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2017 Chevrolet Silverado 2500HD — Used Buying Guide

9 years old · used value range $12,444 – $18,826 · max towing 18,500 lb · max payload 3,979 lb

$12,444–$18,826Used value range
0On TruckLot
18,500 lbMax towing
3,979 lbMax payload

The 2017 Silverado 2500HD at a glance

The 2017 Chevrolet Silverado 2500HD is a 9-year-old used pickup that originally listed at approximately $62,000 for a base configuration. After 9 years of ownership-cycle depreciation, fair market value for typical-mileage examples lands between $12,444 and $18,826, with low-mileage clean-title trucks pushing toward the upper bound and higher-mileage or salvage-history trucks anchoring the lower bound.

The Silverado 2500HD at this model year was built on the Chevrolet light-duty platform and offered in regular, extended, and crew cab body styles. Maximum trailer towing capability for this year is 18,500 lb when properly equipped (typically requires the optional max tow package and the right axle ratio); maximum payload is 3,979 lb in the lightest cab/bed/drivetrain combination.

Available engines for 2017

Powertrain6.0L Vortec V8 Gas (360 hp)
Powertrain6.6L L5P Duramax Diesel V8 (445 hp / 910 lb-ft)

Configuration options

Cab optionsCrew Cab · Extended Cab · Regular Cab
Bed options5'7" Short · 6'5" Standard · 8'0" Long
Available trimsWT, Custom, LT, LTZ, High Country, ZR2, Custom Trail Boss
Max towing capacity18,500 lb (properly equipped)
Max payload capacity3,979 lb

EPA fuel economy ranges for this model year

Powertrain classCity mpgHighway mpg
Gasoline V62022
Gasoline V81621
Diesel2429

Common issues for the 2017 Silverado 2500HD

  • CP4 fuel pump failures on Duramax (less common than Power Stroke but possible)
  • DEF system sensor faults
  • Allison 1000 transmission service interval critical
  • Front-end ball joints wear faster on plowed and lifted trucks

Service history matters more on this model year than mileage alone. A 2017 Silverado 2500HD with documented oil changes, transmission services performed at the recommended interval, and any open recalls completed is worth meaningfully more than an undocumented truck of the same mileage. Ask the seller for the maintenance binder; if it does not exist, ask the local Chevrolet dealership to pull the VIN history before you commit to a price.

Should you buy a 2017 Silverado 2500HD right now?

The honest answer depends on three variables: how the truck was used, what powertrain it has, and what comparable competitors are listed for in your state. A 2017 Silverado 2500HD with a clean service history, the volume powertrain (avoid first-year-of-production engines unless you have done your homework), and a price near the middle of the $12,444–$18,826 range is usually a sound buy.

If you are cross-shopping the same model year against competitors, our comparison guides work through the trade-offs with real numbers. Diesel premium, towing differences, payload differences, and depreciation curves are all spelled out so you can decide whether the $3,000–$8,000 difference between similar trucks is justified for your use case.