- Car seat–friendly tilt (passenger side). You can access the third row even with certain car seats installed. That’s a huge usability win.
- Tether anchors in all seating positions. From a CPST perspective, this gives you great flexibility for forward-facing installs.
- Comfortable second and third rows for its size/. The Acadia prioritizes passenger space over trunk space, and you feel that.
- True six-passenger layout. No fake third-row middle seat. It’s honest seating that actually works.
- Simple, user-friendly tech. Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, physical climate knobs — nothing overcomplicated.
The Exterior
The 2021 GMC Acadia has a sporty, compact look that sets it apart from the bigger three-row SUVs. This is not a Traverse twin — it’s smaller, more athletic, and easier to maneuver.
I especially love it in trims with the blacked-out accents. The black grille, black badging, black roof rails — it gives the Acadia a sharp, cohesive look. In red, it feels bold and sporty. There’s no unnecessary chrome, and that makes it feel modern.
From the side profile, it’s clearly more compact than a traditional midsize SUV. That’s actually a win for a lot of families who want three rows but don’t want to drive something that feels massive.
The back end is boxy and squared off, which helps maximize interior space. It’s clean, simple, and very GMC.
First Row
The first row of the 2021 GMC Acadia is practical. It’s not over-the-top luxury, but it gives you what you need in a very straightforward way.
Here’s what I like:
- User-friendly infotainment system. Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, navigation, and physical home/climate knobs. It’s simple and intuitive.
- Physical climate controls. I love when I can just turn a knob. Not everything needs to be buried in a screen.
- Heated seats with back-only option. Random but actually very nice.
- Driving modes + easy-to-access safety buttons. Everything is right there and easy to control.
- Sunroof. Always a win.
Now, what I didn't love:
- Push-button shifter placement. It’s awkward. If you have a cup in the holder, it’s even harder to reach. That would drive me crazy long term.
- Door cubby size. Larger water bottles don’t really fit well.
- Rear visibility. For how boxy the back end is, I wish the rear window were slightly larger.
Overall, the first row gives you everything you need, nothing you don’t. It’s functional, easy to use, and comfortable — just with a few design choices that feel a little odd.
Second Row
For a smaller three-row SUV, the second row in the 2021 Acadia is surprisingly roomy. Even with a large rear-facing seat installed and the front seat set for a tall driver, there’s still workable clearance.
From a hardware standpoint, here’s what you get:
- Lower anchors in both captain’s chairs
- Tether anchors in all rear seating positions
- Car seat–friendly tilt on the passenger side only
The lower anchors are easy to access and installs are straightforward. Rear-facing and forward-facing both work well in the captain’s chairs.
The big win here is the passenger-side car seat–friendly tilt. You can access the third row even with certain car seats installed, which makes a huge difference in everyday use.
But — and this is important — the driver’s side does not tilt the same way. It folds forward instead, which means you can’t access the third row with a car seat installed on that side. I love one side. I don’t love the other.
Also, there are no lower anchors in the third row, which limits flexibility for LATCH installs back there.
Overall, it’s a solid setup for one or two kids. Just know you’ll need to be strategic if you’re juggling multiple car seats.
Third Row
The third row in the 2021 Acadia is actually very usable for a smaller SUV — but how you get back there matters.
On the passenger side, you get the car seat–friendly tilt. That means you can access the third row even with certain car seats installed. Huge win.
On the driver’s side, the seat folds forward instead of tilting. If you have a car seat installed there, you’re not getting back to the third row from that side. I genuinely don’t understand why they made them different.
Once you’re back there, it’s comfortable for the size. GMC made this a true six-passenger SUV, so there’s no fake middle seat. You get two real seats with:
- Ceiling vents
- A USB port
- A cup holder
- Flat-foot seating position
From a car seat standpoint:
- Tether anchors available
- No lower anchors in the third row
You can install forward-facing seats with the seat belt and tether, but I’d love to see LATCH back here for more flexibility.
Overall, the third row works well — especially for older kids — but access depends heavily on how you set up your second row.
Trunk
This is where the 2021 Acadia shows its size.
With the third row up, the trunk is tight. Very tight. You’re not fitting a double stroller back here. You’re not doing a full grocery haul for a family of five. It’s workable for a couple backpacks or a small errand run — but that’s about it.
There is some underfloor storage, which helps a little, but it doesn’t change the overall reality.
Now, when you fold the third row down, it’s a completely different story. You get solid cargo space and can easily fit a double stroller like the Zoe Twin. So if you’re mainly using this as a two-row SUV with occasional third-row use, it works really well.
But if you need three rows up all the time and still want big trunk space, this probably isn’t your car.
The Acadia prioritizes passenger comfort over cargo capacity — and depending on your stage of life, that tradeoff may or may not make sense.
Safety
The 2021 Acadia SLT comes with a solid suite of safety features, especially for a mid-tier trim.
You get:
- Forward Collision Alert
- Automatic Emergency Braking
- Lane Keep Assist with Lane Departure Warning
- Blind Spot Monitoring
- Rear Cross Traffic Alert
- Parking sensors
- Rearview camera
From a family perspective, those are the core features I want to see. Blind spot monitoring and rear cross traffic alert are especially helpful in a three-row SUV where visibility can be tricky.
The backup camera quality is good, and the parking sensors make maneuvering this smaller three-row feel manageable.
Overall, it’s not the most advanced system in the segment, but it covers the essentials well — and for many families, that’s exactly what you need.
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