
π π π €π π π π π π π ‘π π π COMMERCIAL EV spotlight
FORD E-Transit





Ford E-Transit
America’s
Best-Selling Electric Commercial Van
E-Transit
OVERVIEW
The Workhorse Goes Electric For over six decades, the Ford Transit has been the backbone of commercial fleets worldwide – the van that hauls tools for plumbers, delivers parcels for logistics companies, ferries passengers for airports, and serves as a mobile office for tradespeople of every kind. It is, by any measure, one of the most successful commercial vehicles ever built. So when Ford decided to electrify it, the stakes could not
have been higher.
The Ford E-Transit arrived in late 2021 as a 2022 model year vehicle, making it one of the earliest purpose-built large electric vans from a major traditional automaker. It was not a half-measure or a compliance vehicle – it was Ford betting that the commercial operator community, arguably the most calculating and financially disciplined buyers in the auto industry, would embrace electrification if the total cost of ownership maths
added up.
They were right. The E-Transit rapidly became the top-selling large electric van in Europe, outselling its nearest competitor by more than five to one in 2023. In the United States, it has established itself as the benchmark against which every rival in the segment is measured. By 2025, with an upgraded 89 kWh extended-range battery, a heat pump as standard, faster DC charging, and trade-specific upfit packages direct from the factory, the E-Transit has matured into a genuinely compelling all-round
proposition.


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FORD
Transit to E-Transit
Development History: From Transit to E-Transit
Ford’s Transit has been sold in Europe since 1965 and was relaunched in North America in 2015, quickly displacing the old E-Series as Ford’s primary full-size van. The Transit’s popularity was built on a combination of configurability, reliability, and a best-in-class ergonomic driving position – factors that made it a favourite with professional fleet managers.
By 2019, Ford had committed to electrifying the Transit and began development of the E-Transit in earnest. The engineering challenge was significant: the Transit’s flexible platform spans multiple body lengths, roof heights, and body styles (cargo van, cutaway, chassis cab), and all of those configurations needed to carry over into the electric version without sacrificing the versatility that made the Transit a market leader.
Ford’s solution was elegant: the battery pack was positioned beneath the vehicle floor, replacing the conventional fuel tank and driveline tunnel. This preserved the flat cargo floor that Transit users rely on, kept the battery low in the chassis for a stable centre of gravity, and freed up interior space compared to designs that package batteries above the wheel arches. A rear-mounted electric motor replaced the conventional front-engine and rear-drive layout, maintaining the rear-wheel-drive character that Transit users valued.
The E-Transit launched in the UK in late 2021 and in the US in 2022. The 2024 model year introduced the critical 89 kWh extended-range battery option, increasing range by up to 28% over the original 68 kWh pack and adding significantly faster DC charging capability. The 2025 model year added trade-specific upfit packages from the factory and a new Smart Acceleration Truncation feature for fleet managers.
Body Configurations: The Transit’s Greatest Strength
One of the E-Transit’s defining competitive advantages is the breadth of configurations available. No other electric van in the segment offers comparable flexibility:
Cargo Van – the primary workhorse, available in:
- 2 wheelbase lengths: 130-inch (standard) and 148-inch (long)
- 3 roof heights: Low, Medium, and High
- Resulting in 6 distinct cargo van configurations

Cutaway – cab with an open rear frame for mounting box bodies, ambulance conversions, or specialist upfits; maximum payload of 3,997 lbs

Chassis Cab – bare cab and chassis for bespoke bodywork; maximum payload of 3,960 lbs
The result is that a single E-Transit range can serve package delivery, refrigerated food distribution, mobile workshop, passenger shuttle, and emergency vehicle applications – a flexibility that rivals including the Ram ProMaster EV and Mercedes eSprinter struggle to match with their more limited configuration menus.
Full Technical Specifications: 2025 Ford E-Transit
Powertrain
| Parameter | Specification |
| Motor Type | Single rear-mounted permanent magnet AC synchronous motor |
| Motor Output | 198 kW (266 hp / 269 PS) |
| Peak Torque | 430 Nm (317 Ib-ft) |
| Drive | Rear-wheel drive |
| Transmission | Single-speed automatic |
| 0-60 mph | Approx. 7.5 seconds (estimated, unladen) |
| Top Speed | ~100 mph (governed) |
Ford’s 198 kW rear motor delivers 266 horsepower and 317 Ib-ft of torque – numbers that would have seemed extraordinary for a commercial van a decade ago. The instant torque delivery of electric motors makes the E-Transit feel meaningfully quicker and more responsive in urban environments than its diesel equivalents, particularly when pulling away from traffic lights loaded with cargo. The single-speed automatic transmission is smooth and requires zero driver input beyond selecting Drive.
For 2025, Ford introduced Smart Acceleration Truncation, a fleet-manager-configurable setting that accounts for total cargo load and prevents the van from
“jackrabbit starts” – sudden, tire-squealing full-throttle departures that can concern fleet operators managing multiple drivers with varying experience levels

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FORD
Transit to E-Transit
Battery systems

| Parameter | Specification |
| Battery Chemistry | Lithium-lon (NMC) |
| Battery Capacity (usable) | 89 kWh (enhanced range) |
| Previous Generation | 68 kWh (discontinued April 2024) |
| Battery Position | Under-floor, between axles |
| Thermal Management | Active liquid cooling + heat pump (standard on 89 kWh) |
| Battery Warranty | 8 years / 100,000 miles |
The 89 kWh battery represents a 31% capacity increase over the original 68 kh pack and brings with it a vapour-injected heat pump as standard equipment. This is important: without a heat pump, electric vans in cold climates suffer serious range penalties because conventional resistive heating draws heavily from the traction battery. The heat pump moves thermal energy rather than generating it, consuming far less energy in the process β a critical advantage for operators in northern states, Canada, and northern European markets.
The battery is positioned low and flat beneath the cargo floor, which confers several benefits: it keeps the centre of gravity low (improving handling with heavy loads), maintains the flat cargo floor (critical for loading efficiency), and allows the cargo space dimensions to remain comparable to the diesel Transit.

Range
| Configuration | Estimated Range (EPA / US) | WLTP (European) |
| Cargo Van – Low Roof | 159 miles (256 km) | Up to 249 miles (402 km) |
| Cargo Van – Medium Roof | 148 miles (238 km) | Proportionally adjusted |
| Cargo Van – High Roof | 143 miles (230 km) | Proportionally adjusted |
| Cargo Van – High Roof Extended | ~140 miles | – |
The range differential between roof heights is driven purely by aerodynamics – the High-roof van presents a significantly larger frontal area to the air, creating more drag.
Operators choosing configurations should factor this in: a high-roof van might offer the cargo volume a business needs, but it comes with a range penalty versus the low-roof version.
Crucially, Ford’s analysis of more than 2.5 million commercial van trips totalling 30 million miles found that the average daily range for commercial vans in the US is 74 miles – well within what even the base E-Transit delivers. For the vast majority of fleet applications, range anxiety is essentially a non-issue.
Real-world testing by independent reviewers has found the E-Transit comfortably covers at least 150 miles in typical mixed conditions. In the largest high-roof extended configurations, independent tests estimate realistic working range of 185-210 miles with the 89 kWh battery, depending on payload and speed.
Charging

| Parameter | Specification |
| AC Level 2 Charging (OnBoard Charger) | Up to 11.3 kW |
| AC Charge Time (0-100%) | ~6 hours 11 minutes |
| DC Fast Charging (Max Rate) | Up to 176 kW |
| DC Charge Time (10-80%) | -28 minutes |
| DC Charge Speed (15 min) | Adds ~67 miles (108 km) of range |
| Charging Networks | BlueOval Charge Network (largest public network in North America) |
| Fleet Charging Management | FordPro Telematics – charge windows, tariff optimisation, charger lock |
The 2024+ E-Transit’s 176 kW DC fast charging capability is a significant upgrade over earlier versions and compares very favourably with most rivals. A 10-80% charge in approximately 28 minutes means a driver can meaningfully top up during a lunch break or a scheduled stop. The 15-minute charge adding 67 miles is particularly useful in fleet operations where routes can be designed around brief charging windows.
The AC charging rate of up to 11.3 kW means overnight depot charging is efficient and complete – a six-hour overnight charge from empty delivers a full battery by the morning shift, fitting neatly into the operational rhythm of most commercial fleets.

FordPro Telematics allows fleet managers to set charging windows to exploit off-peak electricity tariffs, lock chargers to prevent unauthorized use, and pre-condition the battery for maximum range before departure, features that translate directly into lower energy costs and better fleet management.

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FORD
Transit to E-Transit
Dimensions and Cargo space
| Parameter | Standard WB | Long WB |
| Overall Length | ~5,395 mm (17.7 ft) | -5,771 mm (18.9 ft) |
| Overall Width | 2,059 mm (81 in) | 2,059 mm (81 in) |
| Wheelbase | 3,302 mm (130 in) | 3,759 mm (148 in) |
| Interior Cargo Height – Low Roof | -1,416 mm (55.7 in) | -1,416 mm (55.7 in) |
| Interior Cargo Height – Med Roof | -1,784 mm (70.2 in) | -1,784 mm (70.2 in) |
| Interior Cargo Height – High Roof | -2,070 mm (81.5 in) | -2,070 mm (81.5 in) |
| Cargo Volume – Low Roof Std | 277.7 cu ft | N/A |
| Cargo Volume – High Roof Long | 487.3 cu ft | – |
| Interior Width | ~1,497 mm (58.9 in) | -1,497 mm (58.9 in) |
| Cargo Floor Length | Up to ~3,912 mm | – |
The high-roof configuration allows anyone up to 6 feet 9 inches tall to stand fully upright inside the cargo area – a genuine working benefit for tradespeople who spend significant time in the van’s interior. The maximum 487.3 cubic feet of cargo space in the extended high-roof configuration is competitive with all rivals except the Ram ProMaster EV’s 524 cubic feet and the Rivian EDV Delivery 700’s 652 cubic feet.
Payload & GWR

| Model | Max Payload | GVWR |
| Cargo Van (Low Roof, Long WB) | 3,249 lbs (1,474 kg) | 9,500 lbs |
| Cargo Van (High Roof, Long WB) | 2,997 Ibs (1,360 kg) | 9,500 lbs |
| Cutaway | 3,997 Ibs (1,813 kg) | 9,500 lbs |
| Chassis Cab | 3,960 lbs (1,796 kg) | 9,500 lbs |

The maximum 3,997 lb payload of the Cutaway model is impressive for an electric van and positions the E-Transit firmly in working-vehicle territory. The cargo van’s 3,249 lb maximum is competitive, though below the Ram ProMaster EV’s 3,020 lb (cargo) – a difference that matters in heavy payload applications.
Technology & Infotainment
| Feature | Details |
| Infotainment System | SYNC 4 |
| Screen Size | 12-inch touchscreen |
| Navigation | Built-in with Traffic Sign Recognition |
| Smartphone Integration | Apple CarPlay + Android Auto |
| Voice Assistant | Amazon Alexa built-in |
| Audio | SiriusXM with 360L, HD Radio |
| Connectivity | Wi-Fi hotspot |
| Fleet Management | FordPro Telematics Essentials (standard) |
| Over-the-Air Updates | Available |
| Driver Monitoring | FordPro – productivity tracking, vehicle health |
The 12-inch SYNC 4 touchscreen is one of the best infotainment systems in the commercial van segment, intuitive, fast, and compatible with the smartphone ecosystem that drivers expect. The built-in navigation, capable of routing around charging stops for longer journeys, is a meaningful advantage for drivers unfamiliar with EV route planning.

FordPro Telematics Essentials is standard equipment, not an optional extra and provides fleet managers with real-time visibility into vehicle location, energy consumption, driver behaviour, and vehicle health. For fleet operators managing dozens or hundreds of vehicles, this represents genuine operational value: identifying inefficient drivers, scheduling preventive maintenance, and optimising charging schedules to minimise energy costs.
Safety & Driver Assistance
Standard Equipment:
- Forward Collision Warning with Automatic Emergency Braking
- Lane Departure Warning with Lane Keeping Assist
- Rear Backup Camera
- Automatic Headlights
- Post-Collision Braking
- Traffic Sign Recognition (with navigation)
- Intelligent Speed Assist
Optional / Available:
- Adaptive Cruise Control with Stop & Go
- Blind Spot Assist 1.0 (includes Reverse Sensing and Side Sensing)
- 360-Degree Surround View Camera
- Enhanced Active Park Assist
- Intersection Assist
The standard safety suite is comprehensive for a commercial van and reflects Ford’s push to make the E-Transit a credible choice for risk-conscious fleet managers.
Adaptive cruise control and blind spot monitoring – available as options – are particularly valued by operators whose drivers spend long hours on motorways.
Pro Power Onboard
One of the E-Transit’s most distinctive and commercially valuable features is Pro Power.

Onboard, an available built-in power supply that delivers 2.4 kW of AC power via tandard 120V outlets inside the cargo area.
This allows the E-Transit to:
- Power electric tools (drills, saws, compressors) directly from the van
- Run lights and equipment at remote job sites without a separate generator
- Provide emergency power if needed
- Operate while the van is moving, en route to a job
For electricians, HVAC technicians, construction workers, and mobile service operations, Pro Power Onboard eliminates the need to carry a separate generator, saving weight, cargo space, fuel costs, and noise. It is a feature that no rival currently matches in the same class.
Trade-Specific Factory Upfit Packages (2025)
For 2025, Ford added four factory-direct trade upfit packages – a significant step that reduces the time and cost of converting a raw van into a job-ready vehicle:
- Electrician Trade Package – shelving, racking, and storage specifically designed for electrical contractors
- General Contractor Package – versatile storage and workspace solutions for multi-trade use
- HVAC Trade Package – optimised for heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning technicians’ tool and parts storage
- Foldable Shelving Package – modular folding shelving for flexible cargo / people-carrying hybrid use
Factory upfitting means shorter lead times between ordering and deployment a meaningful operational and cash-flow advantage for fleet operators.
Pricing (2025)
| Configuration | Starting MSRP (USD) |
| E-Transit Cargo Van (Low Roof, Std WB, 89 kWh | -$57,935 |
| E-Transit Cargo Van (Medium Roof, Long WB) | ~$58,935 |
| E-Transit Cargo Van (High Roof, Long WB) ~$59,935 | ~$51,000 – $57,000 – |
| E-Transit Cargo Van (High Roof, Extended) ~S61,155 | ~$61,000 |
| Destination Fee | $2,095 |
| Federal Tax Credit Eligibility buyers) | Potentially $7,500 (commercial) |
Post federal tax credit, the E-Transit can be acquired for as little as approximately $50,000-$54,000 for commercial buyers who qualify – making it the most affordable
large electric van from a major manufacturer in the US market.



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FORD
The FordPro Ecosystem: More Than Just a Van
The E-Transit is not sold in isolation; it is the centrepiece of Fordβs FordPro commercial vehicle ecosystem, which wraps the van in a suite of software, services, and infrastructure:
FordPro Telematics: Real-time fleet visibility covering location, energy consumption,driver behaviour, vehicle health, and charging status. Compatible with mixed fleets including non-Ford and non-electric vehicles.
BlueOval Charge Network: Ford describes this as the largest integrated publiccharging network in North America, giving E-Transit drivers access to public DC fast chargers beyond their depot.
FordPro Charging Solutions: Turnkey depot charging infrastructure including charger selection, software integration, and installation services, making it straightforward for fleet operators to electrify their sites.
Ford Mobile Service: Technicians who come to the fleet operatorβs location for maintenance and minor repairs, minimizing vehicle downtime.
Connected Charge Station: A Ford-approved home/depot charging solution capable of 0β100% in approximately 6 hours.
The ecosystem approach is a meaningful differentiator. Buying an E-Transit means buying into a support structure that extends well beyond the vehicle itself, addressing the charging infrastructure, fleet management, and maintenance concerns that are the primary barriers to commercial EV adoption

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The Electric Van Showdown
Head to Head
MERCEDES-BENZ
Ford E-Transit vs Mercedes-Benz eSprinter (2025
The Mercedes-Benz eSprinter brings premium German engineering and the legendary Sprinter nameplate to the electric van segment. It competes directly with the E-Transit but occupies a noticeably more expensive price point.
| Specification | Ford E-Transit | Mercedes eSprinter |
| Battery Options | 89 kWh | 81 kWh / 113 kWh |
| Range (max) | 159 miles (EPA) | 204β249 miles (est.) |
| Motor Power | 198 kW / 266 hp | 100β150 kW / 134β201 hp |
| Torque | 430 Nm (317 lb-ft) | 400 Nm (295 lb-ft) |
| Max Cargo Volume | 487.3 cu ft ) | 488 cu ft (long WB |
| Payload (max) | 3,249 lbs (cargo van) | ~2,756 lbs |
| DC Charging Rate | 176 kW | 50β115 kW |
| DC Charge (10β80%) | ~28 min | ~32β42 min |
| AC Charging Rate | 11.3 kW | 9.6 kW |
| Roof Heights | Low / Medium / High | Standard / High |
| Starting Price | ~$57,935 | ~$63,475 |
| Top Price (optioned) | ~$93,000 $93,000 | $115,000+ |
| Infotainment | SYNC 4, 12-inch | MBUX |
| Regenerative Braking Modes | 1 level | 4 selectable levels |
Analysis
The eSprinterβs headline advantage is range; its 113 kWh battery and up to249 miles of estimated range give it a meaningful buffer over the E-Transit. It also carries Mercedesβ premium interior quality and the deeply refined MBUX infotainment system. The eSprinter is notably the only van in this comparison offering four selectable levels of regenerative braking, a feature experienced EV drivers value for adapting to different driving conditions. Weβve included some customizations below which might inspire.







However, the E-Transit punches back hard on three critical fronts.
First, charging speed: the E-Transitβs 176 kW DC maximum charging rate is dramatically faster than the eSprinterβs 115 kW maximum (itself an upgrade option, the standard rate is just 50 kW). In real-world fleet operations, faster charging translates directly into more operational flexibility and shorter downtime windows.
Second, payload: the E-Transitβs cargo van carries more weight than the eSprinter. Third, price: the eSprinter can cost more than $30,000 more than a comparably specified E-Transit, a gap that is very difficult to justify on total cost of ownership grounds for most commercial operators.
Verdict
For operators where range and cabin refinement are paramount, the eSprinter wins. For most commercial fleet operators focused on total cost, payload, and charging speed, the E-Transit offers better value.
The Electric Van Showdown
Head to Head
RAM
Ford E-Transit vs Ram ProMaster EV (2025)
The Ram ProMaster EV is the E-Transitβs closest domestic rival, a front-wheel-drive van built on the same Stellantis Fiat platform as the European E-Ducato, with a 110 kWh battery and an emphasis on last-mile delivery performance.
| Specification | Ford E-Transit | Ram ProMaster EV |
| Battery Options | 89 kWh | 110 kWh |
| Range (max) | 159 miles (EPA) | 174β180 miles |
| Motor Power | 198 kW / 266 hp | 200 kW / 268 hp |
| Torque | 430 Nm (317 lb-ft) | 302 lb-ft |
| Drive layout | RWD | FWD |
| Max Cargo Volume | 487.3 cu ft ) | 524 cu ft |
| Payload (max) | 3,249 lbs (cargo van) | 3020 lbs (cargo) |
| DC Charging Rate | 176 kW | up to 150 kW (configurable: 50/85/125/150 kW) |
| DC Charge (10β80%) | ~28 min | ~35β40 min at 150 kW |
| AC Charging Rate | 11.3 kW | n/a |
| Roof Heights | Low / Medium / High | n/a |
| Starting Price | ~$57,935 | ~$58,490 |
| Top Price (optioned) | ~$93,000 $93,000 | n/a |
| Infotainment | SYNC 4, 12-inch | n/a |
| Regenerative Braking Modes | 1 level | n/a |
| Body Styles | Cargo Van / Cutaway / Chassis Cab | Cargo Van / Step Van (Delivery) |
| Step van option | No | Yes |
| Floor Design | Flat (battery under floor) Step Van Opt | Flat (battery under floor) |
Analysis
The ProMaster EVβs front-wheel-drive layout, unconventional for American vans, delivers a meaningfully lower cargo floor height and a flat, step-in loading threshold that last-mile delivery drivers appreciate enormously. Its 524 cubic feet of cargo volume also beats the E-Transit. The Ramβs configurable DC charging rate is an interesting fleet-management tool, allowing operators to choose how much charging infrastructure investment to make.








However, independent real-world comparison testing has consistently found the ETransit to offer a better loaded ride quality and a more refined driving experience. In a loaded real-world comparison test, the E-Transit can be described as the most comfortable loaded of the vans tested, while the Ramβs acceleration was adequate but not as energetic. The E-Transit also carries a noticeably superior infotainment system (SYNC 4 vs Uconnect 5 on a 10.1-inch screen), more configuration options, and the established FordPro dealer and service network.
The Ramβs ace card is its step van body option, a configuration purpose-built for high frequency parcel delivery operations, particularly as an alternative to the Rivian EDV. For operators who need that format, the E-Transit simply doesnβt compete. For those who donβt, the E-Transitβs configuration breadth and proven track record give it the edge.
Verdict
For last-mile delivery with step van needs, ProMaster EV wins. For trade operators and versatile fleet use, E-Transit is the stronger all-around choice.
The Electric Van Showdown
Head to Head
RIVIAN
Ford E-Transit vs Rivian EDV (Electric Delivery Van)
The Rivian EDV occupies a different part of the market, it is not sold to individual businesses but exclusively to large fleet operators (notably Amazon, its primary launch customer). It is the closest thing to a purpose-designed electric delivery vehicle in this class.
| Specification | Ford E-Transit | Rivian EDV 500 |
| Battery Options | 89 kWh | ~135 kWh |
| Range (max) | 159 miles (EPA) | ~161 miles |
| Motor Power | 198 kW / 266 hp | ~223 kW / 299 hp |
| Torque | 430 Nm (317 lb-ft) | n/a |
| Drive layout | RWD | FWD (AWD in planning) |
| Max Cargo Volume | 487.3 cu ft ) | 500 cu ft (EDV 500) / 652 cu ft (EDV 700) |
| Payload (max) | 3,249 lbs (cargo van) | ~2734 lbs (EDV 500) |
| DC Charging Rate | 176 kW | n/a |
| DC Charge (10β80%) | ~28 min | n/a |
| AC Charging Rate | 11.3 kW | n/a |
| Roof Heights | Low / Medium / High | n/a |
| Starting Price | ~$57,935 | ~$83,000+ (individual buyers) |
| Top Price (optioned) | ~$93,000 $93,000 | n/a |
| Infotainment | SYNC 4, 12-inch | Custom Rivian system |
| Regenerative Braking Modes | 1 level | n/a |
| Body Styles | Cargo Van / Cutaway / Chassis Cab | Step Van (Delivery-specific) |
| Availability | All commercial buyers | Large fleet contracts only |
| Floor Design | Flat (battery under floor) Step Van Opt | n/a |
Analysis
The Rivian EDV is a genuinely impressive delivery-specific vehicle, purpose designed from the wheels up for high-frequency, high-density urban parcel delivery. Its driver-friendly ergonomics (inspired by driver feedback from Amazonβs delivery network), large cargo volume, and futuristic aesthetic have made it the rolling symbol of electric delivery.
However, its availability only to large fleet operators, significantly higher price, and single step-van body style make direct comparison with the E-Transit difficult for most buyers.







For a business operator who can buy whatever van they want, the E-Transitβs configurability, lower price, and broader service network make it the practical choice. For Amazon-scale fleet operators running dedicated delivery routes, the Rivian EDV may be the superior functional tool but it is not in the same open-market conversation.
Verdict
E-Transit wins on accessibility, price, and configurability. Rivian wins on delivery-specific design β for those who can actually buy it.
The Electric Van Showdown
Head to Head
CHEVROLET
Ford E-Transit vs Chevrolet BrightDrop Zevo 600
The BrightDrop Zevo 600 (formerly an independent GM venture, now under the Chevrolet brand) is the heavy-hauler of the electric van world larger, more capable, and significantly more expensive.
| Specification | Ford E-Transit | BrightDrop Zevo 600 |
| Battery Options | 89 kWh | ~200 kWh+ |
| Range (max) | 159 miles (EPA) | ~272-300 miles |
| Motor Power | 198 kW / 266 hp | variable |
| Torque | 430 Nm (317 lb-ft) | 390 lb-ft |
| Drive layout | RWD | FWD & AWD |
| Max Cargo Volume | 487.3 cu ft ) | 600 cu ft |
| Payload (max) | 3,249 lbs (cargo van) | ~2200 lbs |
| DC Charging Rate | 176 kW | n/a |
| DC Charge (10β80%) | ~28 min | n/a |
| AC Charging Rate | 11.3 kW | n/a |
| Roof Heights | Low / Medium / High | n/a |
| Starting Price | ~$57,935 | $66,100 – $68,700 (USD) |
| Top Price (optioned) | ~$93,000 $93,000 | n/a |
| Infotainment | SYNC 4, 12-inch | built-in navigation, OnStar (8year) integration & wireless smartphone projection |
| Regenerative Braking Modes | 1 level | n/a |
| Body Styles | Cargo Van / Cutaway / Chassis Cab | Step Van (long wheelbase & extended body style) |
| Availability | All commercial buyers | Large fleet contracts only |
| Floor Design | Flat (battery under floor) Step Van Opt | n/a |
| Efficiency | Good | ~41.7 kWh/100km (high consumption) |
Analysis
The BrightDrop offers significantly more range and cargo volume than the ETransit but at a proportionally greater cost and with notably higher energy consumption. Real-world comparison testing recorded the BrightDrop consuming an average of 41.7 kWh/100km, nearly double the efficiency of its rivals. For a business paying electricity bills, that consumption gap matters enormously over a fleetβs lifetime.








The BrightDrop is also primarily available to large corporate fleet buyers, not individual businesses. For most commercial operators, it is not a realistic alternative to the ETransit.
Verdict
BrightDrop is a niche heavy-fleet tool. E-Transit wins on efficiency, accessibility, and overall value.
Commercial EV vans
Full Competitor Comparison Matrix
| Feature | Ford E-Transit | Mercedes eSprinter | Ram ProMaster EV | Rivian EDV 500 | BrightDrop Zevo 600 |
| Battery | 89 kWh | 81β113 kWh | 110 kWh | ~135 kWh | 200+ kWh |
| Range (max) | 159 mi | 204β249 mi | 174β180 mi | ~161 mi | ~272β300 mi |
| Motor Power | 266 hp | 134β201 hp | 268 hp | 299 hp | Variable |
| Torque | 317 lb-ft | 295 lb-ft | 302 lb-ft | – | 390 lb-ft |
| DC Charge Rate | 176 kW | 50β115 kW | 50β150 kW | 100 kW using a CCS connector | 120kW DC |
| DC Charge (10β80%) | ~28 min | 32β42 min | ~35β40 min | ~35 min | 60 min |
| Cargo Volume | 487 cu ft | 488 cu ft | 524 cu ft | 500β652 cu ft | 600 cu ft |
| Max Payload | 3,249 lbs | ~2,756 lbs | 3,020 lbs | 2,734 lbs | ~2,200 lbs |
| Roof Options | Low/Med/High | Std/High | High | Step van | Step van |
| Body Configs | 3 (Van/Cut/Chass) | 1 (Van) | 2 (Van/Step) | 2 (delivery) | 1 (step) |
| Starting Price | ~$57,935 | ~$63,475 | ~$58,490 | ~$83,000 | $66,100 – $68,700 |
| Availability | All buyers | All buyers | All buyers | Fleet only | Fleet only |
| Pro Power Onboard | Yes (2.4 kW) | No | No | No | No |
| Heat Pump | Standard | Standard | – | – | Standard |
| Fleet Telematics | Standard (FordPro) | Optional | Standard | Available | Available |
| Drive Layout | RWD | RWD | FWD | FWD (AWD soon) | AWD &FWD |
| Country Assembly | USA (Kansas City) | USA (Charleston, SC) | Mexico (Saltillo) | USA (Normal, IL) | Canada (Ingersoll, ON) |
E-Transitβs Competitive Advantages
Where Ford Wins
Why is the Ford E-Transit so popular?
1. Price Leadership: At ~$57,935 before incentives and potentially ~$50,000 post federal tax credit for qualifying commercial buyers, the E-Transit is the most affordable large electric van from a major manufacturer available to all buyers. This price advantage, when multiplied across a fleet of 20, 50, or 200 vehicles, translates into a massive capital cost difference.
2. Charging Speed: The E-Transitβs 176 kW DC fast charging rate and 28-minute 10β 80% charge time lead the segment. Faster charging means more operational flexibility, shorter depot stops, and the ability to meaningfully top up during operational breaks a genuine productivity advantage.
3. Configuration: Breadth No rival matches the E-Transitβs six cargo van configurations, plus cutaway and chassis cab. This configurability is not marketing language, it means a single purchasing relationship with Ford can serve radically different operational requirements across a mixed fleet.
4. Pro Power Onboard: The 2.4 kW built-in power supply is a unique, practical feature that eliminates the need for a separate generator in trade applications. It is a feature no rival currently offers.
5. FordPro Ecosystem: The end-to-end commercial ecosystem, telematics, charging infrastructure, mobile service, fleet financing, reduces the complexity of transitioning to electric and provides ongoing operational value that standalone van purchases from smaller players cannot match.
6. US Assembly: The E-Transit is assembled at Fordβs Kansas City Assembly Plant, making it eligible for commercial EV incentives available to domestically assembled vehicles, a significant financial advantage in the Canadian & US markets.

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FORD
Honest Assessment
Where E-Transit Falls Short
Range: The E-Transitβs 159-mile maximum range, while adequate for the averagecommercial operator, is meaningfully behind the Mercedes eSprinterβs 249-milemaximum and the Ram ProMaster EVβs 180 miles. For rural operators, highway-heavy routes, or cold-climate fleets where the heat pump doesnβt fully compensate, this remains a limitation.
Cargo Volume: The maximum 487.3 cubic feet, while impressive, is behind the RamProMaster EVβs 524 cubic feet. For operations where cargo volume is the primary constraint high-density parcel delivery, for example the Ram has a meaningful structural advantage.
No AWD Option: Unlike some rival passenger EVs, the E-Transit is available exclusively with rear-wheel drive. For operators in severe winter climates or who need to traverse rough terrain, this may be a limiting factor. The Mercedes eSprinterβs diesel variant offers 4×4, the electric version does not. High-Roof Aerodynamic Penalty: The range gap between low-roof (159 miles) and high-roof (143 miles) configurations is notable. Operators who need maximum headroom will accept a meaningful range reduction.

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FORD
Real-World Operator Experience
Fordβs own fleet data and independent testing tell a consistent story: Leverage
Telematics data from over 2.5 million real commercial van trips, Ford found the average US commercial van travels 74 miles per day, less than half the E-Transitβs minimum range.
For the overwhelming majority of fleet applications, the E-Transit offers more than enough range for a full working day on a single overnight charge. In our opinion, when pitting the E-Transit against the Ram ProMaster EV, Mercedes eSprinter, and BrightDrop, we consistently rated the Ford as offering the best loaded ride quality and characterized it as the most affordable, most familiar, and most comfortable loaded of the contenders making it a solid, balanced choice.
The E-Transitβs approach is the best balance of practicality, affordability, and technology in the segment. The E-Transit demonstrates the extent to which Ford is doubling down on its commitment to EVs, acknowledging it as an environmentally significant choice without requiring operators to sacrifice capability.

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Final word
Still the Standard
The Ford E-Transit arrived first among mainstream automakers in the large electric van segment, and three model years on, it has largely retained its position as the benchmark. Its combination of competitive pricing, rapid charging, meaningful configurability, trade-friendly Pro Power Onboard, and the fully integrated Ford Pro-commercial ecosystem gives it advantages that are difficult for rivals to fully replicate.
The Mercedes eSprinter offers superior range and cabin refinement at a significant price premium. The Ram ProMaster EV challenges on cargo volume and its purpose-builtdelivery step van format. The Rivian EDV remains a closed-market product for Amazon-scale buyers. The BrightDrop serves a different niche at far greater cost and energyconsumption.
For the vast majority of commercial operators, tradespeople, SME delivery businesses, facilities management companies, and mixed-fleet corporate operators the E-Transit remains the electric van to beat. It fits naturally into existing Transit-based fleet operations, supports the full range of upfitting requirements, and delivers compelling total cost of ownership figures when fuel savings, reduced maintenance, and federal incentives are factored in.
The future of commercial transport is electric. And for most businesses ready to make that transition today, the Ford E-Transit is where that journey begins.

