Jeep took the wraps off its shorter, five-seat Grand Cherokee last month, but stopped shorter of revealing how much less it would cost than the even grander three-row version already on sale.

But it appears an error by Jeep’s website geeks might have inadvertently answered that question. Eagle-eyed Jeep fans noticed that the configurator for the five-seat Grand Cherokee briefly showed the MSRP prices for every trim level.

Jeep has since removed the evidence, but not before Muscle Cars & Trucks had grabbed the vital information. The web page showed that the entry level Grand Cherokee Laredo starts at $37,390, the mid-range Limited will cost $43,710, and a flagship Summer Reserve is going to set you back $63,365 excluding destination charges.

That means the starting price for the 2022 Grand Cherokee is $2,420 higher above the list price for the outgoing 2021 model. As for how how much money you’ll save by settling for the two-row Grand over the longer three-row truck, that depends on which trim level you’re looking at, but the difference between the two SUVs may surprise you.

Related: 2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee 5-Seater SWB Introduces Model’s First Hybrid Option

Credit: Muscle Cars & Trucks

An entry-level Laredo with just five seats will cost you $1,245 less than its big brother, but step up just one grade to the Altitude and the gap shrinks to just $250. A swb Cherokee in Limited trim carries a $2630 saving over a lwb model, an Overland is $1830 less expensive with five seats, and by Summit trim the difference is back down to $220.

One notable absentee from the leak is the new Cherokee 4xe. The Cherokee’s first ever PHEV combines a four-cylinder engine with dual-motor electric assistance, just like on the smaller Wrangler 4xe, but won’t be available until early 2022.

It’s worth bearing in mind that Jeep hasn’t officially confirmed these prices, so they may change before they’re officially announced in the coming weeks ahead of deliveries in late 2021. And Jeep has yet to announce prices for the 2022 MY seven-seat Grand Cherokee L. We’ve compared prices with the 2021 model because that’s all we currently have, but it seems likely that the ’22 L will creep upwards, putting more clear air between itself and the new five-seat Grand.

H/T to Motor1

The longer, 7-seater 2021 Jeep Grand Cherokee pictured above and below starts from $38,635 in the States