Related news: Ford Outlines EV, Tech, Customer Growth Strategy
New Ford Service Aims To Boost Customer Uptime, Lower Costs
The new company within Ford will offer bundled financing for vehicles, services, and EV charging as well as hardware and software solutions for public, depot, and overnight home charging of EVs.

An overview of the services and products of the new Ford Pro, a new separate business within Ford Motor Co.
Photo: Ford
Ford is launching Ford Pro, a global vehicle services and distribution business that wants to help customers increase uptime and reduce ownership costs while improving their productivity and performance.
The new business, separate within Ford, evolves from the Ford+ plan for long-term growth announced May 26. Ford+ is based on building always-on customer relationships.
“We’re creating a one-stop shop to help those customers increase uptime and productivity while reducing complexity and the total cost of ownership,” said Ford CEO Jim Farley.
Ford Pro is focused on the range of F-Series and Ranger trucks, as well as Transit and the upfitting of all of them. Soon, Ford will start making high-volume electric vehicles, including the E-Transit later this year and the F-150 Lightning Pro in mid-2022, which Ford Pro will pair with commercially focused charging solutions.
Ford Pro anticipates its growing capabilities and appeal to generate $45 billion in revenue from hardware and adjacent and new services by 2025 – up from $27 billion in 2019. In North America, Ford’s share of Class 1 through Class 7 full-size trucks and vans today exceeds 40%. In Europe, Ford has been the leading commercial vehicle brand for six consecutive years, according to the automaker.
Farley said Ford Pro will be led by Ted Cannis as CEO. Cannis will collaborate with Hans Schep, general manager of commercial vehicles for Ford of Europe, and other regional leaders. Cannis heads Ford’s North America CV business and previously was leader of the Team Edison electric-vehicle development group.

Ford Pro will be led by Ted Cannis as CEO. He now heads Ford’s North America CV business and previously was leader of the Team Edison electric-vehicle development group.
Photo: Ford
Redefining, Unlocking Commercial Customer Value
Ford Pro, which will implement new services in phases, is aimed at helping commercial customers work better, with productive, durable and smart vehicles and connected services.
Ford today has relationships with nearly 125,000 commercial and government fleet customers in North America and thousands more in Europe and elsewhere. Ford Pro is designed to even more rapidly and feasibly anticipate and address their needs and those of new customers.
Ford Pro will integrate, digitize and simplify transportation with capabilities spanning:
Ford Pro Vehicles: Including Ford’s broad lineup of combustion-engine and hybrid commercial vehicles and, soon, all-electric versions of the company’s vans and full-size pickup trucks developed for commercial use.
Ford Pro Charging: Hardware and software solutions for public, depot and overnight home charging of EVs so they’re ready to work again the next day.
Ford Pro Intelligence: Digital services, with distinct features integrated in their vehicles that enable customers to better manage and maintain their fleets.
Ford Pro Services Elite: Expanding Ford’s strong network of CV centers by adding 120 dedicated, large-bay service hubs across the U.S. with extended hours and rapid turnaround, plus introducing 1,200 mobile service vehicles by 2025 to meet customers where they are, save them money and get them back in business, and
Ford Pro FinSimple: Bundled financing for vehicles, services and EV charging.
Some elements of Ford Pro commercial services have already been introduced and are growing in Europe, among them the recently launched Ford Fleet Management and Ford Pro Liive. The latter is a connected uptime system expected to reduce downtime of customer fleets by up to 60%. Such enhanced services are generating higher levels of customer satisfaction and loyalty, and growth for Ford.
Ford Pro will initially launch in North America and Europe.
More Operations

Electrify America Opens EV Fast Charging Station in Southern California
The large-format depot features 20 hyper-fast chargers capable of delivering 350 kilowatts and is backed by a powerful battery energy storage system.
Read More →
Charging Gaps That Impede Electric Fleets
Find out why charger breakdowns can be so misleading, costing fleets time, money, and usage.
Read More →
Turo Launches Electric Vehicles vs. Gas Trip Cost Calculator
New free tool helps travelers compare fuel and charging costs side by side before they book, aimed at more affordable summer road trips.
Read More →
Hybrid Vehicle Collision Claims Hit Record High In Q1 As BEV Claims Flatten
The number of hybrids on the road is growing, indicating that overall electrification is evolving.
Read More →
Redefining The Charging Reliability Layer
Getting boots on the ground quickly is not enough. Fleets must now master charging management, one of the newest capabilities, the most critical of all the new skills the transition to EVs demands.
Read More →
Study: How 2026's Gas Price Hikes Affect Different Vehicle Types
New data from iSeeCars reveals how rising fuel costs have affected different vehicle segments as gasoline prices climbed nearly 46% over the past four months.
Read More →
California Energy Commission Funds More Public EV Fast Charging
As EV adoption grows across California, public fast charging is becoming essential infrastructure for drivers, communities, and businesses.
Read More →
Thousands Of EV Chargers Coming To Multi-Family Residences
ChargePoint and OBE Power plan to deploy about 2,500 EV charging ports at multifamily residential properties across North America beginning in 2026.
Read More →
California Adopts Sweeping New Autonomous Vehicle Regulations
Updated DMV rules open the door for heavy-duty AV testing and deployment while strengthening safety standards, emergency response coordination, and manufacturer accountability.
Read More →
All Electric Test House Could Ease Path To EV Usage
An experimental model home shows how residential charging could enable electric fleet operations by allowing drivers to take EVs home.
Read More →