
GMC launches here with Yukon Denali Large SUV
NZ Autocar has just attended the Australasian launch of GMC's Yukon Denali. And that might sound like double Dutch to some of you. Others will have heard of GMC, a division of GM. And those into their American machinery will have come across Yukon before. It has been around since 1992. Huge 24-inch rims fill body-coloured wheel arches of Yukon Denali.
Before a further explanation, we should just mention that there's an embargo on drive impressions. Check back here on May 12th for details on how it drives. The launch route kicked off in Canberra and ended in Sydney, much of it on roads less travelled.
GMC is the division of General Motors that deals with trucks and SUVs. Or in GM speak, vehicles with 'rugged reliability, technology, and luxury'. The company is certainly long of tooth, founded in 1911.
Until the launch of the Yukon here, there have been no GMC products officially imported into Australasia. The Yukon is a large eight-pew SUV and it's named after the rugged territory in the northwest of Canada, right alongside Alaska. GMC is clearly borrowing imagery here, the SUV designed for the rigours of the great outdoors. For that it is well outfitted. Four exhausts mark out the Yukon Denali rear.
The only model we're getting here is the top-shelf Denali. Its name means 'the tall one' – it is also the indigenous name for the tallest mountain in the US. Measuring up at almost 2m in height, the Yukon Denali has running boards that extend and retract when the doors open and close. It also has grab handles to make entry easier. Long it is too at almost 5.4m and it's well over 2m wide. With its switchable AWD and high/low transfer case, along with a limited slip diff, an off-road drive mode, and height adjustable suspension, this should also cope with barely formed roads and basic trails confidently.
The vehicle itself is built in Arlington, Texas and shares its body-on-frame platform with the likes of Silverado, Sierra, Tahoe and Suburban. That's why it has a braked towing capacity of 3628kg, claimed by GMSV to be the best in class. The odd number makes more sense in US parlance (8000lbs). A towbar is standard fit, as is an 11-view camera and trailer sway control. What the Yukon Denali interior looks like after remanufacture.
Anyhow, once it arrives in Australia, it is shipped to Dandenong, Victoria, where it is remanufactured from left hook to right-hand drive. This facility has just ticked over 10,000 conversions, many of them Silverados.
Prior to going on sale in the Antipodes, GMSV has been durability testing the Yukon, 10 vehicles having completed over 100,000km. Some have done the 14,000km around Australia circuit. Since GMSV indicated that the GMC Yukon Denali would be coming down under, there have been 2500 expressions of interest. There's almost room to party aboard the Yukon Denali.
And there's a good reason for this – there are very few eight-seater luxury grade large SUV options for big families with a love of the outdoors. At least on this side of the Tasman where the asking price is $184,990.
A few other points about the Yukon. It's big enough that there is genuine seating for eight adults inside, especially as the middle-row seats are on sliders. They also fold and slide forward for ease of entry to the third-row seats. Even with all pews in use there's still 722 litres of luggage space, rising to 2056L with the third-row seats out of action and to 3480L with all rear seats folded flat. Loading is facilitated by a powered tailgate and separately opening glass section. Ride height may be lowered by 50mm to make entry and loading easier too. An illuminated GMC badge for the Yukon Denali.
It's coming here as a highly specified model following a recent refresh, sporting new front and rear fascias, liftgate badging, animated lamps and a panoramic sunroof with a powered section up front. Jeweled headlights bookend a bold hexagonal chrome-plated grille. The GMC badge up front lights up at night too.
Denali features 24-inch machined alloys, the biggest standard rims on any production vehicle sold in Australasia. So it looks the part in that can-do way. This is as big as it gets in the alloy wheel department.
Powering the Yukon Denali is a 6.2L naturally aspirated V8 featuring displacement on demand, and fully variable valve timing. Output is rated at 313kW and 624Nm, and the power is processed by a 10-speed automatic transmission. A 0-100km/h time of circa 7sec is quoted. GMC rates mean fuel use at 12.8L/100km, and the tank holds 91L. It requires 95 ULP for optimum performance.
The cabin features wood and gloss black finishes, powered, heated and ventilated seats finished in perforated leather, three-zone AC, and 42 inches of screen. The main unit is 16.8 inches and incorporates wireless AA and ACP, while there's also a wireless charge pad. Other items include 12.6 inch screens, charge points, heated pews and an AC zone for the two middle row occupants, comfort entry and push button start and every safety whatsit available, apart from traffic sign recognition. There's no native sat nav either, but smart phones integrate wirelessly and there's a head-up display. This is almost primarily for infotainment. Most functions are controlled by buttons.
As to rivals, there are only a few eight-seater SUVs on sale, but they're not as big. Arguably its main rival is the similarly sized and priced Land Rover Defender 130 with the eight-seat package. It too features a V8, although that's turbocharged with a mild hybrid set-up. While somewhat quicker, it doesn't have the luggage capacity of the Yukon Denali (2200 vs 3480L), nor the tow capacity (3000kg vs 3680kg). GMC Yukon Denali is on sale here imminently.
The GMC Yukon Denali goes on sale in New Zealand this month.
For more on this vehicle, see the June issue of NZ Autocar.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

1News
a day ago
- 1News
Formula 1: Lawson scores double top 10 finishes in Candian GP practice
Kiwi Formula 1 driver Liam Lawson will be aiming to break into the points at this weekend's Canadian Grand Prix, after an impressive double top 10 finish during Free Practice 1 and Free Practice 2. The Racing Bulls driver clocked a fastest lap time of 1:13.737s in FP1 - just 0.0544 off the lead from reigning world champion Max Verstappen, who set the fastest time of the session. Lawson finished the session in P8, behind teammate Isack Hadjar who finished P6. The Kiwi finished 10th during FP2- setting a fastest lap time of 1:12.751s on a set of soft tires. Mercedes driver George Russell went fastest in the session, with a fastest lap time of 1:12.123s. A points scoring finish in Montreal is crucial for Lawson, after narrowly missing out on a top 10 finish during the last race at the Circuit de Barcelona Catalunya in Spain. ADVERTISEMENT A poorly timed safety car saw the Kiwi slip to 11th during the final laps of the race, denying him what would have been his second points finish of the season. It will be a first-time racing at the Circuit de Gilles Villeneuve for both Lawson and Hadjar, with the track often absent from Formula 2 and Formula 3 calendars. Lawson on track during FP1 in Montreal. (Source: Getty) Verstappen walks a penalty tightrope Reigning world champion Max Verstappen will want to keep his racing clean in Canada, otherwise he could face a one race ban. The Dutch driver has racked up a total of 11 penalty points over a 12-month period- collecting three during the last race in Spain after a collision with Mercedes driver George Russell. Earning one more penalty point this weekend would sit Verstappen on 12 penalty points - enough to result in a one race ban. ADVERTISEMENT Verstappen said he is not changing his approach heading into the race weekend, despite the fine penalty margin. "I'm not here, of course, to try and get a ban," the Dutch driver said to reporters. "Missing a race is not ideal. But it's not the end of the world." Max Verstappen will hope to close the gap to McLaren's Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri in the driver's standings. (Source: Getty) If Verstappen were to miss a Grand Prix, Red Bull would likely grab Lawson or teammate Hadjar to fill in for one race, with Racing Bulls reserve driver Ayumu Iwasa taking the vacant seat in the junior team. Verstappen has claimed victory in Montreal for the last three Grand Prix and will hope to finish ahead of current championship leaders McLaren in this weekend's race. Having won all but two races in the 2025 season, the reigning constructer's champions have established themselves as the team to beat. Oscar Piastri of McLaren currently leads the drivers' standings on 186 points, with teammate Lando Norris just 10 points behind. Qualifying for the Canadian Grand Prix will take place Sunday morning (8am NZT), with the race taking place Monday (6am NZT).


Otago Daily Times
3 days ago
- Otago Daily Times
Matariki Motor Muster fundraiser returning
The time has come for the staging of the third annual Geraldine Matariki Motor Muster. Held over Matariki weekend, the event will begin with a cruise on Friday, June 20, followed by a show at Kennedy Park on Saturday, June 21 between 10am and 2pm. In a statement, event co-ordinator Howard Brockie said last year's event was a tremendous success. "[It] raised $5000 towards the construction of the permanent helipad for the Geraldine area, and feedback after the event indicated that the local community benefited to the tune of approximately $90,000 over the weekend. "Each of the events held so far have seen just under 300 vehicles descend on Kennedy Park with participants having travelled from as far as Te Anau and Invercargill in the south to Blenheim in the north." The Geraldine Lions Club will again have its popular barbecue stall operating along with the Stormy Brew Coffee cart, and a small number of automotive-themed stalls will be selling man-cave items, such as die-cast model cars. Mr Brockie said all funds raised this year would be going to the local St John. "Funds raised will be used to replace AED defibrillators in the Geraldine area. Once again, admission will be by donation both for people displaying vehicles and those attending the show. "A lot of shows charge larger amounts for the entrants than the viewing public but without the cars, we have no show, so why charge them more? "This is only possible thanks to the help of sponsors like The Village Inn, who once again are the main sponsor for this year's event. However, there are many other businesses in town who have got behind the event and it is growing into a real community event." The vehicles on display will range from hot rods and vintage cars to American muscle cars, exotic sports cars and motorbikes. Notably, this year's display will also include a 1926 4.5-litre Bentley and a 1924 Mercer that won the 1924 New Zealand Motor Cup. The event will be held no matter the weather and attendees will be encouraged to vote for their favourite vehicle to determine the people's choice award. — APL


NZ Autocar
3 days ago
- NZ Autocar
Wealthy Aussie buys $1m Cadillac Celestiq EV
An Australian collector has bought one of the world's most exclusive cars, but there's a catch to ownership. They cannot drive the opulent electric Cadillac on Australian roads. The well-to-do enthusiast splashed out on a Cadillac Celestiq that starts from $US358,000. However, the price can virtually double depending on which option boxes are ticked. Crafted as an American alternative to Rolls-Royce, the Celestiq employs meticulous attention to detail in creating an American luxury car that's competitive at the highest echelon. Cadillac says it can customise just about any aspect of the Celestiq, apart from one. It can't build the vehicle in right-hand drive. Aletha Israels, a Celestiq Concierge employed by Cadillac to keep its special customers happy, said a collector flew from Australia to Detroit to customise their dream machine. 'The intention was for the vehicle to be delivered to the States for him, not to Australia,' she said. 'A lot of our clients fly in and out on the same day in private jets.' The 5.5m dual-motor large swoopy sedan weighs in at just under three tonnes, but with dual motors and AWD its 488kW and 877Nm output can propel it to 96km/h in 3.7sec. It has usable battery capacity of 111kWh and suggested range of 485km.