Apr 29, 2026
2027 Ford Expedition trade-in guide — Beadle Ford Bowdle SD

Most of the Expedition drivers I talk to in Bowdle have had the same Expedition for five years or more. Some are on their second. A few are on a Ford Expedition that Ford started building before the sixth-generation platform even existed. If you’re one of those drivers and you’re thinking about trading for a 2027, this guide walks through whether the jump is actually worth it — and the answer honestly depends on what you’re driving today.

We’ll cover three specific trade-in conversations — whether you’re in a 2021–2024 Expedition (pre-6th-gen), a 2025 or 2026 (same-generation swap), or an older Limited that doesn’t have a direct equivalent on the 2027 trim menu — plus the timing question of trading before or after the 2027 arrives, and how to actually value your trade and reserve at Beadle Ford.

If you drive a 2021–2024 Expedition, is a 2027 a real upgrade?

Yes, and the gap is bigger than most drivers expect. The 2021 through 2024 Expeditions are the fifth generation of the nameplate — a different platform, a different interior architecture, a different infotainment system, and a different driver-assist stack than the sixth-generation Expedition that launched for 2025. Moving from a 2024 to a 2027 is genuinely a generational step up, not a model-year refresh.

What actually changes: the Ford Digital Experience replaces SYNC 4, giving you a 24" panoramic driver display and a 13.2" center display with Google Maps, Google Assistant, and Google Play Store embedded natively. Ford Co-Pilot360 Assist 2.0 is a significant upgrade over the fifth-gen Co-Pilot360 tier, with a 360-degree camera, off-road camera overlays, Predictive Speed Assist, and BLIS with Trailer Coverage. The 3.5L EcoBoost V6 High Output option at 440 hp and 510 lb-ft of torque on Tremor, Platinum Stealth Performance, and Platinum Ultimate didn’t exist on the fifth-gen platform. BlueCruise hands-free highway driving is available across the lineup on the sixth-gen. The Tremor — the Expedition’s first factory off-road trim — also launched with the 2025 generation.

Practically, if your 2021–2024 Expedition has 60,000 to 100,000 miles on it and you’re hitting the window where bigger maintenance items come due — brakes, suspension, battery, bigger service intervals — the math of trading into a 6th-gen Expedition often works out favorably. The 2026 vs. 2027 distinction is smaller than the 2024 vs. 2026 (or 2027) distinction. Either current-generation Expedition is a generational jump from where you are today.

For a complete look at what the 2027 model year specifically adds on top of the sixth-generation platform, see the What’s New for the 2027 Ford Expedition guide.

If you drive a 2025 or 2026 Expedition, does the 2027 change enough to swap?

This is a harder decision. The 2025 and 2026 Expeditions are the same sixth-generation platform as the 2027, with the same Ford Digital Experience, the same Co-Pilot360 Assist 2.0 stack, the same engine family, and the same Tremor trim. The 2027 brings six specific changes on top of that foundation: the 30th Anniversary Appearance Package on Platinum, three new paint colors (Bronze Fire Metallic Tri-coat, Nocturnal Blue Metallic, Blue Ember Metallic), the Ford Security Package newly optional across every trim, a laminated windshield standard across the lineup, the new Family Travel Package on Active Touring, and 4×2 availability on MAX Platinum (previously 4×4 only).

For most same-generation owners, those changes don’t justify the swap on their own. If you bought a 2025 or 2026 Expedition and it’s serving your use case, you’re already in the same truck the 2027 represents — just with a slightly different options catalog. The exception is if one of the 2027-specific changes is genuinely a must-have for you: Blue Ember Metallic paint on a 30th Anniversary Package Platinum, the 4×2 MAX Platinum configuration if that wasn’t available when you bought your 2026, or the Family Travel Package if you’re looking at an Active Touring with young kids.

There’s also a financial reality. Trading a 2025 or 2026 for a 2027 within 12-18 months of the original purchase usually involves absorbing significant depreciation. If that math doesn’t work for you, the honest answer is probably to stay in your current Expedition for another two or three years and revisit the trade-in question then. Come see us either way — we’ll walk through your trade number and the 2027 cost side-by-side honestly.

If you own a Limited, what’s the equivalent trim on the 2027?

There isn’t a direct one. The 2027 Ford Expedition retail lineup is Active, Tremor, Platinum, and King Ranch — no Limited. Ford reorganized the trim ladder for the sixth-generation platform, and Limited didn’t carry over. For Limited owners trading in, the question becomes which new trim best matches what you liked about your Limited.

In most cases, the closest replacement is Platinum — it sits in a similar position on the lineup as Limited did, with a comparable luxury emphasis, leather interior, premium audio, and broader feature content. If you had a Limited with the Max Recline Seats and a higher-content interior, a Platinum Ultimate Package (17A) moves you up further to include the 440 hp High Output engine, the BlueCruise 1-Year + 90-Day plan standard, and Platinum’s most premium appearance items retained (Chrome Roof Rails, Lit Tailgate Applique, Lit Grille Bar) that standard Platinum 600A no longer includes for 2027.

If you loved the Limited’s road feel but find Platinum too conspicuous, Active Touring (202A) is actually a strong alternative. It has heated front seats, a heated steering wheel, BlueCruise 90-Day Trial, Pro Power Onboard 400W, and power-folding second-row captain’s chairs — the “enough luxury without the flagship-trim optics” spot in the lineup. Think of Active Touring as the 2027’s practical upper-value trim.

For the full trim-by-trim breakdown with decision framework by use case, see the 2027 Ford Expedition Trim Levels guide.

2027 Ford Expedition reflected on a wet street — Beadle Ford Bowdle SD

Ready to see what your Expedition is worth?

Should you trade in before or after the 2027 arrives on the lot?

This depends more on your configuration needs than on the timing itself. Here’s how I frame it for buyers at Beadle Ford.

Trade in before the 2027 arrives (reservation path): if you know the exact configuration you want, ordering lets you lock in your trim, packages, paint, and options before production slots fill. You’ll have time to work out the trade-in number at a pace that doesn’t feel rushed. The downside: you’re committing to a truck you haven’t physically driven, and your current Expedition continues depreciating while you wait for delivery.

Wait until a 2027 is on the lot (in-stock path): if you want to see and drive a specific trim and color combination before deciding, waiting for inventory gives you that. You can walk through the actual vehicle, compare it to your current Expedition in the lot lane, and make the decision with the truck in front of you. The downside: in-stock choices are narrower than order choices, and popular configurations (Tremor, 30th Anniversary Package) may require a wait regardless.

One more consideration: if your current Expedition is approaching a milestone that meaningfully affects its value — crossing 100,000 miles, needing a major service, coming off a manufacturer warranty — trading sooner rather than later usually protects more of your trade equity.

Whichever path fits your situation, the trade-in conversation can happen in parallel. We can value your current Expedition now, hold that value for a reasonable window while you decide on the 2027 spec, and line up the transition. Call us or submit a reservation and we’ll set that up.

How do you value your trade and reserve a 2027 at Beadle Ford?

Three steps, and you can do them in any order.

1. Value your trade. Submit your current Expedition through the Value Your Trade form on our site, or bring it in for an appraisal. We’ll look at year, trim, mileage, options, condition, and current market data to give you an honest number. We’ll also tell you if a private-party sale would get you meaningfully more — sometimes it does, sometimes it doesn’t, and we’ll tell you the truth either way.

2. Configure your 2027. Decide on standard vs. MAX body, trim, package (if Platinum), paint, interior, and optional equipment. If you’re unsure, we’ll walk through the trim lineup against your actual driving needs and show you the cost difference between configurations. Reserving doesn’t require a final spec — you can lock in your place in line and refine the configuration as you get closer to delivery.

3. Reserve and hand over. Submit the reservation, finalize the trade number when your 2027 is ready, and take delivery. The Ford factory handles the build and delivery; we handle the hand-off, trade settlement, and any financing or leasing arrangement. The paperwork is straightforward if you work with us — and we’ll explain every line before you sign it.

For the trim-by-trim lineup, engine options, package combinations, and reservation details, see the complete 2027 Ford Expedition overview.

Key Takeaways

  • Moving from a 2021–2024 Expedition to a 2027 is a generational jump: new platform, Ford Digital Experience, Co-Pilot360 Assist 2.0, BlueCruise, High Output engine option, and the Tremor trim.
  • Going from a 2025 or 2026 to a 2027 is a smaller step — worthwhile mainly if specific 2027 changes (30th Anniversary Package, new paints, Family Travel Package, 4×2 MAX Platinum) are must-haves for you.
  • The 2027 lineup does not include a Limited trim. Platinum is the closest equivalent; Active Touring is a strong alternative for Limited owners who want heated seats and BlueCruise without flagship-trim optics.
  • Reserving before arrival locks in configuration choice; waiting for on-lot inventory means narrower configuration options but a physical drive before deciding.
  • Value the trade, configure the 2027, reserve — the three steps can happen in any order and in parallel.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I trade in my Ford Expedition for a 2027?

It depends on what you’re driving today. A 2021–2024 Expedition to a 2027 is a generational jump worth considering seriously. A 2025 or 2026 to a 2027 is a smaller step — worthwhile if specific 2027 changes (30th Anniversary Package, new paints, Family Travel Package, 4×2 MAX Platinum) are must-haves for you. Come see Beadle Ford and we’ll walk through the math honestly.

What’s the 2027 equivalent to the Ford Expedition Limited trim?

The 2027 Expedition retail lineup doesn’t include a Limited trim. Platinum is the closest replacement with a comparable luxury emphasis. If you want more content, Platinum Ultimate (17A) adds the 440 hp High Output engine, BlueCruise 1-Year + 90-Day plan, and premium appearance items standard Platinum 600A no longer includes. Active Touring is a strong alternative if you want heated seats and BlueCruise without flagship-trim optics.

Is it better to trade in before or after the 2027 Expedition arrives?

It depends on your configuration needs. Reserving before arrival locks in your trim, packages, paint, and options but means you’re committing without a physical drive. Waiting for on-lot inventory lets you see the truck before deciding but narrows your configuration choices. If your current Expedition is approaching a milestone that affects its value (100,000 miles, major service, warranty expiration), trading sooner typically protects more equity.

How do I get my Expedition trade-in value?

Submit your vehicle through the Value Your Trade form on beadleford.net, or bring it to Beadle Ford for an appraisal. We’ll assess year, trim, mileage, options, and condition against current market data. We’ll give you an honest number and also tell you if a private-party sale would likely net meaningfully more — sometimes it does, sometimes it doesn’t.

Can I hold my trade-in value while waiting for my 2027 to arrive?

For a reasonable window, yes — depending on market conditions and the length of your reservation timeline. We’ll work with you on how to structure the transition so your current Expedition serves you until the 2027 is ready. Call Beadle Ford at (866) 561-2636 to walk through the specifics against your situation.

Does moving from the fifth generation to the sixth generation change insurance or maintenance?

Insurance rates typically reflect the vehicle’s replacement value and safety-feature tier, so a newer, more technology-equipped Expedition may see different premiums — sometimes higher due to replacement cost, sometimes offset by updated safety discounts. Maintenance intervals and warranty coverage reset with the new vehicle. For specifics on your situation, talk to your insurance agent and reference the 2027 Owner’s Manual for service intervals.

Can I trade in a leased Expedition?

Yes, lease trade-ins are common and can be structured in several ways — early buyout to trade, lease-end trade with residual alignment, or lease pull-ahead if your lessor offers one for the 2027 order. Bring your lease documents when you come in and we’ll walk through the options against your specific lease terms.

My Take on the Expedition Trade-In Decision

I talk to a lot of long-time Expedition drivers in Bowdle and the surrounding ranch and farm country, and the trade-in conversation is one I genuinely like having. If you’re in a 2021 or 2022 Expedition, the 2027 (or the 2026 on our current lot) is a real upgrade — it’s a different truck in the places that matter. If you’re already in a 2025 or 2026, the honest answer is usually “not yet,” unless one of the 2027-specific changes lands exactly where you needed it to.

Either way, the conversation is worth having. Come in, let’s walk through your Expedition and the 2027 options side-by-side, and we’ll figure out what actually makes sense for you. No pressure. No scripts. The right answer is usually obvious when you see both trucks against each other.

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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