpg. I thought this was excellent for a car this size. Comfort and space absolutely no comparison to any other vehicle that I have been in recently.

        Other than the annoying seat belt chiming it’s electronics didn’t seem to menacing. If you idle at a light it does a little shake to keep the engine going. I am not crazy about that, but that was really the only thing I did not like about it. Also, came through a 5 minute nickel sized hail storm in Viera…not a dent on her.

  3. Just the fact that this vehicle is Cadillac’s best selling model only proves that GM needs to bring back what made Caddy, Caddy. Stop chasing the other brands and be Caddy again!

    Big, brash, luxurious cars with names you remember. I frankly don’t know the name of any other current Cadillac models besides the Escalade. Don’t be BMW, Lexus, MB or whatever. I think its telling that old Cadillacs are popular with many people around the world, not just Americans. So sell them American cars!

    Cars as long as this truck. Cars you aspire to buy.

    Beancounters and government regulators have ruined this brand. Going electric will likely end the brand for good.

    I wonder how Cadillac would have evolved had it not been for these nasty worthless folks. Guessing the whole lineup would probably be more like the Escalade than what they have now. GM would probably be making huge profits on the brand now too. Now they probably waste the profits from the Escalade on vehicles nobody wants.

    Instead they should spend it on making the Escalade exclusive to Cadillac and leave the Tahoe to Chevy. Looking at their current lineup, I would probably dump the whole lineup (outside of the Escalade) as there is nothing aspirational there.

    Being a creature of the government has its downsides too. Until people like Mary are shown the door, GM will continue to fail.

    As a Gen Xer, I only saw the very end of brash, competent and confident America.

    • Yeah, I’d love to see them build Fleetwood Seventy-Fives and Sixty Specials again. Those were the epitome of American elegance and prestige.

      The men that made that company great are long gone (Bill Mitchell, Bunkie Knudsen, John DeLorean, et al). We’ll never see a renaissance as long as cucks and women remain in charge.

      • Amen, Nick –

        I got to meet some of those guys – who were still around in the early-mid ’90s when I was just starting out. The atmosphere under Barra is totally different. The company might as well be selling toothpaste. In a way, it already is.

  4. Well. I only paid $24k 3 yrs ago for a 2014 TDI Vee Dub Touareg. Bought for me by VW dieselgate ‘buyback program’. They bought our TDI B5 Passat from us.

    The Treg, 7700 pound towing capacity, 5,000 pounds GVW, 30-31 mpg on the interstate, 26 gal fuel tank, ‘serve’ range anxiety after mile 750. 🥲

    But Sargent Hank Voight on TVs Chicago PD, used to drive a badass matte grey finished vinyl wrapped Escalade, so yeah, I still want one. Sort of.

  5. I quit reading once I hit the price ranges, I owe less on my HOME than a base Escalade. Not interested. If it isn’t a Porsche, Ferrari or other exotic I’m not versed on, I’m not interested in reading further.

    My neighbor’s wife named this vehicle long ago. It’s an Escalator not an Escalade.

      • 50 grand for a used carload of electronics? Maybe if it has a prancing horse on it. Or a dancing bull. I buy my Caddies when they are at least a well aged 10 years old (or much more) and you can pick one up from an estate for a few thousand.

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