Ford is teaming up with workwear giant Carhartt on a new appearance and utility package for the 2027 Ford Super Duty, giving one of America’s hardest-working pickups a heavy-duty styling treatment inspired by the jobsite clothing brand.
The new Carhartt package will be available on certain 2027 Ford F-250 and F-350 Super Duty XLT Crew Cab single-rear-wheel 4x4 models. Ford says the package was designed jointly with Carhartt’s design team and focuses more on function and durability than flashy cosmetics.
According to Ford Motor Company, the package will retail for $4,195 and can be added to trucks equipped with either the premium package or the FX4 Off-Road package. A Super Duty fitted with the Carhartt package will start at $61,095 before destination charges. Ford says order banks opened May 8.
The automaker also confirmed that the current $2,795 destination and delivery fee charged on 2026 Super Duty models will carry over unchanged to 2027 trucks.
Ford and Carhartt first announced a multiyear partnership in January that included supplying work uniforms for Ford dealership technicians, but company officials said they wanted to take the relationship further with a factory-backed truck package that reflects both brands’ blue-collar identities.
Steve Gilmore, Ford’s chief designer for vehicle personalization, said the companies approached the truck with practicality in mind rather than simply adding logos and trim pieces.
“The Super Duty was the right product to build the foundation on; it’s all about work,” Gilmore told reporters. “We weren’t going to build a truck that was dressed in Carhartt, we were going to build a truck with the same philosophy as Carhartt. If it doesn’t have a purpose, it doesn’t belong on this truck.”
Still, there’s plenty of Carhartt branding throughout the vehicle. Ford says the Carhartt logo appears 14 different times inside and outside the truck. Even the logos mounted in the fender vents serve a functional purpose because they also act as reflectors.
Beyond the branding, the package includes several design touches inspired by Carhartt products and workwear materials.
The floor mats use a pattern similar to the one found on Carhartt tool bags, while the seat upholstery takes inspiration from the company’s famous “duck canvas” material. Ford says the seats use a similar weave pattern but in a darker shade designed to better hide dirt and stains. The interior color is called “Hamilton Gray,” named after Carhartt founder Hamilton Carhartt.
Designers also carried over Carhartt’s well-known triple-stitch seam pattern into portions of the interior trim.
One of the more unusual design elements involves the 20-inch aluminum wheels. Ford designers said they were inspired by steam rising from manhole covers outside Carhartt’s flagship store in Detroit, leading to a wheel design intended to resemble industrial manhole covers.
The package also includes textured off-road running boards and an LED lighting package. Buyers will be able to choose from six exterior colors, including a new shade called Neptune Blue that joins the Super Duty color palette for 2027.
The Carhartt package arrives at an important time for Ford’s truck business.
Super Duty pickups remain among Ford’s most profitable vehicles, even as overall F-Series sales have softened this year. Ford reported F-Series sales were down 16 percent through April as the company continues dealing with inventory shortages tied to last September’s fire at a key aluminum supplier.
To help rebuild inventory, Ford has already announced plans to skip the normal summer shutdown at its truck plants. The automaker also expects production of Super Duty trucks to begin this year at its retooled Oakville Assembly Complex in Canada.
The new Carhartt edition clearly isn’t aimed at luxury-truck buyers looking for chrome overload and quilted leather. Instead, Ford appears to be targeting contractors, ranchers, utility crews and truck owners who actually use their pickups for what Henry Ford probably intended in the first place: getting dirty while getting the job done.
And let’s be honest, if you’re going to spill coffee, grease and barbecue sauce inside a truck, at least now the seats are dressed for the occasion.