








Desertcart purchases this item on your behalf and handles shipping, customs, and support to Mexico.
📡 Stay connected, stay ahead—talk like a boss anywhere, anytime!
The Midland GXT1000VP4 is a professional-grade GMRS two-way radio set offering up to 36 miles of range, 50 channels with 142 privacy codes, and NOAA weather alerts. Designed for durability with water resistance and a rechargeable battery, it features an SOS emergency function and keypad lock, making it ideal for outdoor enthusiasts and professionals who demand reliable, private communication.






| ASIN | B001WMFYH4 |
| Additional Features | Keypad Lock, Lightweight, SOS, NOAA, 142 Privacy Codes, Silent Operation, Weather Alert |
| Battery Average Life | 10.94 Hours |
| Best Sellers Rank | #7 in Portable FRS Two-Way Radios |
| Brand | Midland |
| Built-In Media | User Manual |
| Color | Black/Silver |
| Compatible Devices | Midland two-way radios, including GXT1000VP4, GXT1050VP4, LXT600, T71VP3, and other walkie talkies and mobile radios operating on the 462-467 MHz frequency range. |
| Connectivity Protocol | GMRS |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 22,994 Reviews |
| EU Spare Part Availability Duration | 3 Years |
| Frequency Range | 462.5500 - 467.7125 MHz |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00046014510005 |
| Impedance | 50 Ohms |
| Item Dimensions D x W x H | 1.4"D x 2.5"W x 7.9"H |
| Item Type Name | Two-way Radio |
| Item Weight | 4.8 Ounces |
| Manufacturer | Midland |
| Mfr Part Number | GXT1000VP4 |
| Model Number | GXT1000VP4 |
| Number of Batteries | 8 AA batteries required. (included) |
| Number of Channels | 50 |
| Special Feature | Keypad Lock, Lightweight, SOS, NOAA, 142 Privacy Codes, Silent Operation, Weather Alert |
| Talking Range Maximum | 36 Mile |
| Tuner Type | Xtreme Range Technology |
| UPC | 046014510005 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Voltage | 0.1 Volts |
| Warranty Description | 3 year parts, 3 year labor |
| Water Resistance Level | Water Resistant |
| Waterproof Rating | JIS4 |
M**Y
The best two way radios
Works really well we can here around the areas we go to keep track of family The clarity is awesome and in sturdy black case overall appearance Charging takes a long charge Very portability just clamp to my purse and go
J**R
good stuff!!
Works well and not difficult to use. Change teh light to turn green when charged. Also, screen gets multicolored in hi-heat days (>90f)
B**E
Great for Ranch Use—Solid 1-Mile Range
Product works great, but don’t expect long-range performance. I’m getting about a 1-mile range at most—and that’s in rural Minnesota with completely flat land and no interference. That said, they’re still a great buy for ranch use. Even a 1-mile range easily covers communication across a pasture—from the corral to the far side—so they get the job done where it counts.
W**N
Great Radios . . . Headsets are not great
I bought the 3 pack to be able to communicate with my party in the Arizona desert. The radios worked crystal clear at nearly 3 miles, and showed no signs of weakening signals. That is as far apart as we got this time, But I believe that they will work to any reasonable distance. The headsets, now they were not made to the same standard as the radios. I have small ears and I had trouble getting one mounted on my ear. I had to stretch the ear loop to get it onto my ear. It was very uncomfortable and the mike was a great distance from my mouth. I tried to adjust it close to my mouth. It took five tries to get it bent enough to be close to my mouth, the mike ended up bent almost 45 degrees to the ear piece. Then even on max sensitivity it would only pick up my voice if I talked really loudly, and then it sometimes cut out in the middle of my transmission. It also didn’t pick up my voice all the time. Not only that but the ear loop is hard plastic and becomes uncomfortable quickly. My two companions also had the same problem. So we ditched the earpieces and just used them old school. We were more than happy with the radios and give them five stars. I will be purchasing better headsets from Midland to use with these radios. I recommend the radios for anyone wanting a great radio for short to medium range communications, these are perfect. Longer range requires more wattage. Under the right conditions and minimum obstructions, you MAY get close to the advertised distance, but if you get 3 to 5 miles, that is super for ANY GMRS radio. And for the price you can’t go wrong. For me, they perform the job that I needed with room to spare. Try them, you will be pleased. Update: Last night I was sitting in my RV and started playing with the radios. I asked for a radio check, expecting that any response would be from close by. I received a check from a base station that is Close to 8 miles from my location. I was inside an RV in the desert about 8 miles from town and communicated with a base station in the edge of town. Both radios were coming in loud and clear. This was in flat basically open desert. I don’t know what the range would be in town or in the woods, but I am happy with these little radios.
G**G
Dragonfly to Raven.... Come in!!!
I bought this set for a summer trip to Michigan's upper peninsula - it's a different world up there. A week into the trip, my buddy had taken off 30 minutes before me in his pickup to get to the second campsite. My straight six 3.0L BMW was humming along working to catch up to him as I only knew the approximate area of our next campsite, not the exact location, but it was about two hours east. The clouds were thick and gray hiding every ounce of the blue sky... but that didn't matter - I was in awe passing the luscious green hills sprinkled with abandoned farm houses every few miles. There aren't many street signs up there, but you don't really care as there is picturesque beauty all around you. About 45 min away from the campsite area, my Uniden GXT1000 in the passenger seat suddenly came alive. "Dragonfly to Raven.... come in..... Dragonfly to Raven... do you copy!??" Smiling at the shock of actually receiving his transmission with NO other vehicle in sight, I hurriedly picked it up and said, "Dragonfly... where the hell are YOU?" His response, "I don't know, I'm just following GPS. These are some great radios though!" We laughed and kept the conversation going for a few more minutes before focusing back on the drive. I didn't see his pickup for about another 30 minutes and followed him to the campsite. I can't give specifics on the distances achieved, but the radios were impressive. Phone service in that area is spotty, so these radios are ideal. Some reviews state the included batteries are rubbish, but the FIRST charge is supposed to be for 24 hours. Charges beyond that are for about 11 to 12 hours and only when the battery gets low (there is a low batt warning displayed). The charger does NOT have a timer, nor does it automatically stop charging. I mostly use Japanese rechargeable AAs as I don't have to worry about overcharging them as can happen with the Midland batteries. Two of the Midland batteries lost power over a few months, possibly due to older stock. I called up customer service and was pleasantly surprised when an American customer service agent answered the phone. Within a few minutes she had two new batteries shipped to my door for free. Great customer service and she actually KNEW the product very well! The NOAA weather station came in loud and clear and provided alerts of impending bad weather. The radios can select 50 different channels, however channels 23 and higher are repeats of 1-22 with the coded tones permanently set. So, if another FRS/GMRS radio (Midland or other brand) is broadcasting on a same frequency that you are using and YOU have a tonal code set or switched to channel 23-50, YOU won't be able to hear them, but THEY can still hear YOU. Unless of course they have a specific tone code set on their radio. Tones set on your radio only block you from hearing others, they don't scramble or encrypt your transmissions. FRS 8-14/GMRS 1-7 and 15-22 462.5625 ch 01/23/42 462.5875 ch 02/31/50 462.6125 ch 03/24/43 462.6375 ch 04/32 462.6625 ch 05/25/44 462.6875 ch 06/33 462.7125 ch 07/26/45 467.5625 ch 08/34 467.5875 ch 09 467.6125 ch 10/35 467.6375 ch 11 467.6625 ch 12/36 467.6875 ch 13 467.7125 ch 14/37 462.5500 ch 15/27/46 462.5750 ch 16/38 462.6000 ch 17/28/47 462.6250 ch 18/39 462.6500 ch 19/29/48 462.6750 ch 20/40 462.7000 ch 21/30/49 462.7250 ch 22/41 The only negative that I found is the channel scan is slow, but I get so much use out of them it doesn't matter that much.
K**E
Good enough for my purposes & better than expected
Bought a set of these a little over two years ago for the intended purpose of using them to help herd a pack of Cub Scouts around on various outings. Originally, I needed a set of radios that would work over a mile, mile and a half range of various terrains. Tested when received over the ground I initially needed them for, mostly flat, but the longest range was not line of sight and partially screened by a copse of trees. Radios worked just fine. Since then I've used them in more varied terrains from heavily wooded to urban and in ranges of up to three miles (that one urban) with no issues. My original usage intent was at our yearly Cub Scout day camp. Sometime we would need to split off a group of the boys to go to different locations with a set of adult leaders. (Like a trip to the john, nurse or Webelos activity.) One radio would stay with the main group and one would go with the others so we'd have a means of linking up should the main group have to move on to the next activity before the others returned. I've also used them on hikes and nature walks with the pack. I'll put one at the head and one at the rear of the column in case line of sight contact has been broken. (Just try and stay in sight contact in a corn maze - LOL!) If we need to spread out even further, I have an older, cheaper set of FRS/GMS radios with less power which I can distribute through the group and we can relay messages if the lower power units don't have the juice to transmit all the way. We've also used them when spread out over a larger, urban area to co-ordinate during our Scouting for Food Drives. They've worked out well. We have an effective means of maintaining contact without resorting to shouting at each other and trying to get the others attention. Battery life has been more then sufficient for a one day outing. Bear in mind though the more you transmit, the faster the batteries are used up. That's just common sense. I love having the ability of swapping the battery packs out for AA's if necessary. This brings me to one peccadillo about these radios which is mentioned in another review, but I believe is buried in the comments section, so I'll bring it up in the actual review. When recharging one of the battery packs, even though the battery is completely recharged, when placed in the radio and switched on, the unit fails to operate. There is an easy fix for this. Simply take the battery pack out of the radio and switch it on for a while. Then replace the battery pack and the radio should function just fine. Not sure why this is, and it's certainly a bit annoying, but there ya go... In my opinion, most reviews lack a discussion of two things: First, the weather alert function of these radios work extremely well. Living in the Mid-West, weather can blow up, especially in the summer, very quickly. The safety of my Scouts is my primary mission. Being alerted to changing weather is absolutely critical. My MIL lives in a very rural area and I took these radios along when we visited last. A line of tornadoes blew through the area and these radios warned us when we needed to take cover and when it was safe to come out. Secondly, to operate these radios legally in the GRMS band at maximum power (and maximum range) you NEED an FCC license. The current cost of the license is $85.00 (although there is talk about dropping the license requirement) which seems steep when compared to the roughly $59.00 cost of the radios. However, the license is good for 5 years, which breaks the cost down to $17.00 a year. Now, obviously, your chances of getting busted by the FCC is virtually nil, but it would be my luck to be Mr. Nil. (Plus I'm using these with my Scouts, so I feel obligated to be "morally straight" and be licensed.) If you don't want to spend the money to be licensed, simply use only the FRS bands or throttle down the power on the GRMS bands. At low power you don't need a license, but be advised that you're lessening your range doing so. So, I'm pleased with these radios and do recommend them. I'd buy them again in a heartbeat. Just bear in mind the range claim is wishful thinking in the extreme. If you have needs like I outlined above I have every confidence you'll be happy with them, too.
N**C
Good radio
I went with Midland because they offer a line of mobile gmrs radios also I can talk about 3.5 miles on high power with me at the house on the back deck and my friend inside his car. Range would be farther if one party was up high and had a clear line of sight. This is comparable to any handheld radio [ham, commercial ,marine ] so dont get disappointed if you cant talk 36 miles from your living room to your wife at Walmart. The radio works well and has a nice feel to it.Appears to be of good quality.Has plenty of volume and some nice features like scan,weather channels etc. The receive seems to be pretty good I had it on scan today and it was picking people up on a distant repeater and also some local farmers during the harvest season .This just setting atop my entertainment center inside the house Battery life is typical for a handheld.You can also power it up with AA batteries if you need to So these fall kinda in the middle.You could get a chinese radio cheap [ Legal? } or move up to a ham handheld more money [can only talk to other hams] On another note looking at the most critical review nimh rechargeable batteries output 1.2 volts where standard alkalines output 1.5 volts .So the radio operates on 6 volts Thats why you only need 4 alkaline batteries. If you use only the amount of power you need you will extend the battery life. Thats normal with any handheld.Your not going to talk 36 miles unless your on top of a very tall building or mountain and your not going to talk forever on high power with the battery capacity you have. There are only 22 shared frs/gmrs channels not 50.The extra channels above 22 are existing channels with a pre programmed privacy code.Which is nice .Not really extra channels tho Folks get led astray .Its possible for hams to talk to the international space station on 5 watts so when they say 36 mile range it is not a false statement but it is not typical. 50 channels well sort of.Midland has done the work for you.Want to use a privacy code go to one of the channels above 22.Already done for you. With realistic expectations whats not to like Read the directions and take a look online at the frs/gmrs channel guide because each service has different power limits except channels 8 to 14 which are only low power 1/2 watt only. Go online and there are several radio line of sight calculators you can use to estimate your radio range I hate to see a bad reviews from folks on something when really its more lack of knowledge and operator error not the products fault Update 6 months later my radios are still going strong.I have had no problems.The 700 mAh battery packs have worked ok .But they are only 700mAh.Typical for AAA batteries.Going to a AA alkaline could get over 2000 mAh and last longer but not rechargable. AA lithium ion rechargeable batteries 1.5 volt are available but they are expensive. Your going to need some spare batteries and packs thats just the nature of handheld battery powered radios whether frs/gmrs ,Ham,Marine ,business or whatever.
M**E
Decent radio, with some serious drawbacks.
Radios are decent. Our point of view is coming from a farming operation, specifically haying. We need multiple radios in multiple tractors, or on several people. So cost vs number of radios is nice. Their range, I think is vastly overstated. We struggle to get 1/2 a mile in decently flat ground, but with trees around. Our biggest gripe is the battery indicator either shows full or dead. It does not actually represent when a battery is getting low, leading to several situations of dead batteries in the field after checking and thinking "these are good, they show as charged". Likewise, the battery life is about 8 hours, and I think that's generous. Overall, they are decent. Not the best, not the worst. I suppose at 115 dollars, they aren't a bad bargain, but when you rely on them like we do, based on the specs, we were a little underwhelmed.
C**N
Muy buen producto
Supero mis espectativas, se escucha muy bien, los uso en distancias cortas, no mas de 1/2 kilometro, en ciudad y con edificios de por medio y no tiene ningun problema, por el precio es muy recomendable. El paquete esta muy completo, sobretodo poderlo cargar en el coche, aunque la bateria le dura bastante tiempo.
A**N
Buen producto
Buena recepción de sonido, buena calidad
O**Z
Excelente servicio!
Me gusto la calidad del producto y lo que incluye en el paquete
E**É
Amazing
Work perfectly
D**A
Excelente
Excelentes radios para comunicarse a distancia en las montañas, las baterías le duran el día.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
3 days ago