Apr 23, 2026
2027 Ford Expedition Tremor off-road teaser — Beadle Ford Bowdle SD

The 2027 Ford Expedition Tremor is the Expedition’s factory off-road trim — a 4×4-only, 440-horsepower, electronic-locking-differential configuration that sits between the Platinum and an aftermarket project. It’s the first factory off-road Expedition, and it continues in the 2027 lineup unchanged from its 2025 launch. If you’ve been hearing about the Tremor but weren’t sure whether it’s a legitimate capability trim or a Platinum with stickers and steel-look wheels, this guide answers it honestly.

We’ll walk through what the Tremor actually is mechanically, what the 440 hp and 510 lb-ft High Output EcoBoost really gets you, how it handles gravel and section-line roads in the kind of terrain we drive around Bowdle, why Ford only offers the Tremor in 4×4 and not in Expedition MAX, whether it’s worth the jump over a Platinum for a rural South Dakota buyer, and what you give up to get it. If you’re cross-shopping the Tremor against anything from a Wagoneer to a Tahoe Z71, the trade-offs section at the end matters as much as the specs at the top.

What is the Expedition Tremor, really?

The Expedition Tremor is the factory off-road trim of the sixth-generation Expedition — a standalone retail trim, not a package. It’s not a Platinum with different wheels or a skid-plate cosmetic; it’s a different mechanical specification of the Expedition with its own engine, suspension, tires, differential, and drive-mode software.

What that mechanical difference includes: a 3.5L EcoBoost V6 High Output engine, a 3.73 Electronic Locking Rear Differential, a modified higher-ride suspension with premium passive shocks, modified Raptor-style front and transmission skid plates, an underbody fuel tank shield, P275/70R18 all-terrain tires on unique 18" Dark Carbonized Gray wheels, a unique off-road grille with Carbonized Gray bars and signature lighting, amber Active front tow hooks, a platform running board with angular step bars, a standard off-road underbody shield, and a drive-mode system that adds Rock Crawl on top of the standard six modes. None of that equipment is optional on another Expedition trim — it’s Tremor-specific.

The Platinum trim, by contrast, is the Expedition’s luxury spec — 22" Ebony Bright Machined wheels, painted body-color bumpers, a chrome-trimmed grille, and an interior that leans plush over purposeful. You can order a Platinum with the Stealth Performance Package (19B) or the Platinum Ultimate Package (17A) and get the same 440 hp / 510 lb-ft High Output V6 as the Tremor, but you won’t get the Tremor’s locking differential, its Rock Crawl drive mode, its all-terrain tire setup, or its off-road-specific skid plates. Those are structural choices the Tremor trim makes that a Platinum cannot match.

If you’re comparing the Tremor to the rest of the lineup, the complete 2027 Ford Expedition overview has the side-by-side trim framing.

What does 440 hp and 510 lb-ft actually get you?

The Tremor runs the 3.5L EcoBoost V6 High Output — a twin-turbocharged V6 that produces 440 horsepower and 510 lb-ft of torque, confirmed in the 2027 Ford Expedition Order Guide. It’s mated to a 10-speed automatic transmission with SelectShift capability and Ford’s intelligent 4WD system with Torque on Demand and a two-speed transfer case.

Practically, the 440 hp and 510 lb-ft figures matter in two scenarios. First, towing — the Tremor’s Heavy-Duty Trailer Tow Package is standard, and current-generation Tremor reporting cites a max tow capacity of approximately 9,600 lbs when properly equipped. Ford will confirm the official 2027 figure when the 2027 Ford Towing Guide is released. That’s enough tow for most livestock trailers, most flat-deck trailers in the 24- to 30-foot range, a two-place enclosed snowmobile trailer, and any boat that fits on a single-axle or tandem trailer for Lake Oahe. Second, altitude and load — turbocharged engines don’t lose power at elevation the way naturally aspirated engines do, which matters if you tow to the Black Hills or into Wyoming from Bowdle. The High Output engine gives you usable torque across the whole tach range, not just at the top.

The engine also includes a High Flow Exhaust System and an Engine Sound Enhancer with Active Noise Cancellation — which means the cabin stays conversational at highway speed while the exhaust has more presence when you’re on the throttle. It’s a deliberate calibration choice, not a defect.

How does the Tremor handle gravel and off-pavement?

Better than any Expedition before it. The Tremor’s modified higher-ride suspension, P275/70R18 all-terrain tires, 3.73 Electronic Locking Rear Differential, and seven drive modes (Normal, Sport, Tow/Haul, Eco, Slippery, Off-Road, and Rock Crawl) are all aimed at the same use case: rural, unpaved, variable-grip driving. Independent reviews of the current-generation Tremor from outlets like Gear Patrol and JD Power cite approximately 10.6 inches of ground clearance; the 2027 figure should be verified against final Ford documentation but the hardware is unchanged.

The practical difference on gravel is twofold. The suspension and tires together let the Tremor absorb washboard gravel at reasonable speed without the harshness of a Platinum on 22" low-profile tires — which matters if your weekly commute involves 10 or 15 miles of county gravel before you hit US-12 or US-83. And Trail Control — which includes Trail One Pedal Drive for steep grade management and Trail Turn Assist for tight-radius maneuvering — plus the off-road underbody shield and modified Raptor skid plates, let you drive into places a Platinum shouldn’t go. Pasture two-tracks after a wet week, unmaintained CRP access roads, Lake Oahe shoreline when the grade gets soft — that’s the terrain the Tremor was engineered for.

Standard on the Tremor: off-road auxiliary grille lights, amber Active front tow hooks, front and rear parking sensors, a 360-degree camera with off-road overlays and a Rock Crawl view, and the BLIS trailer coverage that extends blind-spot monitoring around whatever you’re pulling. None of it is optional. None of it is a bundled package. It’s baseline Tremor equipment.

2027 Ford Expedition in winter conditions — Beadle Ford Bowdle SD

Why is the Tremor 4×4 only and not offered in MAX?

Both answers come back to the same idea: Ford engineered the Tremor for a specific use case, and they didn’t water it down for configurations that compromise that use case. A 4×2 Tremor would be contradictory — the whole point of the trim is off-pavement capability, and you can’t get that without four-wheel drive. So there’s only one Tremor configuration: 4×4, with the two-speed transfer case, Torque on Demand, and the 3.73 Electronic Locking Rear Differential standard.

The no-MAX decision is more about geometry. The Expedition MAX adds roughly a foot of wheelbase and overall length. That length, in an off-road context, hurts the rear departure angle, increases the risk of high-centering over ruts and crests, and makes tight-radius off-road maneuvering (which Trail Turn Assist is designed to help with) meaningfully harder. Ford chose not to offer a compromised off-road Expedition — if you want MAX length, the Expedition MAX is available in XL, Active, Platinum, and King Ranch for 2027.

That does create a buyer decision: if your use case is hauling three kids, dog crates, and a week of gear between Bowdle and Fargo, the Tremor’s standard length may feel short behind the third row. In that case the 2027 Expedition MAX Platinum (now offered in 4×2 as well as 4×4) is probably the better fit. The Expedition vs. Expedition MAX comparison walks through that decision in detail.

Thinking about reserving a Tremor?

Lock in your configuration, or ask us about ordering specifics before you commit.

Is the Tremor worth it over a Platinum for rural South Dakota?

For a lot of buyers in our service area — Bowdle, Selby, Ipswich, Eureka, and out across north-central South Dakota to the Missouri River — yes, but only if your actual weekly driving includes unpaved terrain. If your driving is 90% paved highway, a Platinum does the exact same job with a more refined ride on the 22" wheels and a plusher interior. If your driving is 60% paved and 40% county gravel, pasture, or shoreline access, the Tremor earns its spot.

Pick the Tremor if: you run gravel daily and want a suspension and tire setup built for it; you want a locking rear differential for mud, snow, or steep approach angles; you want Rock Crawl mode for lake access or trailer launches on unimproved ramps; you want Amber Active tow hooks rated for recovery, not decoration; or you want the standard 22-speaker B&O Play Unleashed audio and the Power Panoramic Vista Roof without stepping up to a Platinum Ultimate.

Pick a Platinum instead if: you live on pavement, you prefer the 22" Ebony Bright Machined wheel look over the 18" Dark Carbonized Gray Tremor wheel, you want the 30th Anniversary Appearance Package (which is Platinum-only and not compatible with the Tremor), or you’re leaning toward the Platinum Ultimate’s combination of High Output engine, Driver’s Package, and standard BlueCruise 1-Year + 90-Day plan.

For a broader framing of the whole lineup — Active, Tremor, Platinum with its four packages, and King Ranch — the 2027 Ford Expedition trim levels guide walks through who each trim is really built for.

What do you give up by choosing the Tremor?

Three real trade-offs. The first is fuel economy. EPA ratings for the 2027 Expedition will be confirmed closer to launch, but the current-generation Tremor — with all-terrain tires, the modified suspension, and the High Output V6 — uses more fuel than a standard Expedition with the base 3.5L EcoBoost V6 and highway-biased tires. If most of your miles are interstate commuting, the Tremor will cost you at the pump versus an Active Touring or a Platinum 4×2.

The second is the no-MAX constraint covered above. The Tremor’s third-row and cargo-behind-third-row space is the standard-length Expedition’s space. If you’re hauling big family gear regularly, that may not be enough.

The third is price. Official 2027 pricing will be confirmed by Ford closer to launch; public reporting cites a Tremor MSRP in the mid-$80,000s, which places it above a standard Expedition Platinum and roughly in range with a Platinum Stealth Performance. What you’re paying for is the Tremor-unique mechanical content, not cosmetic upgrades. That’s a different value proposition than most trim walks.

Parking and daily usability are not really trade-offs. The Tremor is the same overall length as a standard Expedition — you’re not navigating a longer truck. The 18" wheels with taller all-terrain sidewalls actually handle curbs and potholes more forgivingly than 22" low-profile wheels do. If daily-driver livability is a concern, the Tremor is not the trim that compromises it — MAX is.

Key Takeaways

  • The Tremor is a standalone factory off-road trim — not a Platinum package. It carries over from its 2025 launch.
  • 3.5L EcoBoost V6 High Output at 440 hp / 510 lb-ft, 10-speed automatic, 3.73 Electronic Locking Rear Differential standard.
  • Seven drive modes including Rock Crawl, Trail Control with One Pedal Drive and Trail Turn Assist, P275/70R18 all-terrain tires.
  • 4×4 only. No 4×2. No Expedition Tremor MAX — Ford didn’t compromise off-road geometry for extended length.
  • Worth it over a Platinum if unpaved terrain is part of your weekly driving; Platinum is the better pick if you’re primarily on pavement.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Expedition Tremor new for 2027?

No. The Expedition Tremor launched with the sixth-generation Expedition for the 2025 model year and continues in the 2027 lineup. It’s not marked as a new trim in the 2027 Order Guide.

How much horsepower does the 2027 Ford Expedition Tremor have?

The Tremor runs the 3.5L EcoBoost V6 High Output at 440 horsepower and 510 lb-ft of torque, confirmed by the 2027 Ford Expedition Order Guide. It’s paired with a 10-speed automatic transmission and a two-speed transfer case.

Can you get an Expedition Tremor MAX?

No — the Expedition Tremor is only offered in the standard (non-MAX) body style and only in 4×4 configuration. The MAX body style is available on XL, Active, Platinum, and King Ranch for 2027.

How much can the 2027 Expedition Tremor tow?

Official 2027 tow ratings will be confirmed when Ford releases the 2027 Ford Towing Guide. Public reporting on the current-generation Tremor cites a maximum tow rating of approximately 9,600 lbs when properly equipped. Contact Beadle Ford to confirm the exact figure against your trailer and payload.

Does the Tremor have a locking differential?

Yes — a 3.73 Electronic Locking Rear Differential is standard on the Tremor. It’s paired with the Heavy-Duty Trailer Tow Package and Ford’s intelligent 4WD with Torque on Demand and a two-speed transfer case.

What tires does the Tremor come with?

P275/70R18 all-terrain BSW tires on unique 18" × 8.5" Dark Carbonized Gray Painted Aluminum wheels with Electric Spice Pocket accents. The all-terrain tire and taller sidewall (versus 22" low-profile wheels on Platinum and King Ranch) is one of the Tremor’s defining equipment differences.

How is the Tremor different from a Platinum with off-road packages?

A Platinum can be ordered with the Stealth Performance Package (19B) or Platinum Ultimate Package (17A), which get the same 440 hp / 510 lb-ft High Output V6 as the Tremor. But only the Tremor has the 3.73 Electronic Locking Rear Differential, Rock Crawl drive mode, modified Raptor-style skid plates, all-terrain tires, unique off-road grille, and amber Active tow hooks. Those are trim-specific, not package options.

My Take on the 2027 Ford Expedition Tremor

I talk to a lot of Expedition buyers in north-central South Dakota, and the Tremor is the trim I’m happiest to explain honestly. For the ranch-and-hunt buyers who actually use the capability — gravel-road commutes, stock-trailer towing, pasture access, boat launches that go below the waterline at Lake Oahe — the Tremor earns every dollar. For the buyer who wants it because it looks rugged but drives exclusively on US-12 and US-83, a Platinum is honestly the better truck, and the Platinum Ultimate gets you the same engine and BlueCruise at a different emphasis.

If you’re trying to decide, let’s talk through your actual week — where you drive, what you tow, and what you need from the third row. I’ll point you at the right trim for you, even if it isn’t the one you walked in thinking about.

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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