The Mercedes-Benz G-Class has been in production since 1979, outlasting most of the vehicles it originally competed against. Built for military use in cooperation with Austrian manufacturer Steyr-Daimler-Puch, the G-Wagen crossed into civilian life and never looked back. Today, it is as much a status symbol as it is an SUV, the kind of vehicle you see outside a swanky Beverly Hills restaurant and deep in a Colorado canyon on the same weekend.
Inside, the G-Class offers Nappa leather seating, a pair of 12.3-inch displays forming the MBUX dual-screen setup, and multi-color ambient lighting throughout the cabin. Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, navigation, and a surround-view camera system all come standard.
Off-road hardware includes three sequentially lockable differentials, an adaptive suspension system, and a suite of drive programs spanning everything from highway cruising to rock crawling.
Three robust powertrain options
Blow the doors off other off-road SUVs
The 2026 G 550 is powered by a 3.0-liter turbocharged inline-six with mild-hybrid assistance, producing 443 horsepower and 413 lb-ft. of torque. Power moves through a nine-speed automatic and a two-speed transfer case to all four wheels.
The G-Class lineup also includes the AMG G 63, which uses a 4.0-liter biturbo V8 to produce 577 horsepower and 627 lb-ft. of torque. Meanwhile, the fully electric G 580 with EQ Technology leverages four electric motors for a combined output of 579 horsepower and 859 lb-ft. of torque.
The 2026 G 550 starts at $153,900. It is worth noting, just as a quick aside, that the Toyota Land Cruiser covers much of the same off-road ground for considerably less (however, yes, there is also the argument to be made that there is no exception for the G-Wagon).
Regardless, when you buy a vehicle like the G-Class, the manual is not exactly light reading. The 2026 G-Class operator’s manual spans 829 pages. I uploaded the entire PDF to Claude and asked it to identify helpful features that a G-Class owner might have but not know about.


Base Trim Engine
4L AMG V8 Hybrid
Base Trim Transmission
9-speed automatic
Base Trim Drivetrain
All-Wheel Drive
The G-Class shows you what’s under the hood
360° camera displays terrain you cannot see
The G-Class is a tall vehicle, and the hood sits well above that of a normal crossover or SUV. When you are navigating rocky or uneven ground at a crawl, the terrain directly in front of the bumper becomes a risky blind spot. The Transparent Hood feature is the G-Class’s answer to that problem.
The system uses the 360° camera to generate a virtual image of that area, displayed on the central screen through the G-Class’s Offroad menu. When the Offroad menu is open and the camera is switched on, the transparent hood view activates automatically whenever the transmission is in Drive and the vehicle is moving below roughly four to five miles per hour.
The display shows the area under the hood, the position of the front wheels, the current travel path, and altitude above sea level.
As you pick up speed, the system transitions automatically. From about five miles per hour, the view switches from the transparent hood to a standard front camera image. Once you exceed roughly 12 to 19 miles per hour, depending on the active drive program, the camera shuts off.
The manual clarifies that the image is built from footage the camera recorded as the G-Class drives over that section of the ground. Although it might seem like it, what a driver sees is not exactly a live feed looking straight down. That means a moving object that entered the frame after the footage was captured may not appear. The manual advises treating the display as a guide and navigating any obstacles with care.
Credit: Mercedes-Benz
Credit: Mercedes-Benz













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