The 2027 Ford Expedition comes in two body styles: standard Expedition and Expedition MAX. Same sixth-generation platform, same engines, same technology, same Ford Co-Pilot360 Assist 2.0, same Ford Digital Experience. The MAX adds roughly a foot of wheelbase and overall length, and the difference ends up concentrated in one place — the cargo area behind the third row. For some buyers, that’s the whole decision. For others, it’s a meaningful trade-off against everyday parking and garage fit.
This guide walks through what actually differs between the two body styles, which trims are available in MAX (and which are standard-length only), what’s new for Expedition MAX in 2027, how MAX changes everyday driving and parking, and which body style fits which buyer. The SD framing is direct: if your longest haul is Bowdle to Fargo with three kids and a week of gear, you might want MAX. If it’s Bowdle to Selby every Tuesday and one car seat, you probably don’t.
What are the length, cargo, and seating differences?
The MAX body style extends the Expedition by approximately 12 inches of wheelbase, with most of the added length going to the cargo area behind the third row. Both body styles share the same engine lineup (3.5L EcoBoost V6 standard, 3.5L EcoBoost V6 High Output at 440 hp / 510 lb-ft on select configurations), the same 10-speed automatic transmission, the same Ford Digital Experience with 24" panoramic and 13.2" center displays, and the same Ford Co-Pilot360 Assist 2.0 driver-assist stack.
Cargo space. This is where MAX pays off. The cargo area behind the third row is meaningfully larger on MAX — the difference you notice when you’re packing a family of six for a week in the Black Hills or loading a full hockey-gear set of bags behind three rows of passengers. On the standard Expedition, behind-the-third-row cargo is more limited; on MAX, you can run the truck with the third row in place and still have real cargo room. With the third row folded, both body styles give you substantial cargo volume — MAX just gives you more of it.
Seating. Both body styles preserve 7-passenger or 8-passenger configurations depending on trim and options. MAX doesn’t add a fourth row or different seating count — the extra length benefits cargo, not passenger count. Third-row legroom is similar between the two body styles; Ford designed both to support adult passengers in the third row.
Dimensions. Overall length on the standard 2027 Expedition is close to an F-150 SuperCrew with a 6.5-foot bed; Expedition MAX is closer to an F-150 SuperCrew with an 8-foot bed. If your current vehicle is an F-150 SuperCrew, you have a useful reference point for what each Expedition body style will feel like in your driveway and on the road.
For the complete 2027 Expedition lineup including engines, technology, and feature content, see the complete 2027 Ford Expedition overview.
Which Expedition trims come in MAX — and why is Tremor standard-length only?
MAX is available on XL (fleet-only), Active Select (200A), Active Touring (202A), Platinum (600A, including the 30th Anniversary Appearance Package), and King Ranch (400A). The Expedition Tremor is the only retail trim not offered in MAX — it’s standard-length only, 4×4 only.
Ford’s engineering decision on Tremor makes sense once you look at the off-road geometry. The Tremor is the Expedition’s factory off-road trim — 3.73 Electronic Locking Rear Differential, seven drive modes including Rock Crawl, Trail Control with Trail One Pedal Drive and Trail Turn Assist, modified Raptor-style skid plates, and off-road-specific suspension. An extended wheelbase would compromise the departure angle, increase the risk of high-centering over ruts and crests, and make Trail Turn Assist’s tight-radius off-road maneuvering noticeably harder. Ford chose not to offer a length-compromised off-road Expedition — the Tremor stays standard-length to protect the capability.
Practically, this creates a clear decision fork. If you need extended length, the Tremor is off the table — you’re picking from XL (fleet only), Active, Platinum, or King Ranch in MAX. If you need Tremor-level off-road capability, you’re in standard length. There’s no way to get both in a single truck, and no Expedition package or option fills that gap.
For the full buyer’s guide on the Tremor — what it offers, who it’s built for, and how it compares to a Platinum Stealth Performance — see the 2027 Ford Expedition Tremor guide. For a trim-by-trim framework across the entire lineup, see the 2027 Ford Expedition Trim Levels guide.
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The biggest MAX-specific change for 2027 is 4×2 configuration availability on MAX Platinum. Previously, MAX Platinum was 4×4 only. For 2027, Ford added 4×2 as an option — meaningful for buyers who want the MAX body style but don’t need four-wheel drive (a family hauler driven primarily on pavement for Fargo, Sioux Falls, or interstate commutes). The standard-length Platinum also became available in 4×2 for 2027 after previously being 4×4 only, but the MAX 4×2 configuration is the newer availability.
The 30th Anniversary Appearance Package (91A) — new for 2027, Platinum-only — is available on both standard-length Expedition Platinum and Expedition MAX Platinum. When ordered on MAX, the “MAX” liftgate badge is finished in black to match the rest of the package styling. The three paint colors offered with the Anniversary Package (Agate Black Metallic, Star White Metallic Tri-Coat, Blue Ember Metallic) are available regardless of standard vs. MAX. Blue Ember Metallic is the exclusive-to-91A finish.
Other 2027 changes apply across both body styles: the Ford Security Package newly optional on every trim, a laminated windshield standard across the lineup, three new paint colors (Bronze Fire Metallic Tri-coat, Nocturnal Blue Metallic, and Blue Ember Metallic for the Anniversary Package), and the Family Travel Package newly optional on Active Touring.
For the complete list of 2027 model-year changes, see What’s New for the 2027 Ford Expedition. For the 30th Anniversary Appearance Package specifically, see 2027 Ford Expedition 30th Anniversary Appearance Package Explained.
Will MAX fit your garage and everyday driving?
Garage. Standard-length Expedition fits in most residential garages that accommodate a full-size pickup. Expedition MAX is roughly the length of an F-150 SuperCrew with an 8-foot bed — close to the edge of what a standard 22-foot residential garage can hold comfortably. If your garage is 24 feet deep, MAX fits without issue. If it’s shorter, bring your measurements when you come to Beadle Ford and we’ll confirm against the exact 2027 dimensions.
Parking in town. A MAX takes up more of a parking stall than the standard Expedition does. For angled parking on a Main Street or in a tight lot, the extra length is real. In typical suburban or small-town parking, both body styles work without difficulty. If your daily driving involves frequent tight parking (a hospital lot, a school pickup line), the standard Expedition is easier to live with.
Turning radius. MAX has a slightly wider turning radius than standard-length, reflecting the longer wheelbase. For most driving — rural roads, interstate, suburban streets — the difference is minor. For tight three-point turns in narrow farmyards or tight cul-de-sacs, the standard Expedition is more nimble.
Highway drive quality. This is where MAX has a subtle advantage. The longer wheelbase generally delivers a slightly smoother ride on long interstate stretches because the body spans more of the pavement’s wavelength. For a family spending 6-8 hours on a road trip, that subtle smoothness adds up.
Fuel economy. Official 2027 EPA ratings for both body styles will be confirmed closer to launch. In general, MAX’s additional mass and length result in slightly lower fuel economy than standard-length Expedition. The difference is small compared to the engine-choice variance within the lineup.
Who should order MAX and who should stick with standard-length?
The honest framing comes back to what you’re doing with the cargo area behind the third row. If you regularly run with the third row in use AND need substantial cargo behind it, MAX is the body style for you. If you either fold the third row most of the time (opening up both body styles’ full cargo volume) or travel lighter, standard-length works.
Order Expedition MAX if:
- You regularly carry 6 or more passengers with their gear — family road trips, sports team runs, extended-family travel
- Your longest routine haul is Bowdle to Fargo (or equivalent) with kids and a full set of gear for a week
- You tow recreational gear (camper, boat) that fills a substantial trunk area and you want third-row passenger capacity at the same time
- Your garage is 24 feet deep or larger and tight parking is rare in your daily driving
- You want a MAX Platinum with the 30th Anniversary Appearance Package or the newly available 4×2 configuration
Stick with standard-length Expedition if:
- Your third row gets used occasionally rather than weekly, and you typically fold it for cargo
- Your longest regular haul is Bowdle to Selby, Ipswich, or Aberdeen — shorter runs where standard-length cargo is enough
- You want the Tremor trim — MAX is not offered
- Your garage is tighter than 24 feet or you frequently park in narrow spaces
- You want the slightly more nimble turning radius for farmyard maneuvering or tight small-town driving
Most Dakota buyers we see at Beadle Ford fall into the standard-length camp. That said, the growing-family and extended-travel case for MAX is real — if that’s your life, MAX is the right answer. Come see both body styles in person if you’re on the fence; the difference in cargo space is easier to feel in person than to describe. We’ll walk through your configuration against your actual week.
Key Takeaways
- Expedition MAX adds about a foot of wheelbase and length, with most of the additional space going to cargo behind the third row.
- MAX is available on XL (fleet-only), Active Select, Active Touring, Platinum (including the 30th Anniversary Appearance Package), and King Ranch. The Tremor is standard-length only.
- Both body styles share the same platform, engines, transmission, technology, and driver-assist stack. Differences are physical dimensions and behind-third-row cargo.
- New for 2027 MAX: 4×2 Platinum availability (previously 4×4 only); the 30th Anniversary Appearance Package is available on MAX Platinum.
- MAX fits most residential garages 24 feet deep or larger; tight in 22-foot garages. Standard-length is more nimble in tight parking and small-town driving.
- Order MAX if you regularly run third row + gear; stick with standard-length if the third row is occasional and you value easier parking and garage fit.
Frequently Asked Questions
My Take on the MAX Decision
Most of the Expedition buyers I see at Beadle Ford go with standard length. It fits the Dakota driving pattern well — county gravel, interstate stretches, farmyard maneuvering, tight Main Street parking. The standard body style covers those use cases with no compromise. But for the families who are really running at the edge of what a three-row SUV can hold — six passengers with gear, teenage sports seasons, long weekends at the lake with everything loaded — MAX earns its keep. Those buyers know who they are.
If you’re genuinely on the fence, stop in and we’ll put the two side-by-side on the lot. The cargo-area difference is easier to understand when you’re standing in it than when you’re reading about it. I’ll help you figure out which one actually fits your week.
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. Learn more about Lexy.

