Gmc Suburban
Gmc Suburban — production years, market prices by model year, NHTSA recalls and owner complaints, and live listings for sale on VehiSales.
Generations of the Gmc Suburban
Every body generation side by side — each links to its full story: market prices, facelift changes, recalls and live listings.
| Generation | Facelift | Price today | Units for sale | Recalls | Complaints |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Generation 1 1996–2000 | — | — | 0 | — | — |
Vehicles within one generation share the same platform and body style. Price today — median asking prices across each generation's model years (current market).
Engines used in the Suburban
Engine families this model shipped with, by NHTSA VIN build data — each links to every model that shares it.
| Engine | Years in this model | Also used in | VIN builds ⓘ |
|---|---|---|---|
| GM 5.7L V8 (350 / Vortec 5700) | 1981–1999 | 32 models | 119 |
| Gmc 7.4L 8-cylinder | 1983–1999 | 19 models | 45 |
| Gmc 6.5L 8-cylinder | 1994–1999 | 14 models | 30 |
| Gmc 6.2L 8-cylinder | 1982–1991 | 21 models | 16 |
About the Gmc Suburban
The Chevrolet Suburban is a series of SUVs built by Chevrolet since 1934. The longest-produced automobile nameplate in the world, the Suburban is currently in its twelfth generation, in production since the 2021 model year. Beginning life as one of the first metal-bodied station wagons, the Suburban is the progenitor of the modern full-size sport utility vehicle, combining a wagon-style body with the chassis and powertrain of a pickup truck.
Alongside its Advance Design, Task Force, and C/K predecessors, the Chevrolet Silverado currently shares chassis and mechanical commonality with the Suburban and other trucks.
Source: Wikipedia — Chevrolet Suburban, CC BY-SA.