The table below lists every trim of the 2004 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Regular CAB with the engine, drivetrain, axle ratio, horsepower, torque, GVWR, curb weight, and payload that go with that trim's headline tow rating. Manufacturers often publish more than one tow figure per truck — a conventional bumper-hitch rating, a weight-distributing rating, and a gooseneck or fifth-wheel rating — so the highest number here is the maximum across all hitch classes the source carries for the trim.

Per-trim breakdown

Configuration Engine HP Torque Axle Tow (lb) GVWR Curb Payload
Work Truck Pickup 2D 8 ft V6, 4.3 Liter 200 260 9,000 4,286
Pickup 2D 6 1/2 ft V6, 4.3 Liter 200 260 9,200 4,147
Work Truck Pickup 2D 6 1/2 ft V6, 4.3 Liter 200 260 9,200 4,147
Pickup 2D 8 ft V6, 4.3 Liter 200 260 9,000 4,286
LS Pickup 2D 6 1/2 ft V8, 4.8 Liter 270 285 9,200 4,147
LS Pickup 2D 8 ft V8, 4.8 Liter 270 285 9,000 4,286

How to interpret the headline tow figure

Tow ratings at this level are normally achievable with a conventional Class II or Class III receiver hitch. Always verify your vehicle has the manufacturer's tow package installed if you intend to tow at the upper end of the rating, and inspect the door-jamb sticker for the actual maximum permitted on your specific configuration.

How this year compares to 2003

The 2003 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Regular CAB carried a maximum tow rating of 9,100 lb. The 2004 model adds 100 lb on top of that — usually a sign the manufacturer added a tow package option, refreshed the powertrain, or revised hitch class certification. See the 2003 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Regular CAB page for the full per-trim breakdown of the prior year.

Other 2004 Chevrolet models

The rest of Chevrolet's 2004 lineup, ranked by maximum tow rating. Click through for the per-trim breakdown of any of these.

All figures sourced from manufacturer documentation. See our methodology for how the dataset is compiled. Always confirm against your vehicle's door-jamb sticker before towing.