Ford’s Ranger-sized affordable electric ute will use a platform that supports right-hand drive

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Ford has confirmed its Universal Electric Vehicle (UEV) platform, which will underpin a range of vehicles including a Ford Ranger-sized electric ute, has been engineered for right-hand drive (RHD, enabling it to underpin vehicles for the Australian market.

The EV underpinnings, which the automaker said it have invested US$5 billion (A$7.16 billion) on, are designed to be used across a range of Ford electric models, including the recently teased affordable new ute, which appears similar in size to a Ranger.

“The platform is capable of right-hand drive, but we have no specifics to share currently,” a spokesperson told media in the US, according to Ford Authority.

“The UEV is a globally capable platform, and Ford plans to export vehicles. However, we aren’t sharing specifics on where and when yet.”

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Ford Australia has not shared any details or confirmed if any models based on the Universal platform will be sold here; however, the RHD capability aligns with previous announcements from Ford saying the UEV will be used for export models.

The automaker has also previously said the new model would need to prove itself in the US before being offered elsewhere, with Ford releasing teaser images earlier in 2026.

More recently spied testing in the US, the ute is tipped to be badged ‘Ranchero’ when it’s unveiled in 2027 and will showcase the advantages of the new platform, which Ford says include ‘gigacasting’ and other new manufacturing techniques.

Combined with lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries and more cost-conscious electric motors, the approach is designed to help UEV-based Fords become more price-competitive with petrol-powered cars.