Grand Wagoneer is one of Jeep’s most storied nameplates. In 2021, Jeep revived it — sans wood paneling or any explicit Jeep branding — as a Ram 1500-based, super-lux, slightly more than three-ton luxury barge to take on swanky behemoths like the Cadillac Escalade and Lincoln Navigator. Upon beholding the new Grand Wagoneer’s prodigious mass for the first time, we all undoubtedly had the same reaction: great, but can you build an even bigger one?
Well, here in late 2022, Jeep is obliging with the all-new Grand Wagoneer L.
“L,” as you’ve no doubt surmised, stands for larger and longer than the standard model. Specifically, the Grand Wagoneer grows a foot in overall length, adds seven inches to the wheelbase and now offers up to 44.2 cubic feet of cargo space behind the third row. The modifications balloon the curb weight to more than 6,700 pounds. And that’s before you start adding people and stuff.
The Grand Wagoneer L is also a landmark vehicle for more than immensity and price point. Stellantis is cutting Hemi V8s from its lineup. And the Grand Wagoneer L is the first vehicle to receive the new, more powerful and (at least marginally) more efficient Hurricane twin-turbo 3.0-liter inline-six engine.
Jeep (or rather, Wagoneer) brought me out to Big Sky County with other media types to sample the Grand Wagoneer L for a day in its natural habitat, America’s wide open west. It’s not an SUV that’s going to save the planet. But the Grand Wagoneer L’s blend of plushness, tech and practicality make it a compelling option for the niche of buyers that need it.
2023 Jeep Grand Wagoneer L

Pros: Smooth engines; luxurious tech-forward interior; Cargo space; 10,000-pound towing capacity