Sponsored

Why is winter *highway* mpg so low?

inline_five

2.5L Hybrid
Well-known member
Joined
Jun 15, 2023
Threads
32
Messages
1,167
Reaction score
1,629
Location
-
Vehicle(s)
2023 Hybrid XLT
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
I have a '23 hybrid, and drive a normal highway route of 180 miles @ 70-75 mpg. My average speed is around 74.

Did it today, first time in cold temps (28°F weather) and got 27 mpg. Normal is 35-36 over the summer months. Keep in mind tire pressure was ~40 on all four (just filled them prior to trip).

Curious why low temps effect the hybrid mpg so much? Heat being on shouldn't bring it down from where it is in the summer, as the engine is running 100% of the time at ~75 mph.
Sponsored

 

MavMeister25

2.5L Hybrid
Well-known member
Joined
Jan 24, 2025
Threads
28
Messages
229
Reaction score
493
Location
South USA
Vehicle(s)
‘25 Ford Maverick XL
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
I have a '23 hybrid, and drive a normal highway route of 180 miles @ 70-75 mpg. My average speed is around 74.

Did it today, first time in cold temps (28°F weather) and got 27 mpg. Normal is 35-36 over the summer months. Keep in mind tire pressure was ~40 on all four (just filled them prior to trip).

Curious why low temps effect the hybrid mpg so much? Heat being on shouldn't bring it down from where it is in the summer, as the engine is running 100% of the time at ~75 mph.
I’ve noticed the same thing. Although I just got mine and I’ve ONLY driven in the winter on the highways. I’m getting 25-30 mpg on highways. I also wonder why this is the case since technically it shouldn’t be drawing from the hybrid battery which is affected by low temps—and therefore should be getting the estimated 33 mph highway. What gives?

Btw, do you have the AWD? I have the FWD.
 

Deb from MN

2.5L Hybrid
Well-known member
First Name
Deborah
Joined
Apr 27, 2022
Threads
5
Messages
154
Reaction score
206
Location
Mounds View
Vehicle(s)
22 Ford Maverick
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
Clubs
 
mine is also down to about 23, wonder if some gas stations have different blends of gas?
 

Sponsored

Rowerwet

2.5L Hybrid
Member
First Name
Josh
Joined
Aug 31, 2021
Threads
0
Messages
17
Reaction score
43
Location
Haverhill Massachusetts
Vehicle(s)
23 🌶 Hybrid XLT, 21 AWD hybrid sienna, 15 frontier, 03 PriusV
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
Cold air is denser, this requires more fuel to be injected to keep the correct 14:1 air/fuel ratio.
Cold air is denser, this means slightly more drag on your brick shaped truck.
You're running the cabin heater and the only heat source is the engine, so you'll have the engine running just to produce heat even when it would be off in moderate temperatures. The majority of heat from combustion in an ICE engine goes out the tailpipe, so most of this extra gasoline burned for heat is wasted, with possibly 20% going into the engine coolant and then into the greater core and then the cabin air.
You're running seat/steering wheel/windshield wiper heaters (if equipped), and those all require the engine to run more to recharge the batteries that power them.
You're probably driving in the dark more and that requires more lights to be on, which also use more battery energy.
Your tires are stiffer from cold, and the pressure might drop a couple pounds overnight, this robbs energy from the engine requiring more engine power to go the same speed.
The winter time gasoline mix usually has the highest percentage of ethanol in it, and ethanol has less energy per gallon than gasoline. This means that possibly 10% of what you pump into your tank has less energy in it, and this of course requires more fuel to be burned.
 
Sponsored

nospam56

2.5L Hybrid
Well-known member
First Name
PF
Joined
Nov 25, 2024
Threads
2
Messages
46
Reaction score
32
Location
ny
Vehicle(s)
'25 Eruption Green, the '24 was held hostage by the camera
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
How cold was it. ICE engines are always worse in the winter and the colder it is, the bigger the difference.
 

Jeff D.

2.0L EcoBoost
Well-known member
First Name
Jeff
Joined
Oct 22, 2023
Threads
17
Messages
641
Reaction score
736
Location
Duluth, MN.
Vehicle(s)
'24 Maverick Lariat & '25 Chevy Equinox LT
Engine
2.0L EcoBoost
I don't know what weight fluid Ford uses in their transmissions and differentials, but I know in other/heavier vehicles, the grease in those can take a long time to warm up enough to thin out. That adds addtional friction until it does. Even wheelbearing grease takes some amount of time of spinning before it'll allow the wheel end to spin freely.

Just another small factor to add in to the others mentioned.
 
OP
OP

inline_five

2.5L Hybrid
Well-known member
Joined
Jun 15, 2023
Threads
32
Messages
1,167
Reaction score
1,629
Location
-
Vehicle(s)
2023 Hybrid XLT
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
What mpg do you get on highways in the summer? And secondly, do you have the hybrid FWD or AWD?
Not who you quoted but I get around 35 mpg highway in the warmer months going 75, 36-37 mpg going 70. It's the same highway route of which 98% is highway speed at 70 or 75 depending on my time pressure for 180 miles.

My tire pressure is always at or above 40 psi. Today I actually filled it to 43 psi before leaving.

I'm wondering if the hybrid is just that sensitive to anything that gives it a mpg hit and cumulatively the sub-freezing temps all add up to major losses. But we're talking 30% loss here. Crazy.
 

AF Blue

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 5, 2023
Threads
13
Messages
550
Reaction score
769
Location
US
Vehicle(s)
NA
Engine
Undecided
Clubs
 
I have a '23 hybrid, and drive a normal highway route of 180 miles @ 70-75 mpg. My average speed is around 74.

Did it today, first time in cold temps (28°F weather) and got 27 mpg. Normal is 35-36 over the summer months. Keep in mind tire pressure was ~40 on all four (just filled them prior to trip).

Curious why low temps effect the hybrid mpg so much? Heat being on shouldn't bring it down from where it is in the summer, as the engine is running 100% of the time at ~75 mph.
EPA estimate: 33 highway
EPA Highway Test Speed: not >65mph AFAIK .. but not gonna even search (60mph is a guess)

Winter blend gas ... tends to drop MPGs
Hybrid Battery use in extreme temps usually pushes ICE into use more.


AKA ...i'm not an engineer, but when i read your post i see "normal operation" for Hybrid Mav.
You are not far off from EPA
 

MavMeister25

2.5L Hybrid
Well-known member
Joined
Jan 24, 2025
Threads
28
Messages
229
Reaction score
493
Location
South USA
Vehicle(s)
‘25 Ford Maverick XL
Engine
2.5L Hybrid
But we're talking 30% loss here. Crazy.
Right!? That’s a huge drop in mpg. I’m glad I live in the South where it rarely goes below freezing even in winter.

Is this your first winter owning the Mav?
Sponsored

 
 







Top