I've been working on this for about a week and I'm not sure I am any closer, but I'm curious to know if you care. Do you want to know how automakers actually calcuate GVWR?
The closest I've gotten is: "GVWR is something that the manufacturer sets based on FMVSS (safety) and emissions requirements along with loading limits for tires, axles, frames, etc."
Then, they factor in some people. The people part is rather interesting.
You see they have people factored into the curb vehicle weight, but not payload.
Ford says they account for 150 lbs per seat belt. So a crew cab truck is 5, so that's 150 x 5.
Ram said "Our standard weight data accounts for a 15th percentile male and a 40th percentile female as a driver in the truck, which is the statistical norm according to engineering." Ram also has the image below on their website.
Toyota said, "We account for two AM50 occupants." I Googled that and came up with:
Chevy/GMC didn't get me an answer from engineering, but they did state this in a 2023 trailering guide. "Maximum Trailer Weight Rating This rating is determined by subtracting the towvehicle’s weight (curb weight) from the Gross Combination Weight Rating (GCWR).Base vehicle (curb) weight plus 150 lbs. each for the driver and a front passengeris used, so additional passengers, equipment and cargo weight reduce this rating."
The official definition of curb weight is:
Curb weight means the actual or the manufacturer's estimated weight of the vehicle in operational status with all standard equipment, and weight of fuel at nominal tank capacity, and the weight of optional equipment computed in accordance with § 86.1832-01; incomplete light-duty trucks shall have the curb weight specified by the manufacturer.
That's from the code of Federal Regulations.

The closest I've gotten is: "GVWR is something that the manufacturer sets based on FMVSS (safety) and emissions requirements along with loading limits for tires, axles, frames, etc."
Then, they factor in some people. The people part is rather interesting.
You see they have people factored into the curb vehicle weight, but not payload.
Ford says they account for 150 lbs per seat belt. So a crew cab truck is 5, so that's 150 x 5.
Ram said "Our standard weight data accounts for a 15th percentile male and a 40th percentile female as a driver in the truck, which is the statistical norm according to engineering." Ram also has the image below on their website.
Toyota said, "We account for two AM50 occupants." I Googled that and came up with:
- Women: ~170.8 lbs (average height of 5'3.6")
- Men: ~197.8 lbs to 199.8 lbs (average height of 5'9")
Chevy/GMC didn't get me an answer from engineering, but they did state this in a 2023 trailering guide. "Maximum Trailer Weight Rating This rating is determined by subtracting the towvehicle’s weight (curb weight) from the Gross Combination Weight Rating (GCWR).Base vehicle (curb) weight plus 150 lbs. each for the driver and a front passengeris used, so additional passengers, equipment and cargo weight reduce this rating."
The official definition of curb weight is:
Curb weight means the actual or the manufacturer's estimated weight of the vehicle in operational status with all standard equipment, and weight of fuel at nominal tank capacity, and the weight of optional equipment computed in accordance with § 86.1832-01; incomplete light-duty trucks shall have the curb weight specified by the manufacturer.
That's from the code of Federal Regulations.
