Ford F-150 Lightning Pro cost to own in Maine — the true 5-year total
The Ford F-150 Lightning Pro starts at $54,780. As of July 1, 2026, over 5 years, owning one (EV) costs about $70,639 in Maine — $1,177/month, $1.18/mile — including depreciation, charging (with the ~12% AC charging loss most calculators ignore), maintenance, insurance, financing and fees. That's $17,856 more than a comparable Ford F-150 XLT (gas) over the same 5 years. Maine's electricity (28.4¢/kWh) is 51% above the U.S. average, and gas runs $3.90/gal here — both fed straight into the numbers above. The federal $7,500 EV credit expired Sept 30, 2025 and is not applied.
Maine EV incentive: Efficiency Maine LMI new-EV rebate (income-qualified) — up to $8,000 (income / price caps may apply). Shown for reference; not included in the total above. Source: Efficiency Maine
Ford F-150 Lightning Pro · Maine · 5-year estimate$70,639 total · $1,177/mo · $1.18/mi
Where the money goes
| Cost component | Electric · Ford F-150 Lightning Pro | Gas · Ford F-150 XLT |
|---|---|---|
| Depreciation (estimated) | $31,225 (44%) | $16,800 (32%) |
| Charging / fuel | $12,091 (17%) | $10,634 (20%) |
| ↳ of which charging loss | 12% (~$1,451) | — |
| Maintenance | $3,660 (5%) | $6,840 (13%) |
| Insurance | $13,750 (19%) | $11,000 (21%) |
| Financing interest | $9,738 (14%) | $7,335 (14%) |
| Registration & fees | $175 (0%) | $175 (0%) |
| Total cost of ownership | $70,639 | $52,783 |
The charging-loss row is the ~10–15% of electricity lost to AC charging that you pay for but never reaches the battery — we include it; most calculators don't.
Ford F-150 Lightning Pro specs & assumptions
- Starting MSRP
- $54,780manufacturer base
- Powertrain
- Electric
- Efficiency
- 48 kWh/100miEPA
- Range
- 300 miEPA
- Maine electricity
- 28.4¢/kWhEIA
- Annual miles (assumed)
- 12,000adjustable in tool
Compare the Ford F-150 Lightning Pro against any car, your miles & your state
What else moves your Ford F-150 Lightning Pro cost
The 5-year total already folds in depreciation, charging, insurance, maintenance and financing. Here's how the biggest levers work — and the ones that sit outside the total.
- Financing. Borrow the full $54,780 at a typical 7.2% new-car APR over 60 months and interest alone adds about $10,613. Lower the APR or add a down payment in the calculator and the total drops — financing is in the 5-year figure above.
- Insurance. This model averages about $2,750/yr to insure — roughly $550/yr more than a comparable gas car ($2,200/yr), as EV parts and repairs tend to cost more — our own estimate, calibrated to Insurify/Bankrate 2026, and already in the total above.
- Home charger. A Level 2 home charger is a one-time $500–$2,000 installed (depends on your panel and wiring) — not in the total above, but it pays back fast versus public fast-charging.
- Tires. EVs are heavier and make instant torque, so tires can wear ~20% faster — a real running cost most comparisons skip. We fold a higher maintenance rate for EVs into the total.
- Where you charge. Public DC fast-charging can cost 2–3× your home rate. The total assumes 80% home charging; if you can't charge at home, lower that share in the calculator to see the real cost.
Ford F-150 Lightning Pro battery — replacement cost & lifespan
Most EVs never need a battery replacement inside the 8-year / 100,000-mile warranty, so this is not in the 5-year total above — but it's the cost buyers worry about most, so here it is transparently.
- Out-of-warranty replacement
- $17,000–$26,000estimate
- Battery warranty
- 8 yr / 100,000 mimanufacturer
- Typical lifespan
- ~15 yrindustry est.
Cost to charge the Ford F-150 Lightning Pro at home
A full charge of the Ford F-150 Lightning Pro costs about $40, and it runs about $15.50 per 100 mi at home — versus about $13.00 for a typical 30 mpg gas car. Home charging only (the ~12% AC charging loss is included); public DC fast-charging is billed per session by each network — often 2–3× the home rate — and isn't in these figures.
- Full charge (123 kWh usable)
- $40pack ÷ (1 − 12% loss) × $0.28/kWh
- Per 100 mi at home
- $15.5048 kWh/100mi + 12% charging loss × $0.28/kWh
- A typical 30 mpg gas car
- $13.00/100miat $3.90/gal — for comparison
Recalls & reliability record — F-150 Lightning
Official U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) safety record for the F-150 Lightning, MY 2022–2026. Figures cover all powertrains and trims sold under the F-150 Lightning nameplate for the model years shown. A recall means a free remedy is available at no cost. Source: NHTSA (nhtsa.gov), data as of .
Recalls (2)
- Visibility
Dealers will replace the electronic cabin coolant heater, free of charge.
- Electrical System
Dealers will replace the high-voltage battery pack, free of charge.
Full recall history: every F-150 Lightning campaign →
Consumer complaints
NHTSA has 381 consumer complaints on file for the F-150 Lightning (MY 2022–2026). The most-reported areas: Electrical System, Exterior Lighting, Forward Collision Avoidance. Complaints are unverified reports submitted by consumers to NHTSA. Counts here are from NHTSA’s complaint flat-file export, which lists this nameplate under records the model-lookup API omits.
Ford F-150 Lightning Pro head-to-head comparisons
The 5-year cost gap against the cars buyers cross-shop:
← Ford F-150 Lightning Pro cost (U.S. average)