Ford to Boost F-150, Super Duty Production in Michigan & Kentucky

Ford plans to increase F-Series production by more than 50,000 trucks in 2026 to meet demand & recover production losses due to the Novelis plant fire…

Ford announced plans to significantly increase F-150 and F-Series Super Duty truck production to meet customer demand and recover production losses stemming from the fire at supplier Novelis’ Oswego, New York, aluminum plant.

Ford aims to increase its F-Series production volume by more than 50,000 trucks in 2026, ramping from the first quarter of 2026. This means creating up to 1,000 new jobs and transferring additional employees into Ford’s American truck assembly powerhouses, company officials stated in a press release.

“The people who keep our country running depend on America’s most popular vehicle—F-Series trucks—and we are mobilizing our team to meet that demand,” said Ford chief operating officer Kumar Galhotra. “As America’s leading auto producer, we will work with the UAW and our suppliers to quickly increase output at our F-Series plants in Michigan and Kentucky.”

Shuffling the Deck, Adding Employees & Investing Millions to Increase Production of the F-150 & F-Series Super Duty

The Dearborn Truck Plant will target assembling more than 45,000 additional F-150 gas and hybrid trucks in 2026, enabled by a new third crew of 1,200 employees, noted the release. Elsewhere at the Ford Rouge Complex, Ford will add 90 employees at the Dearborn Stamping Plant and 80 employees at the Dearborn Diversified Manufacturing Plant to support the increase.

Ford says F-150 Lightning assembly at the Rouge Electric Vehicle Center will remain paused as the company prioritizes gas and hybrid F-Series trucks, which are more profitable for Ford and use less aluminum.

All the hourly employees at the Rouge Electric Vehicle Center will transfer next door to the Dearborn Truck Plant to join the new third crew. The rest of the third crew will comprise employees transferring from other Southeast Michigan Ford manufacturing facilities and new hires.

The Kentucky Truck Plant aims to increase its F-Series Super Duty assembly line speed by one job per hour, or more than 5,000 trucks per year, with the addition of more than 100 employees, the company said. Ford will invest $60 million in the Kentucky Truck Plant for training and other enablers to support the line speed increase.

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