Apr 11, 2026
2026 Ford Escape AWD on snow-covered South Dakota highway in winter

If you’re shopping for a 2026 Ford Escape in South Dakota, AWD is probably on your checklist — and for good reason. But the answer to “does it come with AWD?” isn’t a simple yes or no. Some trims include it standard. Some have it as an option you must add at the order stage. And one trim can’t get it at all. Getting this wrong at purchase is costly — in most cases, drivetrain can’t be changed after the vehicle is built.

This guide covers what central South Dakota buyers specifically need to know: which 2026 Escape trims come with AWD, how the system performs on packed snow and gravel county roads, whether the optional AWD upgrade on entry trims is worth the cost, and why the PHEV has a limitation most buyers don’t discover until it’s too late.

Which 2026 Ford Escape Trims Come with AWD?

AWD is standard — and the only drivetrain option — on the ST-Line Select, ST-Line Elite, and Platinum trims. On the Active and ST-Line, FWD comes standard and AWD is an option you must specifically select at order. The PHEV trim is front-wheel drive only with no AWD available at any configuration.

Here’s the full breakdown:

Trim AWD Status Engine
Active Optional (FWD standard — must add) 1.5L EcoBoost
ST-Line Optional (FWD standard — must add) 1.5L EcoBoost
ST-Line Select AWD Only — standard, no FWD 2.0L EcoBoost or 2.5L Hybrid
ST-Line Elite AWD Only — standard, no FWD 2.0L EcoBoost or 2.5L Hybrid
Platinum AWD Only — standard, no FWD 2.0L EcoBoost or 2.5L Hybrid
PHEV FWD Only — no AWD available 2.5L Plug-In Hybrid

The practical takeaway for buyers in this area: if you want AWD without having to think about it at the order stage, start at ST-Line Select. At that trim and above, every unit built is AWD — there is no FWD version to accidentally end up with. For buyers considering Active or ST-Line, AWD must be explicitly specified when the vehicle is ordered. You cannot add it to a finished vehicle later.

What Does Ford’s Intelligent AWD Actually Do in Snow and Ice?

Ford’s Intelligent All-Wheel Drive monitors wheel slip continuously and transfers torque between the front and rear axles as conditions change — without any driver input required. In normal driving, the system defaults toward front-wheel drive to preserve fuel economy. When it detects wheel slip on snow, ice, or slippery surfaces, it engages the rear axle and redistributes power to where traction is available.

This is on-demand AWD, not a locked four-wheel-drive system. That distinction matters for South Dakota buyers. The Escape’s Intelligent AWD is designed to handle the conditions most drivers in this area encounter most often: packed snow on county roads, ice-covered intersections, slippery highway on-ramps in January, and the slow grip loss that starts on a gravel road in early October. For those conditions, it performs well.

Where it starts to show limits is in deeper unpacked snow, significant off-camber terrain, or situations where a driver wants to manually lock in four-wheel drive. That’s where the Bronco Sport’s standard 4×4 system with GOAT (Goes Over Any Type of Terrain) modes has a genuine edge. For most Escape buyers — highway commuters, school-run vehicles, buyers who see gravel roads but not serious off-road terrain — the Intelligent AWD is well-suited to what a central South Dakota winter actually looks like. The full 2026 Ford Escape overview at Beadle Ford covers the complete powertrain and AWD picture if you want to compare everything at once.

2026 Ford Escape on gravel road through South Dakota plains landscape

Looking for Something in Stock?

Check out these models available now at Beadle Ford.

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Standard 4×4, GOAT modes, staying in Ford’s lineup. Built for South Dakota.

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More room, available 3-row seating, ready for the plains.

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Compact truck versatility at an Escape-comparable price.

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Active and ST-Line AWD: Is the Optional Upgrade Worth It?

For most South Dakota buyers, yes. Winter driving in Spink or Walworth County is not the same as winter driving in a warm-climate suburb, and the optional AWD on Active and ST-Line trims is one of those decisions where the cost of skipping it tends to show up in February. The critical point is that it’s a factory-order decision — it must be selected when the vehicle is built. Once an FWD Escape leaves the assembly line, it stays FWD.

Before committing to the AWD add on an Active or ST-Line, it’s worth looking at the ST-Line Select as a comparison. The Select starts at AWD as its only configuration — no option needed, no risk of an FWD unit being delivered — and it also brings heated front seats, a heated steering wheel, remote start, a power liftgate, and body-color heated mirrors as standard equipment. At -15°F outside Bowdle on a January morning, those aren’t comfort upgrades — they’re practical ones. For many buyers, the total picture at ST-Line Select represents better value per dollar than adding only AWD to a base trim and still missing those features.

That comparison gets clearer when you see all six trims laid out with specific feature detail. The 2026 Ford Escape trim levels guide walks through every trim with a South Dakota buyer’s lens — including which features matter most in this climate and at this price point.

Why PHEV Buyers Should Think Twice (It’s FWD Only)

The 2026 Escape PHEV is front-wheel drive only. There is no AWD option, no upgrade path, no workaround. That’s confirmed in the 2026 order guide. If you purchase a 2026 Escape PHEV, it will be FWD — regardless of trim package or added options.

The PHEV’s approximately 37-mile EV-only range sounds appealing on paper, but that figure comes with a significant infrastructure assumption: regular access to Level 2 charging. In practice, the Level 2 charging network that makes plug-in hybrids most cost-effective is concentrated in larger cities. If you’re primarily driving around Bowdle, Gettysburg, or Redfield, the realistic scenario involves Level 1 home charging — slower, and in many cases insufficient to keep the battery consistently topped for daily use. Many rural PHEV owners end up running in hybrid gas mode the majority of the time anyway, which means they’ve paid for plug-in capability they can’t fully use, in a vehicle that can’t get AWD.

For central South Dakota buyers, the 2.5L Hybrid AWD — available on ST-Line Select, ST-Line Elite, and Platinum — is typically the more practical choice. It delivers strong fuel economy without requiring a charger, and AWD is standard on every unit. The PHEV has its place in the right situation; that situation is more easily found closer to a city with established charging infrastructure than it is in rural central South Dakota.

2026 Ford Escape wheel and tire on snow-covered road in South Dakota winter

How Does the Escape AWD Hold Up on Gravel Roads and Through South Dakota’s Mud Season?

AWD earns its value in central South Dakota well beyond December through February. The seasonal picture for a vehicle driven in this area breaks into four distinct challenges: deep-winter cold and packed snow from December through March, spring mud season on gravel roads through April and May, dry-season gravel and dust from June through September, and early freeze and frost conditions in October and November.

Ford’s Intelligent AWD handles the winter and fall scenarios well for a vehicle in the Escape’s class — the on-demand torque transfer responds quickly to the kind of gradual slip that packed county roads and icy intersections produce. Spring mud adds a different kind of AWD value: gravel township roads that soften and rut through May are manageable with AWD in a way that FWD crossovers often aren’t. The Escape isn’t a dedicated mud vehicle — all-season tires and moderate ground clearance define its limits clearly — but it handles the general surface variability of rural South Dakota driving better than FWD alternatives in the same class.

One honest caveat worth stating clearly: if your driving regularly involves unimproved ranch access roads, significant off-camber terrain, or anything approaching serious off-road conditions, the Escape AWD will reach its limits before the Bronco Sport does. The Bronco Sport’s standard 4×4, higher ground clearance, and GOAT mode settings are built for more demanding use. For the majority of South Dakota Escape buyers — county road commuters, farm families using the vehicle as a daily driver, buyers who encounter gravel roads but not livestock trails — the Escape AWD handles the year-round reality of this area well.

Key Takeaways

  • AWD is standard on ST-Line Select, ST-Line Elite, and Platinum — on Active and ST-Line, it’s an option that must be explicitly added at the order stage.
  • The PHEV trim is front-wheel drive only — there is no AWD available on the 2026 Escape PHEV at any price point.
  • Ford’s Intelligent AWD handles packed snow, ice, and gravel roads well — it’s well-matched to typical central South Dakota winter and spring driving conditions.
  • ST-Line Select is where AWD becomes mandatory, and it also brings heated seats, heated steering wheel, and remote start — making it a single-decision answer to winter preparedness for most buyers.
  • For buyers who need deeper off-road capability or want standard 4×4 engagement, the Bronco Sport is the stronger option in Ford’s current lineup.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the 2026 Ford Escape come with AWD standard?

AWD is standard — and the only drivetrain option — on the ST-Line Select, ST-Line Elite, and Platinum trims. On the Active and ST-Line, FWD comes standard and AWD is an optional add that must be specified at order. The PHEV trim is front-wheel drive only with no AWD available at any configuration or price point.

Is the 2026 Ford Escape hybrid AWD or FWD?

It depends on which hybrid. The 2.5L Hybrid (gas-electric, non-plug-in) is AWD only — available on the ST-Line Select, ST-Line Elite, and Platinum trims. The 2.5L Plug-In Hybrid (PHEV trim) is front-wheel drive only, with no AWD option available on that trim.

Can you get the 2026 Ford Escape PHEV with AWD?

No. The 2026 Ford Escape PHEV is front-wheel drive only. There is no AWD configuration available for the PHEV trim at any price point. Buyers who want both plug-in hybrid capability and all-wheel drive will need to consider a different vehicle.

Which 2026 Ford Escape trim is best for South Dakota winter driving?

The ST-Line Select is the natural starting point for South Dakota buyers. AWD is standard on that trim with no FWD option, and it also includes heated front seats, a heated steering wheel, remote start, and a power liftgate — all of which matter in sub-zero temperatures. ST-Line Elite and Platinum add more comfort and technology upgrades. Active and ST-Line with the optional AWD add are viable, but require explicitly specifying AWD at order to avoid receiving an FWD unit.

How does the Escape’s AWD compare to the Bronco Sport’s 4×4?

The Escape uses Ford’s Intelligent AWD, an on-demand system that monitors slip and engages the rear axle as conditions require. The Bronco Sport uses a standard 4×4 system with GOAT modes and higher ground clearance, designed for more demanding off-road and rough-terrain use. For typical South Dakota winter driving — packed snow, ice, gravel roads, spring mud — both are capable. The Bronco Sport has an advantage in deeper snow, off-camber terrain, and situations calling for engaged four-wheel drive. The Escape Hybrid AWD has an advantage in fuel economy on highway miles.

My Take on AWD and the 2026 Ford Escape

The AWD question comes up in almost every Escape conversation I have, and the answer that surprises most buyers is that it isn’t guaranteed by the model — it depends on which trim they’re actually ordering. My default starting point in those conversations is usually ST-Line Select, because AWD is already locked in, and so are the heated seats and remote start that make the first start of a February morning significantly less unpleasant. Getting all three in a single trim decision takes a lot of the complexity out of it.

If you’re trying to decide between adding AWD to an Active or ST-Line versus stepping up to Select, or if you’re weighing the Escape against the Bronco Sport on traction grounds, I’m happy to walk through the specifics. Those are real trade-offs worth talking through before you commit. Stop by or give us a call.

About the Author

Lexy Tabbert — Beadle Ford, Bowdle, SD

Lexy Tabbert is the Director of Sales and Marketing at Beadle Ford in Bowdle, South Dakota. She covers Ford vehicles, trim comparisons, and buyer guidance — helping families, ranchers, and ag operators across the region find the right truck and configuration for their needs.

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