May 5, 2026

If you need third-row seating, Chevrolet gives you three real options: the 2026 Traverse, the 2026 Tahoe, and the 2026 Suburban. All three are genuine 3-row SUVs, but they differ quite a bit in size, seating capacity, and who they actually work for. At Turan-Foley Chevrolet Buick near Gulfport, we help buyers sort through this exact decision every day, so we put this guide together to make it a faster process. Browse our new vehicle inventory to see what’s currently in stock, or keep reading to figure out which model actually fits your household.

Quick clarification before we dig in: the Trax, Trailblazer, Equinox, and Blazer don’t offer a third row. They’re solid vehicles in their own right, but if third-row seating is non-negotiable, those four are out. The Traverse, Tahoe, and Suburban are the only Chevy SUVs with a 3rd row.

Not Every Chevy SUV Has a Third Row – Here’s What Does

Each of the three 3-row models approaches the job from a different angle. The Traverse is a midsize unibody SUV built around everyday family practicality. The Tahoe is a full-size body-on-frame SUV that brings more power and a larger overall footprint. The Suburban takes that same full-size construction and stretches it further with an extended wheelbase, giving you the maximum in both passenger and cargo room. Once you understand those structural differences, picking the right one gets a lot simpler.

2026 Chevrolet Traverse: The Midsize 3-Row SUV for Growing Families

The 2026 Traverse is Chevrolet’s midsize entry in the 3-row category. It’s the most maneuverable of the three, the easiest to park, and the one that fits most naturally into daily suburban life without ever feeling like you’re piloting something too large.

Seating Capacity and Who It Fits Best

Seating actually varies by trim. The LT trim offers an available second-row bench that brings total capacity to eight passengers. Most other trims, including the Z71, RS, and High Country, come with second-row captain’s chairs and seat seven. That distinction matters: if you consistently need that eighth seat, the LT is the one to focus on.

The Traverse is the natural fit for growing families with younger kids, households where one vehicle handles both school runs and weekend road trips, and drivers who want a 3-row SUV that doesn’t demand extra confidence to navigate a crowded parking garage. Wide door openings and a low step-in height are the kind of practical details that seem minor until you’re buckling car seats twice a day.

One honest note on the third row: 32.13 inches of legroom works fine for kids and shorter adults, but it’s tight for taller adults on long drives. If your third row will regularly carry full-grown passengers on extended trips, the Tahoe or Suburban will serve them considerably better.

Midsize Size, Real-World Space

Cargo is one of the Traverse’s strongest suits. Fold everything down and you’ve got 97.6 cu. ft. of space, which is genuinely impressive for a midsize. Double stroller, a week’s worth of groceries, lacrosse gear for three kids, it all fits. Higher trims include power-folding third-row seats, which makes switching from passenger mode to cargo mode quick and painless. For families who are constantly loading and unloading, that feature becomes more useful than it sounds on paper.

2026 Chevrolet Tahoe: Full-Size Flexibility for Active Families

Step inside the Tahoe after spending time in the Traverse and the difference is immediately obvious. The Tahoe is bigger, built on a body-on-frame platform, and designed to handle more in every direction: more passengers, more cargo, more demanding conditions.

Seating Capacity and Who It Fits Best

The 2026 Tahoe can seat up to nine passengers when the LS trim is configured with a front bench. Most other trims seat seven or eight depending on whether the second row has a bench or captain’s chairs. That front-bench option is worth knowing about if you’re regularly moving a larger group and need every available seat.

The Tahoe is the right call for families with older kids who actually use the third row the way adults do, for households that need real legroom in all three rows, and for drivers who regularly tow a boat, camper, or trailer. Every row has noticeably more breathing room than in the Traverse, and the third row in particular is a meaningfully more comfortable place for adults on longer drives.

If you want to schedule a test drive with the Tahoe and Traverse back-to-back, we can set that up. That kind of direct comparison tends to make the decision pretty clear for most people.

When You Need More Than a Midsize

Families who lead active lives and push their vehicles hard tend to gravitate toward the Tahoe for good reason. It handles demanding terrain, carries full loads without complaint, and the trim selection is broad enough that you can dial in exactly the features you want. For households that genuinely use their SUV hard, the full-size construction is a better long-term fit.

2026 Chevrolet Suburban: Maximum Space for Large Families and Long Hauls

The Suburban is in its own category. It shares the Tahoe’s full-size body-on-frame bones but adds an extended wheelbase, which translates directly to more interior length, more third-row space, and more cargo room behind that third row.

Seating Capacity and Who It Fits Best

Like the Tahoe, the 2026 Suburban seats up to nine on the LS trim with a front bench. Most trims seat seven or eight depending on second-row configuration. What sets the Suburban apart is what those passengers actually experience. The extended wheelbase gives third-row occupants noticeably more legroom than either the Traverse or the Tahoe. Adults can sit back there comfortably, which is genuinely rare in the SUV segment.

The Suburban is built for large families with three or more kids, multi-generational households where grandparents and children are riding together regularly, and frequent long-distance travelers who aren’t willing to trade passenger comfort for cargo capacity. It’s also the right answer for anyone who needs to carry a full vehicle of people and still have meaningful cargo room to work with.

The Case for Going Full-Size Plus

The Suburban’s reputation comes from what it lets you do simultaneously. You’re not choosing between hauling nine people or hauling gear. You can do both. Road trips, team carpools, beach days on the Mississippi Gulf Coast where everyone shows up with coolers and equipment, the Suburban handles all of it without forcing compromises. For families who’ve outgrown everything else, it’s often the logical endpoint.

Traverse vs. Tahoe vs. Suburban: Side-by-Side at a Glance

The table below uses verified 2026 model year data and puts the key differences right next to each other.

Feature2026 Traverse2026 Tahoe2026 Suburban
Body TypeMidsize unibodyFull-size body-on-frameFull-size extended body-on-frame
Max Seating8 (LT w/ 2nd-row bench); most trims 79 (LS w/ front bench); most trims 7–89 (LS w/ front bench); most trims 7–8
Max Cargo Space97.6 ft³122.7 ft³144.50 ft³
3rd-Row Legroom32.1 in34.9 in36.7 in
Best ForGrowing families, daily versatilityActive families, towing, full-size strengthLarge families, max passenger + cargo capacity
Starting TrimLSLSLS

The Traverse is the approachable, maneuverable choice for families who want a 3-row SUV without the full-size footprint. The Tahoe bridges everyday usability and serious capability in one package. The Suburban extends that further for households that simply need the most room available. All three are legitimate Chevy SUVs with a 3rd row. The right one comes down to how many people you regularly carry, whether adult comfort in the third row matters to you, and how much you demand from an SUV beyond moving passengers from point A to B. You can compare all three in our new vehicle inventory to check current availability and trim options.

Which Chevy 3-Row SUV Is the Right Fit for You?

Start with passenger count and how you actually use the third row. If your family is growing and you need something that handles school pickups, weekend errands, and the occasional road trip without feeling unwieldy, the Traverse is a strong starting point. It’s manageable, genuinely capable on cargo, and the most practical fit for families with younger kids who aren’t yet filling all three rows with adults.

If your household regularly travels with older kids or adults filling every seat, or if towing is part of your regular routine, the move to full-size is worth making. The Tahoe’s third row is meaningfully more comfortable for adult passengers than the Traverse’s 32.1 inches allows, and the full-size construction gives the whole vehicle a more confident, capable character.

For large families, frequent long-haul drivers, or anyone who simply refuses to leave people or gear behind, the Suburban answers all of it at once. It’s not for everyone, but for the families it’s built for, nothing else in the Chevrolet lineup even comes close.

See These 3-Row Chevy SUVs in Person

There’s only so much that reading about these vehicles can tell you. Sitting in all three rows, checking how the third row folds, taking a model out on the road: that’s usually where the decision actually gets made. We carry the Traverse, Tahoe, and Suburban at Turan-Foley Chevrolet Buick, so you can compare all three in one visit without driving all over the Gulf Coast.

Come see us at 11123 Hwy 49N in Gulfport. We’ve been serving families across the Mississippi Gulf Coast for over 50 years, and whether you’re ready to buy or just starting to narrow things down, we can walk you through trim configurations, seating options, and financing to make the whole process straightforward. Contact us ahead of your visit if you have specific questions or want to confirm availability on a particular model.