For a hundred years, "trailer" meant one thing: dead weight. Passive load. Whatever you loaded on it, the tow vehicle moved. That model worked because gas engines had range to spare. It stops working the moment the tow vehicle goes electric.

The powered trailer is the category that changes this relationship. Instead of dead weight, the trailer is an active partner — carrying its own energy, driving its own wheels, and contributing to the system's capability rather than subtracting from it.

Here is a direct comparison across the dimensions that matter.

Head-to-Head Comparison

DimensionConventional TrailerPowered Trailer (Aslin)
Energy systemTow vehicle does all the workTrailer carries and uses its own battery
EV towing range–40 to –65% at highway speedUp to 150 mi (trailer contributes independently)
Sway controlPassive weight distribution / sway barsActive — differential motor torque damps sway
Regen brakingFriction brakes onlyTrailer regen on descent; recharges battery
Maneuverability (unhitched)Manual only — must push by handRemote self-propelled — moves under app control
Basecamp powerNone (requires external generator)Full off-grid power from onboard LFP battery
Hook-up processManual alignment and hitchingAssistance mode — trailer can move to align with hitch
Brake systemElectric drum or disc brakes (tow vehicle controlled)Coordinated regen + friction; integrated with tow vehicle
MaintenanceBrakes, bearings, tires, lightsAbove + motor, battery (minimal — LFP has 3,000–5,000+ cycle life)
Upfront cost$2,000–$15,000 typical rangeHigher — purpose-built premium system
Total trip cost (EV)High — charging stops, time costs, range anxietyLower total — fewer stops, faster trips, no range anxiety
ICE tow vehicle compatibilityOptimal — gas has range to spareWorks with ICE too; benefits most pronounced with EV/hybrid

The Economics: Total Cost vs. Upfront Cost

A conventional ATV trailer costs $2,500–$8,000. An Aslin powered trailer costs more — it is a purpose-built electrified system with motor, battery, and control electronics. The upfront cost comparison is not close.

The total cost comparison is more nuanced. For an EV tow vehicle owner making 20+ towing trips per year to destinations 150+ miles away:

At the right use frequency, a powered trailer's premium price amortizes against the elimination of these ongoing costs — plus the value of the basecamp power system, which replaces an $800–2,000 portable generator.

When a Conventional Trailer Still Makes Sense

A conventional trailer is the right tool when:

When a Powered Trailer Is the Right Choice

A powered trailer is right when:

The powered trailer doesn't compete with the conventional trailer on price. It competes with a category of problem the conventional trailer creates — the broken half-electric rig — and solves it completely.

Don't tow dead weight.

The Aslin powered trailer drives its own wheels. Three models, three load classes, up to 150 miles of towing range. Complete the rig.

Explore the Aslin Lineup

Related reading:
What Is a Powered Trailer?
What Is EV Towing Range Anxiety — and How Do You Solve It?