Here’s the thing. Plug-in hybrids were supposed to be the bridge. A safe, practical halfway house between gas and full electric. For Stellantis, that bridge is officially closed in the United States.
As of the end of the 2025 model year, Stellantis has discontinued every plug-in hybrid vehicle it sells in the US. That includes the once-celebrated Jeep Wrangler 4xe, Jeep Grand Cherokee 4xe, and the Chrysler Pacifica PHEV. No pause. No quiet delay. These models are done.
Just a few years ago, the Wrangler 4xe was being promoted as the best-selling plug-in hybrid in America and a cornerstone of Stellantis’ electrification push. Today, it’s a symbol of a strategy that didn’t age the way the company hoped.
Jeep and Chrysler’s PHEV Era Comes to an End
The decision affects two of Stellantis’ most visible American brands: Jeep and Chrysler.
Jeep’s 4xe lineup played a unique role. It promised electric commuting during the week and gas-powered freedom on weekends. Chrysler’s Pacifica PHEV, meanwhile, was one of the few plug-in hybrid minivans on the market and a favorite among families looking to dip a toe into electrification.
All three vehicles disappeared from Jeep’s online Build and Price tools earlier this week, sparking speculation. That mystery is now resolved. Production is ending, full stop.
Stellantis Explains the Shift
In a statement provided to The Drive, a Stellantis spokesperson framed the move as a response to changing market realities.
Customer demand, regulatory pressure, and competitive dynamics are all pushing the company in a different direction. According to Stellantis, the future lies not in plug-in hybrids but in a mix of conventional hybrids, range-extended electric vehicles, and full EVs where they make the most sense.
Translation: PHEVs are no longer pulling their weight.
Stop-Sales, Recalls, and a Quiet Exit
It’s worth noting that all 4xe models were already under active stop-sale orders due to ongoing recall campaigns. While Stellantis initially avoided explaining why the vehicles vanished from configurators, the discontinuation confirms this wasn’t a temporary issue.
What this really means is that Stellantis isn’t planning a next-generation PHEV architecture for the US market. The company is stepping away entirely.
What Comes Next for Electrification at Stellantis
The pivot doesn’t mean Stellantis is backing away from electrification. Instead, it’s narrowing its bets.
Range-extended EVs are now front and center. Vehicles like the upcoming Ram range-extended electric pickup remain in development, signaling a belief that onboard generators and series-hybrid systems may resonate more with American buyers than plug-in hybrids ever did.
That keeps Ram firmly in the electrification conversation, even as Jeep and Chrysler reset.
A Bigger Signal to the Industry
Stellantis ending PHEVs in the US isn’t just a product decision. It’s a market signal.
The bridge strategy may be cracking under real-world usage, charging behavior, and cost pressures. For now, Stellantis is betting that Americans want either simpler hybrids or electric vehicles that don’t ask them to plug in at all.
The plug-in hybrid moment, at least for this automaker, is officially over.




