GMRS Radio Review: We Test Midland's Newest Radios
We test four Midland GMRS radios including the MXT500, MXT575, MXT115, MXT275, and the new MXPW500 Ammo Can Base Station.Being able to communicate reliably off-road is a big deal. GMRS (General Mobile Radio Service) has become the go-to voice communication service for many off-roaders. Nowadays, instead of seeing a CB radio in a 4x4, it's likely a GMRS radio.
What Is GMRS?
A bit about GMRS—The service, which is regulated by the Federal Communications Commission, offers 30 channels that include a bonus function that most consumer radio services like CB, FRS, and MURS do not have: the ability to utilize repeaters. Quite simply, a repeater receives a voice transmission, amplifies it, and retransmits it, which can greatly increase the distance over which you can communicate. A repeater-capable GMRS radio will offer the ability to select and transmit a repeater's "PL tone," which allows access to the repeater. The PL tone is a subaudible tone that opens the input side of the repeater to accept your radio transmission.
To transmit on a GMRS radio requires an FCC license, but it's inexpensive ($35 for a 10-year term), and as the FCC notes, "if you receive a license, any family member, regardless of age, can operate GMRS stations and units within the licensed system." Click here to learn more about how to get a GMRS license.
Midland Knows Radios
A company that has made quite a name for itself in the GMRS world is Midland Radio. Midland is a longtime radio manufacturer that has been involved in GMRS radios since the late 1990s. Midland knows radios, and the company was the Official Communication Product of the 2021 and 2022 Four Wheeler Overland Adventure Presented by Jeep, which ensured that all of the participants had the tools to reliably communicate.
One of the cool things about Midland's MicroMobile GMRS product line is that it offers a variety of handheld and mobile radios. Midland's mobile radio lineup is one of the largest on the market, with 5-, 15-, 40-, and 50-watt GMRS radios available. This means Midland has a radio for you no matter how much power you want.
What We've Been Testing
Over the last several months we've had the opportunity to test four of the newest radios in Midland's MicroMobile lineup, the MXT500, MXT575, MXT115, and MXT275. The MXT500 and MXT115 are a traditional two-way radio design, meaning most of the radio controls, the speaker, and the radio display that shows the channel and other settings are on the radio body. The microphone has a transmit button and channel up/down buttons. The MXT575 and the MXT275 are a different design that put the radio controls and the radio display in the Fully-Integrated Control Microphone so the radio base unit can be mounted remotely. We've also had some time to use the MXPW500 Ammo Can Base Station, which offers portable use of an MXT500 radio thanks to its onboard battery.
Similarities
Before we look at each Midland radio we've been testing, let's look at some of what these radios have in common.
These radios come ready to use, and each kit includes a radio mounting bracket and hardware, wiring, and pre-tuned magnet-mount antenna. This means that in just a few minutes you'll likely be talking it up on your new radio. Each radio has super-simple, uncomplicated menus. There are only 8 to 15 main menu items (depending on the radio), so you won't have to go face down in an owner's manual for hours prior to use.
More commonalities: eight GMRS repeater channels, 142 privacy tones (38 CTCSS and 104 DCS), split-tone capability on the eight repeater channels, wide and narrow bandwidth selection, a USB-C charging port, selectable squelch, channel scan, and NOAA weather radio.
And finally, we found that each of the four Midland radios we tested have fast startup and shutdown times and a premium feel and build quality. Now, on to each radio.




