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https://insideevs.com/news/785904/scout-erev-harvester-reservations-ceo-expectations/
Scout CEO Reveals Nearly All Its Electric Truck Buyers Want a Gas Engine: TDS
Scout now has over 150,000 reservations and most of them are for an EV with a gas-powered backup generator.
January 30, 2026
Since unveiling its first two vehicles in October of 2024, the independent Volkswagen subsidiary has collected over 150,000 refundable reservations, a company spokesperson said. Soon we’ll learn how well that early intent translates into real sales; Scout's debut vehicles are set to go into production at a new plant in South Carolina by the end of 2027.
Keogh said the interest in EREVs blew away his expectations.
“We felt very good about it,” he said. “Did I think it was 85/15? No. I thought it might be more 60/40, let’s put it that way.”
The strong demand for gas-extended versions means the company will "most likely" launch the EREVs first, Keogh said on stage at the BloombergNEF Summit in San Francisco this week, where InsideEVs caught up with him.
Scout began debating range extenders in the summer of 2023, Keogh told InsideEVs. His team looked at how EREVs were being received in China—where the powertrain type is booming—and considered the performance requirements for their vehicles. They also clocked the “noise” around range anxiety and charging that was repelling buyers from EVs, despite the qualities people love about them.
“We said, boy, this takes all that drama away,” he said.
That is the EREV promise in a nutshell. They aim to provide the best of both worlds: the quiet operation, cheap refueling and instant torque of an EV—plus the care-free road-tripping and towing you get in an internal-combustion car.
Scout CEO Reveals Nearly All Its Electric Truck Buyers Want a Gas Engine: TDS
Scout now has over 150,000 reservations and most of them are for an EV with a gas-powered backup generator.
January 30, 2026
- Scout has collected over 150,000 refundable reservations to date, the company said.
- Roughly 85% of Scout Motors' reservations are for the extended-range "Harvester" versions, its CEO told InsideEVs.
- Scott Keogh originally expected around 60% of reservations to be for the EREV, with the remaining 40% going to pure-EV versions.
Since unveiling its first two vehicles in October of 2024, the independent Volkswagen subsidiary has collected over 150,000 refundable reservations, a company spokesperson said. Soon we’ll learn how well that early intent translates into real sales; Scout's debut vehicles are set to go into production at a new plant in South Carolina by the end of 2027.
Keogh said the interest in EREVs blew away his expectations.
“We felt very good about it,” he said. “Did I think it was 85/15? No. I thought it might be more 60/40, let’s put it that way.”
The strong demand for gas-extended versions means the company will "most likely" launch the EREVs first, Keogh said on stage at the BloombergNEF Summit in San Francisco this week, where InsideEVs caught up with him.
Scout began debating range extenders in the summer of 2023, Keogh told InsideEVs. His team looked at how EREVs were being received in China—where the powertrain type is booming—and considered the performance requirements for their vehicles. They also clocked the “noise” around range anxiety and charging that was repelling buyers from EVs, despite the qualities people love about them.
“We said, boy, this takes all that drama away,” he said.
That is the EREV promise in a nutshell. They aim to provide the best of both worlds: the quiet operation, cheap refueling and instant torque of an EV—plus the care-free road-tripping and towing you get in an internal-combustion car.