Nissan Brings Plug-In Power to Fleets With 2026 Rogue Hybrid
Nissan is adding a new electrified option for fleet buyers with the launch of the 2026 Rogue Plug-in Hybrid, arriving at dealerships in February starting at $45,990. The compact SUV delivers up to 38 miles of all-electric driving and an estimated 64 MPG, giving fleets a practical bridge between gas and fully electric vehicles while maintaining a total range of about 420 miles.
As Nissan’s first plug-in hybrid offered in the U.S., the Rogue combines all-wheel drive with 248 horsepower for stronger performance than the standard gas model, along with a full suite of safety and connectivity tech. The launch also signals a broader electrification push, with the next-generation Rogue Hybrid e-POWER expected to follow in late 2026 — offering electric-style driving without the need to plug in.
For fleets looking to reduce fuel costs without sacrificing flexibility, Nissan is clearly expanding the Rogue’s role as a transition vehicle into electrification.
GM Shrinks Inventory to Stay Agile in an Uncertain Auto Market
General Motors is heading into a potentially softer auto market with a leaner inventory strategy, carrying about 30–40% fewer vehicles than before the pandemic. Executives say tighter supply allows the company to react faster to market changes and manage incentives more carefully, helping protect profitability during a downturn.
Geotab Connect 2026 Signals a New Era for Fleet Intelligence
At Geotab Connect 2026 in Las Vegas, the message was clear: AI is quickly moving from a support tool to doing real fleet work on its own. Much of the discussion centered on “vibe coding,” where users describe a problem in plain language and AI builds the solution — turning tasks that once required weeks of reports, IT support, and vendor tickets into minutes of automated analysis.