Stellantis’ $13B U.S. Plan: Why I’m Not Celebrating (Yet)
The headlines scream “$13 billion to supercharge U.S. operations,” and I get why people are hyped—jobs, plants, product actions. But once you strip away the press-release confetti and look at what’s actually in (and not in) the announcement, it’s hard to see this as a win for those of us who want Dodge to be Dodge again. I went through the language line by line, matched it against what we’ve already been tracking for months, and here’s the blunt truth: the plan leans heavily into EVs and hybrids, recycles several items we already knew were coming, and never says the one word that would signal a real course correction—Hemi.
The “five new vehicles” problem
Stellantis says it’ll expand U.S. production by 50% over four years with five new vehicles and 19 product actions. Sounds strong… until you map where those five go:
- Belvidere, IL reopens for two new Jeeps. That’s 2/5 gone right there.
- Toledo, OH gets the all-new midsize Ram truck. That’s 3/5.
- Warren, MI will build a range-extended EV and an internal-combustion large SUV (read: Wagoneer/Grand Wagoneer family spinoff for a Dodge, Chrysler, or Ram-branded SUV). Now we’re at 4/5, and we haven’t even touched Dodge.
- The next-gen Durango is slated for Detroit in 2029—news we already expected but still with fuzzy powertrain details.
Do the math and tell me where Dodge’s “new” product lands. If the total is truly five all-new vehicles, there’s room for one Dodge card to be played in the next four years—and that’s assuming these counts aren’t double-packed with trims or facelifts presented as “product actions.”
The missing word that matters: Hemi
You’d think—after the instant demand spike we just watched when Ram re-introduced Hemi—that this release would carve out even a sentence about V8 strategy, Hemi localization, or a next-gen architecture. Nothing. No U.S. Hemi tooling. No fourth-gen Hemi R&D line item. Not even a breadcrumb about a long-rumored stateside move of production to stabilize supply of Hemi V8 engines and stop issues of engine shortages at Saltillo can’t keep up with Hurricane and 5.7 Hemi demand.
Meanwhile, there is a very specific call-out to the GME T4 Evo (the four-cylinder program) being produced in Kokomo, which has been in the works for years. That’s fine for Jeep’s volume and for CAFE math, but the signal is clear: the funded powertrain momentum—at least in this package—is EV, hybrid, and four-cylinder, not “Hemi comeback.”
Where’s SRT’s new house?
I’ve told you how important a unified SRT base would be—one building where aero, chassis, calibration, durability, and low-volume build all live together. Tim Kuniskis himself has talked about giving SRT a real place to work. If this $13B were truly a muscle pivot, you’d expect a paragraph—one—announcing that facility. It’s not here.
Without that cornerstone, you’re stuck with scattershot performance projects, higher third-party costs, and the same “special edition” treadmill that gave us eye-watering MSRPs and dealer addendums. Give SRT a home and competitive pricing fixes itself. Not seeing it in the official plan is a red flag.
What’s actually “new” vs. what was already happening
I’m not saying Stellantis isn’t spending real money. I’m saying the newness is thinner than the headline implies:
- Reopenings and reassignments: Belvidere’s revival and Warren’s large-SUV setup sound fresh, but much of that footprint shuffle has been in motion behind the scenes.
- Toledo midsize truck: We’ve been telling you about this for months. It’s finally in black-and-white.
- Kokomo GME T4 Evo: The plant’s been tooling for this; the release simply formalizes it.
You can celebrate the jobs and local production shifts and still be honest about how little this says about Dodge performance.
If you care about Dodge, this is the real risk
Here’s the uncomfortable part: if Stellantis truly limits itself to five all-new vehicles in four years and four of them are already spoken for by Jeep/Ram/large SUV, Dodge gets one bite at the apple. What is it?
- A $30K sporty compact (the “Duster”-sized fun car we’ve talked about)?
- A Cuda-flavored coupe/hatch riding on a shared architecture?
- A Viper-spirit low-volume flagship?
Pick one. Because under this plan, that may be all you get within the stated window. And none of those are worth much to the core if there’s no Hemi strategy, no SRT home, and no pricing discipline to keep MSRPs from drifting into fantasyland.
“EVs and hybrids forever” isn’t a plan—balance is
I’m not anti-hybrid. A smart hybrid setup can make a heavy SUV feel 800 lb lighter and crush a towing grade without turning the gauge cluster into a prayer book. But balance matters. The market already rejected an EV-first fantasy. Buyers want choice: tough, reliable ICE; efficient hybrids where they make sense; and performance that doesn’t require a finance degree and a charger map.
If this was Stellantis learning that lesson, the proof would be simple: fund both sides. Mention the Hemi. Stand up SRT. Tie Direct Connection to factory-validated power packages installed by certified shops with warranty support. None of that is present here.
What would change my mind fast
I’d flip from skeptical to cautiously optimistic if Stellantis releases, in short order:
- An SRT facility announcement with location, scope, and hiring plan.
- A U.S. Hemi manufacturing investment—tooling, timelines, and applications.
- A clean Dodge product roadmap showing a near-term attainable performance model and a halo project, with pricing logic that avoids $90–$100K sticker shock on mid-trims.
Drop those three and I’ll happily eat crow on camera.
So what now?
I’m not rooting against Stellantis. I want Dodge to win without apology: V8 thunder where it belongs, hybrids where they’re useful, and prices that let real people play. But this $13B release—as written—is mostly EV/Hybrid infrastructure and four-cylinder housekeeping, wrapped in a growth bow, with Dodge performance shoved to “we’ll get back to you.”
If you’re a Hemi person, an SRT person, or just someone who wants a fun, affordable Dodge you don’t need a loan officer to modify, you’re right to be frustrated. I’m still hoping for a second shoe to drop—one that finally says Hemi out loud and gives SRT its home.
Until then, tell me which single Dodge you’d green-light under this five-vehicle cap: the $30K fun car, the Cuda-style coupe, or the Viper-spirit flagship. And more importantly—what would you actually buy at a fair price? That’s the signal Stellantis needs to hear, and I’ll make sure it’s heard.







