How many Dodge plants are in the US?
There is one active Dodge-branded vehicle assembly plant in the United States today (as of 2025): Jefferson North Assembly in Detroit, Michigan. The broader Dodge production network includes facilities that build multiple Stellantis brands, and some Dodge models have been produced outside the U.S., so the number of dedicated Dodge plants can vary over time.
Current Dodge production facilities in the United States
The following overview focuses on U.S. sites that currently or recently served as the primary home for Dodge-branded vehicle assembly. Fleet management, model shifts, and cross-brand production can affect how many plants are counted as "Dodge plants" at any given moment.
- Jefferson North Assembly (Detroit, Michigan) — The main U.S. site for Dodge-branded SUV production, including the Dodge Durango. The plant is part of a multi-brand complex that also produces Jeep and Ram models.
Note: Across the Stellantis network, some Dodge models have been produced at non-U.S. facilities or at multi-brand plants, and production allocations can change with model-year updates and corporate retooling. The above site is the primary Dodge-focused plant in the United States as of 2025.
Broader context: how the network operates
Stellantis operates a network where many plants serve multiple brands (Dodge, Jeep, Ram, Chrysler) under one roof or within the same complex. This means that while there is a single clearly identified Dodge-focused site in the U.S., other plants contribute to Dodge model output as part of a shared manufacturing ecosystem. Some Dodge models have historically been produced outside the United States or at facilities primarily dedicated to other Stellantis brands.
For the most precise, year-by-year status, consult Stellantis’ current manufacturing guides and quarterly production reports, since plant allocations can shift with product planning and capacity adjustments.
Summary
In practical terms, Dodge’s U.S. presence on the factory floor is centered on Jefferson North Assembly in Detroit as the main site for Dodge-branded production on U.S. soil. The broader network includes multi-brand plants and overseas facilities, which means the number of Dodge-specific plants in the United States remains small and subject to change with company strategy and model cycles.
