Ford has nailed the formula for being leader in pickup truck sales: Here’s how

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The key to dominance in pickup trucks requires giving buyers choices as the industry rapidly evolves and that means offering F-Series in classic gas, hybrid and electric options, Ford CEO Jim Farley told investors in recent days.

Based on October sales totals, and year-to-date totals, the formula is working as hoped.

Farley has promised the public that F-Series trucks with gas-powered engines aren't going away anytime soon and anxious consumers need to relax. The Ford strategy is to offer the hybrid F-150 and Maverick, which use gasoline and battery power, to bridge the gap for people who are hesitant about making the big leap to full battery electric.

Yet electric trucks are selling, too.

Highlights and lowlights

According to Ford sales numbers obtained from the automaker on Thursday:

  • For the first 10 months of the year, Ford leads the industry as the top-selling brand with total sales of 1,591,695 vehicles, outselling second highest Toyota by 18,571 vehicles and up 8.4% from a year ago.

  • Ford is the top-selling truck manufacturer. Ford truck sales outsold General Motors by more than 66,000 trucks through October of this year with 903,204 trucks — up 16.9% year-to-date from last year. Ford builds the F-Series, Super Duty, Ranger, Maverick and Transit van lineup.

  • Hybrid vehicle sales, led by Maverick and F-150, hit a new monthly sales record of 13,155 vehicles, up 37.9% from a year ago. Maverick hybrid sales had a record month in October with 6,230 trucks sold, up 42.6% over last year. Year to date, the Maverick saw a 50.2% sales increase to 42,669 trucks. Maverick hybrid now accounts for 56% of all Mavericks sold. F-150 hybrid trucks sales grew to 3,930 for the month of October, contributing to total sales this year of 40,636, up 42.6%.

  • In October, the all-electric F-150 Lightning had the best sales month since Lightning launched in 2022 with a record 3,712 trucks sold. This, despite the fact that it had a quality check disruption with dealer orders. Year to date, Lightning is up 42.7% with 15,972 trucks sold.

  • While F-Series sales dipped 5.1% in October to 53,509 vehicles, it still outsold the Chevrolet Silverado by 11,876 vehicles. F-Series year-to-date is up 19.7% to 626,879 trucks. F-Series remains America’s bestselling truck this year, leading its closest competitor Silverado by 181,825 trucks.

Year to date, Ford has sold 53,502 electric vehicles, up 12.6% from 2022; 109,669 hybrid vehicles, up 18.8% from 2022; 1,494,839 internal combustion vehicles, up 6.8%. Total Ford Motor Co. sales, including Lincoln vehicles, climbed 7.7% to 1,658,010.