Tested: The 2025 Cadillac Escalade Sport Platinum Dresses for the Job It Wants

The Escalade’s fashion-forward makeover puts Cadillac on a path to being the standard of the world once again.

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Jim FetsPhotographer
003 2025 Cadillac Escalade Sport Premium 4WD

Pros

  • Posh and comfortable cabin
  • Buttoned-down dynamics
  • Last V-8 standing in the segment

Cons

  • Underwhelming sound system
  • 24-inch wheels compromise ride
  • Six-cylinder competitors are noticeably quicker

Cadillac’s cash cow is now a franchise. You want an Escalade? You’ve got choices. There’s the electric Escalade IQ in regular and large sizes, the “baby Escalade” Vistiq, the long-body Escalade ESV, and the original from which the others sprouted. This rapid brand expansion has redefined what an Escalade represents. No longer just a big box with a big engine and leather seats, Cadillac’s large SUVs are establishing a new standard of American luxury. Size and power are part of that, of course, but the Escalade experience is now as much about a swanky cabin, trailblazing tech, and iconoclastic style.

That’s on full display in the 2025 Cadillac Escalade Sport Platinum 4WD, the top-shelf gas guzzler. A midcycle refresh for 2025 lavishes attention on the interior like never before, and as a result you can no longer describe the big, bad Cad as a leather-lined Tahoe. Chevy who? The Escalade’s redesigned cabin is so fresh that you might not even recognize it as a Cadillac’s if it weren’t for the badging.

Cadillac’s Inside Game

While a new 55-inch screen dominates the cockpit, spend time in the updated Escalade, and it’s the rich leather, real wood trim, aluminum-look accents, and upholstered lower dash that’ll have you questioning if this is the same Cadillac that gave us the Catera. Many of these materials are recycled from the impressive 2021 redesign and now look even more premium thanks to the 2025 model’s modern aesthetic. As with last year’s Escalade, you’ll have to hunt to find the few hard plastics hidden low in the cabin where the sun doesn’t shine—and your hands rarely reach. That luxury carries through to the second and third rows even without the optional $7,500 Executive second-row seats.

The standard Super Cruise hands-free system can turn the driver into a passenger on mapped roads so long as they keep their eyes looking forward. One of 2025’s MotorTrend Best Tech winners, Super Cruise isn’t just a lane centering system—it’s the closest thing to a safe and useful autonomous vehicle that you can buy today. Run up on slower traffic, and it will change lanes, make a pass, and move back to the right with the natural grace of an attentive and courteous human. A recent mapping expansion has opened even more miles of select two-lane highways and back roads.

The Sport Platinum’s doors can drive themselves, too, opening and closing at the tug of a handle. That might sound gimmicky or superfluous, but our initial skepticism gave way to genuine appreciation with use. Cadillac nailed the execution, using sensors in the doors to stop them from bashing into people or neighboring cars, and as a result you can get a taste of Rolls-Royce opulence for the bargain price of $125,020 as tested.

While Cadillac’s gas vehicles still offer Apple CarPlay or Android Auto, the infotainment system is good enough not to need them. It features native Google Maps and the ability to download streaming apps such as Spotify directly to the vehicle wrapped in an easy-to-learn interface—that is if you’re willing to lean forward in your seat to use the touchscreen. A redundant click wheel lets you navigate the system from a natural driving position, but it can take a lot of scrolling and tapping to get to where you want to go.

As cool as the panoramic screen looks, it’s a shame that huge swathes of it serve as nothing more than digital wallpaper. In particular, the right third can only show a giant Escalade logo when the passenger isn’t streaming a video (in which case the driver sees a blank black pane of glass). Another annoyance: Although you can download apps to the infotainment portion of the 55-inch display, the passenger and rear entertainment screens can only stream YouTube or Hulu and can’t be customized. If your crew wants to watch Netflix or Amazon Prime, you’ll have to plug in your own streaming device.

The cabin’s only major letdown is the AKG sound system, which in our test car lacked the dynamic range and surround-sound effect we expected based on our experience with pre-refresh Escalades. Cadillac sent a tech out to confirm everything was working as intended, but to our editors’ ears it sounded like all 36 speakers were mounted either entirely in front of or entirely behind the driver depending on the settings.

Last V-8 Standing

The Escalade’s midcycle refresh drops the optional diesel engine but otherwise leaves the mechanicals unchanged. That’s largely a good thing, as the full-size SUV with the heart of a Corvette wasn’t lacking in personality. The small-block 6.2-liter V-8—the last V-8 in the full-size luxury SUV segment—cranks out 420 hp and 460 lb-ft of torque with a threatening rumble to match the new menacing front fascia.

In MotorTrend testing, the Escalade hustled from 0 to 60 mph in 6.2 seconds, shifting its 10-speed transmission with quick yet smooth action. Negotiating the real world, the engine jumps into action at the lightest poke of the throttle, building torque and revs with an immediacy that turbocharged engines struggle to match.

It’s quick to respond, but that’s not the same as plain, old quick. The naturally aspirated V-8 doesn’t have the juice to match its turbocharged six-cylinder competition. The Lincoln Navigator and Jeep Grand Wagoneer can hit 60 mph more than a second ahead of the Cadillac. We’d hate to see the Escalade drop its V-8, which is such a crucial part of its identity, but Cadillac at the very least needs to unlock some more power during the next redesign or risk being left in the dust.

When the road twists and turns, the Escalade feels sharp, connected, and even playful for a 6,182-pound brick. The Caddy steers with confident precision, and the brake pedal has the same firm feel and short action you’ll find in a CT5 sport sedan. A 117-foot stop from 60 mph places the Escalade ahead of the competition, but its overly aggressive stability control puts the kibosh on hard cornering at 0.71 g before the tires start to sing.

Air springs and Magnetic Ride Control dampers keep body motions on a short leash in corners and over moonscape roads. The ride is firm yet forgiving, especially for something on 24-inch wheels (a $1,800 option). The pickiest luxury buyers might quibble over the occasional secondary ride motions and the way hard hits can excite some structural shake, but softening the suspension would likely erode some of the Cadillac’s charm.

Putting All the Pieces Together

Cadillac set itself up for success with the 2021 redesign that poured more attention and money into the Escalade’s interior. Doubling down on that investment with the latest makeover has pushed the Escalade even further upscale. The 2025 Escalade is a big, opulent cruiser with innovative technology, refined driving dynamics, and an impeccable sense of style. The last time Cadillac put all the pieces together like this, “the Standard of the World” was more than just a slogan.

2025 Cadillac Escalade Sport Platinum 600 4WD Specifications

BASE PRICE

$122,595

PRICE AS TESTED

$125,020

VEHICLE LAYOUT

Front-engine, 4WD, 7-pass, 4-door internal-combustion SUV

POWERTRAIN

6.2L direct-injected OHV 16-valve V-8

POWER

420 hp @ 5,600 rpm

TORQUE

460 lb-ft @ 4,100 rpm

TRANSMISSION

10-speed automatic

CURB WEIGHT (F/R DIST)

6,182 lb (50/50%)

WHEELBASE

120.9 in

LENGTH x WIDTH x HEIGHT

211.9 x 81.1 x 74.3-78.2 in

TIRES

Bridgestone Alenza A/S 02 TPC 3193MS
285/40R24 112H M+S XL

EPA FUEL ECONOMY,
CITY/HWY/COMBINED

14/18/16 mpg

EPA RANGE

384 mi

ON SALE

Now

MotorTrend Test Results

0-60 MPH

6.2 sec

QUARTER MILE

14.6 sec @ 95.8 mph

BRAKING, 60-0 MPH

117 ft

LATERAL ACCELERATION

0.71 g

FIGURE-EIGHT LAP

29.4 sec @ 0.60 g (avg)

I fell in love with car magazines during sixth-grade silent reading time and soon realized that the editors were being paid to drive a never-ending parade of new cars and write stories about their experiences. Could any job be better? The answer was obvious to 11-year-old me. By the time I reached high school, becoming an automotive journalist wasn’t just a distant dream, it was a goal. I joined the school newspaper and weaseled my way into media days at the Detroit auto show. With a new driver’s license in my wallet, I cold-called MotorTrend’s Detroit editor, who graciously agreed to an informational interview and then gave me the advice that set me on the path to where I am today. Get an engineering degree and learn to write, he said, and everything else would fall into place. I left nothing to chance and majored in both mechanical engineering and journalism at Michigan State, where a J-school prof warned I’d become a “one-note writer” if I kept turning in stories about cars for every assignment. That sounded just fine by me, so I talked my way into GM’s Lansing Grand River Assembly plant for my next story. My child-like obsession with cars started to pay off soon after. In 2007, I won an essay contest to fly to the Frankfurt auto show and drive the Saturn Astra with some of the same writers I had been reading since sixth grade. Winning that contest launched my career. I wrote for Jalopnik and Edmunds, interned at Automobile, finished school, and turned down an engineering job with Honda for full-time employment with Automobile. In the years since, I’ve written for Car and Driver, The New York Times, and now, coming full circle, MotorTrend. It has been a dream. A big chunk of this job is exactly what it looks like: playing with cars. I’m happiest when the work involves affordable sporty hatchbacks, expensive sports cars, manual transmissions, or any technology that requires I learn something to understand how it works, but I’m not picky. If it moves under its own power, I’ll drive it.

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