Click any model in the list to see year-by-year tow ratings, the trim and engine combination that hits the maximum, GVWR, curb weight, payload, and axle ratio. The data is split into a recent table for the last six model years and a longer table for the rest of the catalogue.

Suzuki towing capacity snapshot

Across every Suzuki in this dataset, the highest tow rating on record is the 2009 Suzuki Equator at 6,500 lb. That figure represents the maximum tow capacity published for any trim and hitch class of that vehicle — typically the gooseneck or fifth-wheel rating on heavy-duty pickups.

For the 2013 model year, Suzuki's maximum towing capacity tops out at 3,000 lb averaging 2,350 lb across the lineup. The bar chart below ranks the top Suzuki models of 2013 by their headline tow rating so you can spot the leader at a glance.

Across the Suzuki catalogue: 47 between 5,000 and 9,999 lb (mid-duty), 245 below 5,000 lb (light-duty / passenger). The mix gives a quick read on whether the brand leans toward heavy-tow trucks or passenger vehicles whose tow rating is more of a footnote.

Top Suzuki models for towing (2013)

Recent Suzuki models (2009–2013)

Recent Suzuki towing capacities, 2009 model year onward. 9 models are listed with the maximum tow rating across all trims, the year range covered, and a link to the full model page. Manufacturers commonly publish multiple tow figures per truck (conventional bumper, weight-distributing, gooseneck or fifth-wheel) — the headline figure below is the maximum across all hitch classes published for that model.

Model Years covered Trims Max tow (lb)
Equator 2009–2012 29 3,500 – 6,500
Equator Ext. Cab 2WD 2009 2 3,500 – 6,500
Equator Extended CAB 2009–2012 13 3,500 – 6,500
Equator Crew CAB 2009–2012 13 6,100 – 6,300
Equator Crew Cab 2WD 2009–2012 4 6,300
Equator Crew Cab 4WD 2009–2012 4 6,100
XL7 2001–2010 9 3,000 – 3,500
Grand Vitara 1999–2013 40 1,500 – 3,000
SX4 2008–2013 68 1,500 – 1,700

Older Suzuki models (1991–2008)

Older Suzuki towing capacities going back to 1991. 11 models. Pre-2015 ratings predate SAE J2807, the standardised towing-capacity test that is now used industry-wide, so figures from those years may be measured under different assumptions than current ratings. Use them to track the trend within a single model rather than for direct cross-era comparison.

Model Years covered Trims Max tow (lb)
XL7 2WD/4WD 2003–2007 5 3,000 – 3,500
XL 7 2001–2005 14 3,000
Vitara 1999–2003 32 1,000 – 1,500
Grand Vitara 4-Door 2000 1 1,500
Vitara 2-Door 2000 1 1,000
Sidekick 2-door 1995–1998 4 1,000
Sidekick 4-door 1995–1998 4 1,500
Sidekick Sport 1996–1998 3 1,500
X 90 1996–1998 3 1,000
Sidekick 1991–1997 36 1,000 – 1,500
Samurai 1991–1995 7 1,000

How to read Suzuki towing capacity figures

The headline tow rating for each Suzuki model on this page represents the maximum tow capacity published across every trim, cab, drivetrain, and hitch class — typically the manufacturer's gooseneck or fifth-wheel rating on heavy-duty pickups, and the bumper-pull rating on light-duty vehicles. Manufacturers commonly publish three figures per pickup: a conventional bumper-pull rating, a weight-distributing rating, and a gooseneck/fifth-wheel rating. The number you can actually tow on the road is the lowest of these three, capped further by the receiver hitch installed on your specific vehicle.

Click any Suzuki model above to open the year-by-year breakdown. The model page lists every trim the source data carries separately, with the engine, drivetrain, horsepower, torque, GVWR, curb weight, payload, and axle ratio that go with that trim's headline tow rating. Use the door-jamb sticker on your specific vehicle as the final source of truth — these figures are for reference and lookup only.

All figures sourced from manufacturer documentation. See our methodology for how the dataset is compiled.