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Right-hand-drive Ford F-150 Lightning electric pick-up spotted in Brisbane – UPDATE

A mysterious right-hand-drive Ford F-150 has turned up in Brisbane, being the first electric F-truck spotted on Australian soil.


UPDATE: A spokesperson for Ford has confirmed the vehicle isn't one of theirs, telling Drive: "Ford Australia has not re-manufactured any F-150 Lightnings to right-hand drive and does not have any on fleet. We are focused on beginning customer deliveries of F-150 XLT and Lariat next month."

The story below has been updated to reflect this infomation.

An electric Ford F-150 Lightning has been caught on camera on the streets of Brisbane – and with the steering wheel on the right side.

As first reported by The Driven, images posted to X (formally Twitter) by @wynchil show the right-hand-drive F-150 Lightning in the Brisbane suburb of Morningside – though this isn't prototype from Ford, meaning it is likely a privately-imported and converted vehicle.

While the petrol-powered Ford F-150 pick-up has been confirmed for Australia – with right-hand-drive remanufacturing being carried out in Melbourne by RMA on behalf of Ford – the US car giant has yet to announce whether the electric F-150 Lightning will be offered locally.

In April 2023, Ford Australia CEO Andrew Birkic refused to rule-out bringing the Lightning to Australia, admitting he would "love" to see the electric pick-up in local showrooms.

It's believed the vehicle in the photos is the F-150 Lightning XLT variant, which offers 515 kilometres of driving range from its 131kWh battery pack.

The XLT model send a combined 337kW and 1050Nm from dual electric motors – one for each axle – to all four wheels, allowing an approximate 0-100km/h time of less than five seconds.

Ford Australia has previously announced it will launch five new electrified model by the end of 2024, but has confirmed the F-150 Lightning isn't one of the five – suggesting the pick-up could be earmarked for a 2025 launch, if it does indeed get the greenlight.

The company has said it is focusing on getting the right-hand-drive remanufacturing right for petrol-powered F-150s first.

Drive can confirm the F-150 Lightning is on the Department of Infrastructure's list of approved vehicles for private importation.

There are a number of independent local companies offering right-hand-drive conversions for US pick-ups – many of which complete the process overseas where labour is cheaper – before shipping the finished vehicle to Australia.

While a Queensland-based conversion company told Drive it has not yet worked on an F-150 Lightning, it's possible a private customer commissioned an interstate company to do the conversion.

Morningside, where the vehicle was seen, is a 20 minute drive from the Port of Brisbane, where vehicles arrive via sea.

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Ben Zachariah

Ben Zachariah is an experienced writer and motoring journalist from Melbourne, having worked in the automotive industry for more than two decades. Ben began writing professionally more than 15 years ago and was previously an interstate truck driver. He completed his MBA in Finance in early 2021 and is considered an expert on classic car investment.

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