The 2017 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD LT is rated to tow up to 13,000 lbs powered by the 6.0L. For real-world towing, the practical limit is 10,400 lbs — that's 80% of max, giving you margin for hills, headwinds, and load variation. The payload rating of 4,052 lbs is the number to watch closely — once you add passengers, hitch weight, and gear, it fills faster than most people expect. With this setup, you're looking at a great selection of travel trailers, toy haulers, and many fifth wheels.
Recommended Equipment
Towing Gear for This Truck
Matched to this trim's Class IV hitch class and 13,000 lb tow rating
Towing & Capacity
Engine & Performance
Dimensions
Towing
Payload & Weight
Curb Weight
6,423 lbs
Engine
Engine
6.0L
Horsepower
360 HP @ 5400 rpm
Torque
380 lb-ft @ 4200 rpm
Transmission
6-speed shiftable automatic
Drive Type
RWD
Fuel Type
Flex-fuel (unleaded/E85)
Fuel Tank
36.0 gallons
Fuel Economy (EPA)
City10 mpg
Highway13 mpg
Combined11 mpg
Dimensions
Overall Length239.5"
Overall Width80.5"
Height78.4"
Cab Typecrew
What Can I Tow?
RV Class Compatibility
Based on a safe tow limit of 10,400 lbs and 4,052 lb payload. Shows what % of each RV class in our database you can tow.
Expandable Trailers
Bumper Pull
1,000 – 25,450 lbs
Travel Trailers
Bumper Pull
1,100 – 89,950 lbs
1,300 – 112,250 lbs
Limited
1,176 – 24,000 lbs
Limited
Destination Trailers
Bumper Pull
9,800 – 16,500 lbs
Limited
Compare Configurations
Other 2017 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD Trims
| Configuration |
Max Towing |
MPG |
|
| 2026 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD WT |
20,000 lbs |
— |
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| 2026 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD WT 4WD |
20,000 lbs |
— |
View → |
| 2026 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD LT 4WD |
20,000 lbs |
— |
View → |
| 2026 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD LT 4WD |
20,000 lbs |
— |
View → |
| 2026 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD WT |
20,000 lbs |
— |
View → |
| 2026 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD WT |
20,000 lbs |
— |
View → |
| 2026 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD WT 4WD |
20,000 lbs |
— |
View → |
| 2026 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD WT 4WD |
20,000 lbs |
— |
View → |
| 2026 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD High Country 4WD |
20,000 lbs |
— |
View → |
| 2026 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD LTZ 4WD |
20,000 lbs |
— |
View → |
Questions & Answers
Common Questions
How much can I actually tow with my 2017 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD LT?
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The 2017 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD LT is rated at 13,000 lbs maximum — but the real-world best practice is the 80% rule: target 10,400 lbs as your practical limit. This gives you margin for hills, headwinds, braking distance, and real-world load variance. More critically, check your payload first — the door sticker tells you your specific truck's limit, and payload may be your actual binding constraint.
What about payload — how much stuff can I put in the truck?
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You have 4,052 lbs of payload capacity — that's everything going IN the truck: passengers (~150 lbs each), camping gear, coolers, and critically the tongue weight from your trailer. For bumper pull trailers, tongue weight is typically 10–15% of the trailer's loaded weight. It fills up faster than most people expect, especially on longer trips.
What kind of hitch do I need?
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For the 2017 Chevrolet Silverado 3500 HD LT, you need a Class IV receiver hitch rated for 13,000 lbs. Don't skimp here — the hitch is the critical link between truck and trailer. For fifth wheel towing, you'll need a dedicated kingpin-style fifth wheel hitch mounted in the truck bed.
What types of RVs will work with my truck?
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With your 10,400 lb safe towing capacity, you're looking at a great selection of travel trailers, toy haulers, and many fifth wheels. The compatibility chart above shows what percentage of each RV class in our database you can handle. Use the
Tow Calculator to check a specific RV including gear, water, and passengers.
What does GVWR mean and why should I care?
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GVWR is Gross Vehicle Weight Rating — the maximum your truck can weigh when fully loaded with people, gear, and fuel. Your truck's GVWR is 10,500 lbs. Exceed it and you're over-stressing brakes, suspension, and tires. This is different from towing capacity — it's about what the truck itself can carry.