On the Dash:
- Ford’s Universal EV Platform can support vehicles as small as B-segment subcompacts, not just trucks.
- The platform’s first product is an unnamed midsize pickup, starting near $30,000 in 2027.
- The platform cuts costs with 20% fewer parts and 40% fewer plant workstations.
Ford’s new Universal Electric Vehicle Platform may reach further down the price ladder than dealers expected. The automaker says it can support B-segment vehicles as small as subcompact cars, a detail that emerged in a recent Q&A session about the Universal EV Platform, as reported by Ford Authority.
“The UEV platform is designed to be highly flexible and will support a family of vehicles across multiple body styles (from B-car sized up to commercial vans). It is also engineered to be flexible for multiple chemistries and form factors beyond the initial Lithium Iron Phosphate or LFP battery, allowing it to adapt to future advancements,” the company said in the Q&A session.
The comment signals that Ford wants affordable EVs smaller than anything on the platform so far. Although Ford currently has no subcompact cars in its U.S. lineup today, a vehicle that small would be a new kind of product for the home market. Which the automaker has said is the platform’s priority in the North American market.
The first platform vehicle is a midsize pickup, which has yet to be named. The company says the pickup will start at around $30,000 and reach customers in 2027.
Affordability is at the center of the plan, as price remains one of the biggest hurdles to wider EV adoption in the U.S. Now that federal incentives for new EVs have expired, automakers need to find ways to bring costs down if they want to increase EV sales.
According to the automaker, the platform uses 20% fewer parts than a typical vehicle. It also uses 25% fewer fasteners and 40% fewer workstations on the plant floor.
For now, the midsize pickup is the only confirmed product on the platform. Dealers will get a clearer picture as the truck nears its 2027 launch.



