Related: Lordstown Releases Endurance EV Pickup Interior Rendering
Lordstown Motors Unveils All-Electric Pickup for Fleets
Preorders from commercial and fleet customers for the all-electric Endurance pickup exceed the company’s production capacity of 20,000 units for 2021.

Revealed at the Lordstown Assembly Plant in Warren, Ohio on June 25, the all-wheel drive Endurance is powered by four in-wheel hub motors with an estimated range of 250 miles unladen.
Photo courtesy of Lourdstown.
“Our goal is 20,000 vehicles in the first year of production,” Steve Burns, CEO of Lordstown Motor Corp., told Business Fleet. With existing preorders, “We have the whole first year spoken for.”
Burns is referring to orders for the Endurance all-electric pickup, which was revealed on June 25 at the company’s manufacturing plant in Lordstown, Ohio.
The coronavirus pandemic has delayed the Endurance’s release, Burns said, but not too much: The first registration-worthy Endurances will start rolling off the assembly line in mid-2021. Before that, Lordstown is on track to build 30 beta vehicles for crash and durability tests by December.
Unlike Tesla’s Cybertruck, preorders for the Endurance are strictly commercial customers, and that’s by design. “We're starting exclusively in the commercial market,” Burns said. ServPro has put in an order for 1,200 units and Clean Fuels Ohio ordered 250.
With only fleet and commercial sales for the foreseeable future and no retail sales, there is no need for a dealer network right now, Burns said. He hinted that lease programs and partnerships with fleet management companies may be announced soon.
Organizations considering the Endurance should get in line now — orders placed today might be looking at mid-2022 for delivery, Burns said.
While Lordstown planned for 20,000 units a year, with significantly more demand the plant could be retooled for more production. When GM owned the Lordstown plant it was producing 400,000 Chevrolet Cruze models a year at its peak.
The Endurance is opening up the most important vehicle segment in the U.S. to electrification. With no track record, will the trucks perform at levels work truck customers need?
“We built (the Endurance) so it can tow and haul just as much as an internal combustion engine counterpart,” Burns said of the Endurance, which has an electric motor at each wheel and no transmission or axles.
Yet the big unknown when it comes to electric trucks is how towing and payload affect range. Burns said the estimated unladen range for the Endurance is 250 miles.
For ICE-powered pickups the EPA uses an empty truck to determine fuel economy. The same factors — weight, speed, weather, size and shape of load, and wind resistance — will greatly affect electric trucks too, Burns said.
With too many variables, the range question will only be answered with miles of various on-road usages. “Once the vehicles are out in mass, we’ll better understand how much range is lost, just like we do for cold weather’s effect on electric cars,” he said.
One range factor to consider, Burns said, is that most pickups are empty 90% of the time. “The average fleet pickup truck drives 60 to 70 miles per day,” he said. “We think that’s a good range buffer to get most jobs done.”
The $52,000 Endurance has a production head start on seven announced all-electric pickup models due within two years. At the end of that timeline, Lordstown will have to contend with the electric Ford F-150.
Burns wouldn’t speculate too much on what the world will look like for Lordstown Motors after Ford releases the electric F-150. He stressed there are too many unknowns at this point in terms of specs and performance compared to the traditional ICE-powered F-150.
“We know we'll already have a good lead with millions of miles on the road, which is important with new technology like an electric pickup truck,” he said. “It's going to be tough to catch the early leaders because those learnings quickly help (the vehicle) evolve.”
“That’s why we really want to get out there and become the leader in our lane of electric full-size work trucks.”
“In the modern automotive world, it's very hard to have a clear lane. We think we do, and it’s the electric full-size truck,” said Burns. “The appetite, the pent-up demand for an electric work truck is there, and we want to fulfill it.”
Originally posted on Work Truck Online
More Global Fleet

Cameras, Safety and Insurance: From Reactive Claims to Real-time Prevention
Commercial auto remains one of the most challenging and costly lines of coverage for fleet operators and insurers alike. Learn more about how to effectively address these issues from Onur Aksan, Enterprise Business Development Executive, Geotab.
Read More →
Why Fleet Managers Are Replacing Departmental Vehicles with Shared Motor Pools
Departmentally assigned vehicles often create hidden costs through underutilization, poor visibility, and increased administrative burden. This white paper explores how shared motor pool strategies help fleets reduce costs, improve accountability, and optimize vehicle utilization.
Read More →
Fleet Costs Are Rising: Here’s How Leaders Are Responding
Fleet leaders are under pressure to reduce costs, adapt to economic uncertainty, and make smarter decisions. See how peers across North America are responding with real data, proven strategies, and forward-looking insights. Download the 2026 Market Pulse Report to benchmark your strategy and uncover where you can gain an edge.
Read More →
Enterprise Fleet Management Surpasses 900,000 Vehicles in U.S. & Canada
Enterprise Mobility connects with mobility solutions around the globe
Read More →Automotive Fleet's Guide to Fleet Electrification
Unlock the secrets to a successful transition to electric fleets with Automotive Fleet's comprehensive Fleet Electrification Guide!
Read More →
Sumitomo Rubber Industries to Acquire Viaduct
Viaduct will join Sumitomo as an independent subsidiary. Partnership strengthens global reach and accelerates AI-driven innovation for fleets and manufacturing.
Read More →
AfMA’s 2025 Education & Leadership Summit: 26 Years of Impactful Connection
Held in Sydney, the Australasian Fleet Management Association’s 2025 Summit marked ten years of growth as the event expanded its global reach and doubled down on practical, non-commercial fleet leadership programming.
Read More →
Closing Soon! Nominate a 2025 Global Fleet Team of the Year
Submit your nomination for the award that honors outstanding multinational fleet teams. Nominations close Aug. 15.
Read More →
Seven Strategies to Reduce Preventable Accidents
“Accidents” suggest inevitability, but most crashes are preventable — caused by driver actions and behaviors. Here’s why shifting the narrative can improve road safety.
Read More →
2024 Global Fleet Conference in Photos
Check out photos from the first two days of the 2024 Global Fleet Conference, which convened for the first time in San Diego Nov. 4-6 as part of the new Fleet Week series of conferences.
Read More →
