Home » Ford Dealers Will Finally Sell You The Proper F-150 Street Truck You’ve Always Wanted, But There’s An Insane Catch

Ford Dealers Will Finally Sell You The Proper F-150 Street Truck You’ve Always Wanted, But There’s An Insane Catch

Roush F150

Ford truck fans have been begging the Blue Oval for a new SVT F-150 Lightning for years. Somehow, Ford keeps getting close, but not quite there, with seriously fast trucks that miss out on one or two ingredients that the old Lightnings had. Roush Performance is doing what Ford apparently can’t, and will sell you a proper F-150 street truck through your local dealership with a warranty. But there’s one extremely stupid catch.

I’m a huge fan of the street truck. I grew up with icons like the Ford SVT F-150 Lightning and the Dodge Ram SRT-10. I still dream about taking a spin in a GMC Syclone. It was glorious how America’s automakers were more than happy to sell you a sports car with a truck bed on the back.

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Truth be told, that spirit of tire-shredding muscle trucks and street trucks never really left – they just come with asterisks. Ford will happily sell you an F-150 with at least 700 horses under the power barn, but that pickup will either be a Raptor R, a work truck with no suspension, braking, or tire changes, or a crew cab truck. Ram will also sell you a ridiculously powerful truck, but again, it has to have four doors and shod in gigantic mud tires.

Ford F-150 Lobo. Credit: Ford

Ford is trying to quench the thirst of the street truck enthusiast with its Maverick and F-150 Lobos. The Maverick Lobo hits all of the right notes, except for the fact that it doesn’t get any additional ponies over a regular Maverick and ships with tires that don’t quite match the sporty vibe. The F-150 Lobo is technically available with more power and also looks the part, but it sits way too high and is available only in a four-door cab configuration. The electric Lightning is also plenty fast, but it isn’t a street truck.

To be fair, turning to the aftermarket can solve a lot of these issues. But there was something so satisfying about being able to peel out of the showroom in a proper street truck without having to stop by a customizer on your drive home. Roush is making what’s possibly the closest you’ll get to driving a new SVT F-150 Lightning off the dealership floor. This is the 2026 Ford F-150 Nitemare, and it’s the lowered single-cab V8 truck that the Lobo should have been offered in.

Dark And Low

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Roush has been the go-to customizer for Ford fans for decades. Sometimes, if you want something that Ford doesn’t sell and are not loaded with the kind of cash that a Hennessey commands, Roush might be your stop. The company sells all sorts of parts as well as full vehicles. Right now, the Roush vehicle lineup consists of three Ford F-150 variants, a Super Duty, and the first-ever collaboration between Nissan and Roush for the Frontier.

The Nitemare was added to the Roush lineup in 2025 and makes a return this year with a few upgrades. The Nightmare takes a Ford F-150 XL or XLT and turns it into a street truck. Much of it is cosmetics. You get a Roush front clip featuring orange lettering, functional heat extraction vents on the hood, and the requisite Nitemare badges. Of course, it can’t be a modern truck without flashy lighting, and Roush gives you clearance lights and illuminated badges.

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Then there’s the 22-inch wheels shod in 305/40R22 General Tire G-MAX AS07 all-season tires, a blacked-out tailgate, and optional puddle lights. Inside, Roush tosses out the work truck cloth for leather thrones and a leather steering wheel. For 2026, Roush will replace your truck’s rubberized flooring with premium carpet and Roush floormats. Also new for this year is the option to slap checkered flag graphics on the bed.

The style is sinister and nails the street truck look down perfectly, I think. But where the Nitemare really shines is under the metal. Roush dropped the truck three inches up front and five inches in back through lowering knuckles and spindles. Handling is taken care of through a set of coilovers, twin-tube shocks, progressive-rate springs, and upgraded sway bars. The truck has a 1.375-inch bar up front and a 1-inch bar taking up the rear. Those bars connect to CNC aluminum sway bar bushing brackets.

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There’s more, as slotted brake platters back up the new meaty tires. Add it all up, and Roush says the truck says that the suspension and tire changes were good for 1 g in cornering on a road course. For comparison, a Ford F-150 Lightning electric truck is good for 0.77 g when the going gets twisty. The F-150 Lobo pulls 0.79 g while the Maverick Lobo hits 0.96 g. So, Roush made a material difference in handling here, which is great.

The stock Roush Nitemare doesn’t touch the engine at all, and instead flirts with the exhaust by fitting a catback system to the engine’s throat. That means 400 horsepower and 410 lb-ft of torque from the howling Coyote under the hood. Should that not be enough, you could also add Roush’s TVS R2650 2.65-liter supercharger to crank the volume to 705 HP and 635 lb-ft of twist.

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You can buy your Nitemare in either Regular Cab or SuperCab, though Roush says that the fancy interior accoutrement is available only in the Regular Cab version. Besides, there’s really no reason to buy one of these with a SuperCab, anyway. At that point, just buy a Lobo and lower it.

Honestly, a 2026 Ford F-150 Nitemare with the optional supercharger sounds like the kind of truck Ford should just sell straight from the factory. Offer it with both cabs, too, so you can maximize on interest. Unfortunately, since Ford doesn’t do that, you’re left knocking on Roush’s door, and here’s where the catch comes in.

It Costs How Much?

The Nitemare costs $22,999 on top of whatever you pay for the base truck. I think I can hear the faint sounds of a Ford fan quaking in their Timberland boots and Truckle. You can get into a Regular Cab XL V8 for $42,125 or an XLT SuperCrew for $50,850. Basically, Roush is trying to say that the Nitemare kit, which is largely cosmetics and some suspension upgrades, costs half as much as a whole new base model F-150 V8. If you think 400 HP isn’t enough, Roush will then suck another $8,899 out of you for the supercharger. At the very least, all of this comes with a three-year, 36,000-mile warranty, which is neat.

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To be fair to Roush, it’s significantly less cash than the trucks that Hennessey slings nowadays, but that pricing is something. Ford’s FP700S package, which does add real horsepower and now comes with a mild rear suspension drop, costs $13,250. It doesn’t look as aggressive as the Nitemare. I bet you’d then still come out on top with an aftermarket suspension on that one.

It’s a shame because I really like this truck. It has everything that I think is missing from the Lobo, and can be upgraded into a truck as patently crazy as the FP700 while looking even better. This could really be the holy grail of Ford street trucks. But the price means that it will be out of reach for many of those who would love to own one.

But I guess I cannot be too salty. We still live in a reality where you can waltz down to the dealer of your choice and do a wicked burnout upon exit with way too much horsepower that you didn’t pay a ton of cash for. So, bravo for automakers for still being crazy sometimes. Now, I’m just hoping for Ford to bring back the Lightning as a performance truck for real now.

All photos: Ford

 

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Shinynugget
Shinynugget
7 minutes ago

The irony that a lowered truck in 2026 is probably still taller than my 1995 C1500 Silverado.
Also, how crazy is it that it can hit 1g on the skidpad. I remember when it was big news that a ‘Vette could that.

My Other Car is a Tetanus Shot
Member
My Other Car is a Tetanus Shot
14 minutes ago

I’m just mostly shocked Ford still produces a regular-cab truck, TBH.

They can’t be selling but a handful of them to fleets.

Anyway, we’re pretty spoiled for power, so the blower seems rather superflous on a rear-drive truck, aside the amusement of slightly more entertaining burnouts.

I’d be curious if Ford would put a Godzilla motor in a regular cab version of this from the factory. Probably not, given that it would traumatize their fuel-economy ratings.

Phil
Phil
42 seconds ago

A 7.3 liter engine would probably turn the weight balance to 90/10 front/rear

Rollin Hand
Rollin Hand
16 minutes ago

I look at this and can’t help but think one could copy most of this with a bunch of aftermarket parts and a couple of weekends of wrenching. You don’t get the warranty though, and that is a factor, but lots of folks mod warrantied cars.

I kinda like it, but just the Roush add-ons are more than I have ever paid for a car.

5VZ-F'Ever and Ever, Amen
Member
5VZ-F'Ever and Ever, Amen
24 minutes ago

I think I can hear the faint sounds of a Ford fan quaking in their Timberland boots and Truckle.

Surely you mean TREMORing…

Phil
Phil
36 minutes ago

Fun. 400hp in a lightweight single cab config like this should move very nicely.

It would be tempting to debadge this thing of the “Nitemare” stickers and headrests, though. I see the word play and it’s kinda clever given Ford’s peacocking cowboy and horse themes, but I’m getting more than a little weary of this childish brashness from domestic brands.

There’s some irony in the interior shot of the front seat, with the flag and Nitemare in the same frame. I think a lot of people are feeling that way.

The Stig's Misanthropic Cousin
Member
The Stig's Misanthropic Cousin
36 minutes ago

That thing is awesome. If I hadn’t bought a new Jeep yesterday I might be ordering one.

I am not even bothered by the price. It is reasonable to question whether these upgrades are worth $30k, but it would be hard to argue that these upgrades aren’t worth at least a $15k premium. These are extremely niche vehicles that will sell in low volume. If you want a unique product like this you should be prepared to pay more than it is “worth” by standards of a mass market vehicle.

Also, vehicles are expensive in 2026. I was surprised that the catch referenced in the headline was that an unbelievably cool, low volume, 700 hp supercharged sport truck costs $72-$80k. That isn’t much more than the crew cab F150 Lariats I see all the time.

Phil
Phil
35 minutes ago

Tell me about the Jeep.

Mechjaz
Member
Mechjaz
32 minutes ago

Congratulations!! That’s so exciting!

Kevin Rhodes
Member
Kevin Rhodes
38 minutes ago

I don’t get this. It’s a shitty sports car and a shitty truck for a TON of money. Lateral grip on a skid pad is not handling. Anything can pull close to 1G on a smooth pad if you make it stiff enough and put sticky enough tires on it – but can it do that on a bumpy frost heaved back road without your needing a kidney belt or getting bounced into the ditch?

Buy a proper truck and a used Corvette and let your inner redneck run free.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
7 minutes ago
Reply to  Kevin Rhodes

There’s one aspect that, arguably, makes it a better truck: it’s lower to the ground letting it be easier to load things into the back.

I’m also willing to bet that this truck has more suspension compliance than the average car – but it’s more hampered with it’s added weight over a car.

Greg
Member
Greg
52 minutes ago

I usually talk shit in my head when I see RR and Roush trucks/cars. I love this. Sure, I’d want a different grill and wheels, but other than that its great. I don’t have 70k for this, but I hope a lot of people who do buy one, so they make more and maybe Ford steps it up.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
53 minutes ago

Is this still running with the 10R transmission?

UnseenCat
UnseenCat
1 hour ago

I can’t say it doesn’t have a certain appeal… But those wheels have to go. I understand the why of having them; the style is popular. But I’d prefer something a bit more stout on a truck. Honestly, slotted steelies with appropriate trim rings and center caps would be just fine.

Buzz
Buzz
1 hour ago

I was hoping the insane catch was that it was only offered for single cab short bed trucks, as pictured above. It looks great in that configuration.

Grey alien in a beige sedan
Member
Grey alien in a beige sedan
1 hour ago

Timed perfectly to coincide with the beginning of the gas crisis.

IRegretNothing, Esq, DVM, BBQ
Member
IRegretNothing, Esq, DVM, BBQ
1 hour ago

It’s probably not a terrible price for a niche product. The economy of scale doesn’t work out when most people who plan to mod their new trucks want to lift them and do other things that go in the opposite direction of a street truck.

Bearddevil
Member
Bearddevil
1 hour ago

It seems like the smart money play is a tune and tires on a Maverick Lobo. *shrug* I haven’t really looked at what you can do to the engine on the Mav, but most turbo fours seem to be able to have the wick turned up significantly with a few supporting mods, and good tires are readily available.

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
1 hour ago
Reply to  Bearddevil

There are multiple tuners that already serve this market, I don’t know any of them, but I’ve heard through my underground car nerd network that there are a couple rolling around with significant boot upgrades.

Bearddevil
Member
Bearddevil
1 hour ago
Reply to  Max Headbolts

Some quick googling says you can get a new Mav Lobo for under $40K, and you can bump that to 260hp/300ft-lb for another $700 or so, and throw down $1500 or so on summer tires. Sounds like most of the fun for half the money.

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
1 hour ago
Reply to  Bearddevil

This is my kind of sport truck!

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
1 hour ago
Reply to  Bearddevil

There’s a new ’25 on the lot in my area in the good blue paint for 30K! I really shouldn’t go test drive it….

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
58 minutes ago
Reply to  Max Headbolts

OF COURSE they are advertising it with all kinds of rebates most people won’t qualify for:

Price includes: $1000 – AXZD Plan Bonus Customer Cash. Exp. 04/30/2026 $1000 – Bonus Customer Cash. Exp. 04/30/2026 $1000 – Retail Customer Cash. Exp. 04/30/2026 $1000 – Retail Customer Cash. Exp. 04/30/2026 $500 – 2026 Farm Bureau Recognition Exclusive Cash Reward. Exp. 01/04/2027 $500 – 2026 First Responder Recognit

Mechjaz
Member
Mechjaz
44 minutes ago
Reply to  Max Headbolts

$1500 – you have to leave location services on all the time and submit your grocery store receipts to the dealer
$500 – first responder that never needed to use emergency services personally – we salute you for helping keep public service taxes low!
$3000 – if you read this far you’re disqualified from all rebates, including this one

So yeah, come on in and we’ll give you $4000 to drive away in one of our trucks!

*$4000 is a cash loan at 28.99% APR that must be repaid over 84 months and is subject to early repayment penalties. May not be combined with any other offer. Should be illegal in all areas. APR higher in Alaska and Hawaii.

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
31 minutes ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

You forgot the Farm Bureau Recognition bonus!

As long as you don’t dare use our lowered sport truck for farm things, as doing so will violate your warranty. We’ll know you were doing this, as we can monitor your location and vehicle modes!

Bearddevil
Member
Bearddevil
41 minutes ago
Reply to  Max Headbolts

This is the kind of craptastic deceptive advertising that should be punished.

I’m trying
Member
I’m trying
43 minutes ago
Reply to  Bearddevil

The 8f35 in my 2020 transit connect couldn’t survive the 160hp na2.0 for a full 80,000miles. I can’t imagine the mavericks holding up better with awd launches and another 100hp and 175 lbft of torque. Dealers and independents are asking 9-10k for transmission replacement. So budget accordingly.

Bearddevil
Member
Bearddevil
37 minutes ago
Reply to  I’m trying

The Lobo uses the transmission from the Edge ST, but with second gear programmed out for some reason, so that ought to be a bit less fragile.

V10omous
Member
V10omous
1 hour ago

To be fair, this price is not out of line with what the old street trucks cost, especially considering the better power and features, not to mention that Roush trucks never sell for anything near sticker:

1991 GMC Syclone – $26,000 is $63,000 today

1999 Ford Lightning – $30,000 is $60,000 today

2004 Ram SRT10 – $45,700 is $80,000 today.

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
1 hour ago
Reply to  V10omous

That was my thought as well, still out of reach for me, as a third car as I’d struggle to use it as a daily; but you don’t buy these things for practical reasons.

V10omous
Member
V10omous
1 hour ago
Reply to  Max Headbolts

In general, people tend to greatly exaggerate how affordable things were in the past. An SRT-10 or a Lightning was an impractical toy and not something a normal Joe could typically afford!

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
57 minutes ago
Reply to  V10omous

Oh absolutely , I was there!! I was also driving $700 shitboxes so…

Mechjaz
Member
Mechjaz
1 hour ago

So… What was the insane catch?

Rad Barchetta
Member
Rad Barchetta
1 hour ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

It’s either the $22,000 adder, or the fact that it still

ships with tires that don’t quite match the sporty vibe. 

305/40R22 General Tire G-MAX AS07 all-season tires

Blech.

Mechjaz
Member
Mechjaz
54 minutes ago
Reply to  Rad Barchetta

I was definitely taken aback at General tires – seriously? – but I dunno, “cosmetics pack is overpriced and comes with the cheapest tires you can buy” isn’t an insane catch. It’s just a bad deal.

Matt K
Matt K
40 minutes ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

The size being offered is the issue here. 305/40/22 is very uncommon. General is the only one making a UHP All-Season in this size that is a recognized manufacturer. US OEM’s aren’t factory-installing Parada, Advanta, or Radar branded tires.

Furthermore, General is an American brand – so it ‘works’ on an American truck.

It’s besides the point that this particular size AS-07 tire is made in the Czech Republic (according to Tire Rack).

Mechjaz
Member
Mechjaz
34 minutes ago
Reply to  Matt K

You might have me with the UHP, but you can get Hankook Ventus and Michelin Defenders in this size (not arguing with you exactly, just saying there are options). Having worked at discount tire for too too long (about two months), I think getting stuck with any kind of Generals you’ll be lucky to make it to 15,000 miles.

Matt K
Matt K
30 minutes ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

The Michelin Defenders are not an appropriate tire for a 700+hp truck with no weight in the bed. If you’re lucky to get 15k out of the Generals, you’ll definitely get 60k out of the Defenders with a 780 treadwear rating, even whilst burning out at every takeoff.

You don’t mention which Ventus you’re referencing – but I would guess it also doesn’t work because of weight load ratings.

Angrycat Meowmeow
Member
Angrycat Meowmeow
21 minutes ago
Reply to  Matt K

I don’t understand why OEM’s do this. Go down to a 295/40/22 and you’ve got options from Michelin, Continental, Goodyear and Hankook for either summer or UHP all-season. Did they really need that extra 10mm?

Phil
Phil
41 minutes ago
Reply to  Rad Barchetta

Just sounds like an invitation to use the crappy tires up quickly in clouds of smoke and hard cornering. Then put on some appropriate ones.

Shop-Teacher
Member
Shop-Teacher
1 hour ago

I’d rather have a work truck with the supercharger. Go full sleeper. I would lower it a little, but I’d keep the stock 18″ steel wheels.

Anybody want to spot me $60k?

4moremazdas
Member
4moremazdas
1 hour ago
Reply to  Shop-Teacher

I like the way the sleeper work truck looks, but I’m not a fan of how it stops or turns. It needs some of the suspension and brake upgrades seen here.

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
1 hour ago
Reply to  4moremazdas

This is what I’d do, get a two door short bed in fleet white, add all the Roush suspension bits and skip the interior upgrades. I’m certain Roush will happily sell me those parts. The only gap is the warranty coverage, but I haven’t owned a car with a warranty in half a decade, and that hasn’t bothered me.

Shop-Teacher
Member
Shop-Teacher
43 minutes ago
Reply to  4moremazdas

Yeah, I’m with you on suspension and brake upgrades, but I’m keeping the steelies. You can fit plenty of brake inside an 18″ wheel.

Mechjaz
Member
Mechjaz
52 minutes ago
Reply to  Shop-Teacher

There’s a lowered F-150 just out of my neighborhood that has a huge DRAG LIFE sticker in the back and I can’t help but wonder if they’ve thought through the, y’know, meanings that decal might have.

Shop-Teacher
Member
Shop-Teacher
42 minutes ago
Reply to  Mechjaz

I kind of love it whether they’ve thought that through or not. I can’t decide which I like more.

Groover
Member
Groover
1 hour ago

Mercedes, I very rarely disagree with your takes – but this thing is shit. Expensive shit.
But I expect the target market won’t recognize it as $23k over a stock truck – instead they’ll recognize it as an extra $450/mo over the term of the 84-month loan

Last edited 1 hour ago by Groover
Groover
Member
Groover
1 hour ago
Reply to  Groover

Mad props for getting 1G out of an F-series though, that’s an accomplishment!

Smoke&Mears
Smoke&Mears
1 hour ago

Nitemare? Just a little too on the nose for the times maybe?

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
1 hour ago
Reply to  Smoke&Mears

I think it’s a play on the old Ford Nite trim F150s they offered in the 90s. It was an appearance package sold along side the Lightnings. But yeah, seems like a name that fits the times…

Alexk98
Member
Alexk98
1 hour ago

But there’s an insane catch

Is it that *gasp* Quality isn’t job Number One?

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